At the time Manet began working, the generally accepted art was the official art of the Salon. His work can generally be described as part of the impressionist movement, which emerged from the works of Realist painters like Courbet and Millet. Paris itself was going through several great changes at the time - the arrival of Japanese prints and woodcuts introduced a new use of perspective and space, and impressed artists with its beauty and economy of line. Also, the Emperor's marriage to a Spaniard in 1853 had given a new leash of life to 'Hispagnolisme' - a fashion for all things Spanish which had started with the Romantic poets Gautier, Merimee and Hugo, and was a popular craze by the end of the 1830's. Manet was a very cultured man, a friend of the great poets of the time, Baudelaire and Mallarme, and had a profound knowledge of literature and music; so was greatly influenced by these developments.…