Showing posts with label 1820s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1820s. Show all posts

Saturday, October 1, 2022

Eugène Delacroix - Dante and Sardanapalus

Eugène Delacroix
Study for the Damned in The Barque of Dante
ca. 1822
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Eugène Delacroix
Study for the Damned in The Barque of Dante
ca. 1822
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Eugène Delacroix
The Barque of Dante (detail)
1822
oil on canvas
Musée du Louvre

Eugène Delacroix
The Barque of Dante
1822
oil on canvas
Musée du Louvre

Eugène Delacroix
Study for Heads of Dante and Virgil in The Barque of Dante
ca. 1822
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Eugène Delacroix
Study for The Barque of Dante and other Studies
ca. 1822
drawing, with watercolor
Musée du Louvre

Eugène Delacroix
Atmospheric Study for The Barque of Dante
ca. 1822
watercolor
Musée du Louvre

Eugène Delacroix
Study for the Damned in The Barque of Dante
ca. 1822
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Eugène Delacroix
Study for the Damned in The Barque of Dante
ca. 1822
drawing
Musée du Louvre

"Romanticism and colour lead me straight to Eugène Delacroix.  I do not know if he is proud of his title of 'romantic', but his place is here, because a long time ago – from his very first work, in fact – the majority of the public placed him at the head of the modern school.

As I enter upon this part of my work, my heart is full of a serene joy, and I am purposely selecting my newest pens, so great is my desire to be clear and limpid, so happy do I feel to be addressing my dearest and most sympathetic subject.  But in order to make the conclusions of this chapter properly intelligible, I must first go back some little distance in the history of this period, and place before the eyes of the public certain documents of the case which have already been cited by earlier critics and historians, but which are necessary to complete my demonstration.  Nevertheless, I do not think that true admirers of Eugène Delacroix will feel anything but a keen pleasure in re-reading an extract from the Constitutionnel of 1822, taken from the Salon of M. Thiers, journalist 

In my opinion no picture is a clearer revelation of future greatness than M. Delacroix's Le Dante et Virgile aux Enfers.  Here above all you can recognize the spurt of talent, that burst of dawning mastery which revives our hopes, already a trifle dashed by the too moderate worth of all the rest.

Dante and Virgil are being ferried across the infernal stream by Charon; they cleave their way with difficulty through the mob which swarms round the barque in order to clamber aboard.  Dante, pictured alive, bears the dreadful taint of the place: Virgil, crowned with gloomy laurel, wears the colours of death.  The hapless throng, doomed eternally to crave the opposite bank, are clinging to the boat: one is clutching at it in vain, and, thrown backwards by his precipitate effort, plunges once more into the waters; another has hold, and is kicking back those who, like himself, are struggling to get on board; two others are gripping at the elusive timber with their teeth.  There you have all the egoism of misery, the despair of Hell.  In a subject which borders so closely on exaggeration, you will yet find a severity of taste, a propriety of setting, so to say, which enhances the design, though stern judges – in this case ill-advised – might perhaps criticize it for a lack of nobility.  It is painted with a broad, firm brush, and its colour is simple and vigorous, if a trifle raw."

– from The Salon of 1846, published in Art in Paris, 1845-1862: Salons and Exhibitions reviewed by Charles Baudelaire, translated and edited by Jonathan Mayne (London: Phaidon Press, 1965)

Eugène Delacroix
Death of Sardanapalus
1827
oil on canvas
Musée du Louvre

Eugène Delacroix
Death of Sardanapalus (detail)
1827
oil on canvas
Musée du Louvre

Eugène Delacroix
Death of Sardanapalus (detail)
1827
oil on canvas
Musée du Louvre

Eugène Delacroix
Study for Death of Sardanapalus
ca. 1827
drawing (colored chalks)
Musée du Louvre

Eugène Delacroix
Study for Death of Sardanapalus
ca. 1827
drawing (colored chalks)
Musée du Louvre

Eugène Delacroix
Study for Death of Sardanapalus
ca. 1827
drawing (colored chalks)
Musée du Louvre
 

Saturday, February 1, 2020

Human and/or Divine Figures in Paint (1820-1830)

William Hilton
Phaeton
ca. 1820
oil on canvas
Manchester Art Gallery

John Jackson
Miss Chester (Eliza Jane Chester)
ca. 1820
oil on canvas
Guildhall Art Gallery, London

Théodore Gericault
Horsewoman
ca. 1820-21
oil on canvas
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Andrew Geddes
Portrait of Two Women
ca. 1820-30
oil on panel
Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh

John Constable
Académie
(posed after a figure from Michelangelo's Last Judgment fresco)
ca. 1820-30
oil on canvas
National Trust, Anglesey Abbey, Cambridge

Richard Evans
Ganymede Feeding the Eagle
ca. 1822
oil on paper, mounted on canvas
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Horace Vernet
The Veteran at Home 
1823
oil on canvas
Wallace Collection, London

"The soldier is a grenadier of the Old Guard.  Under the restored Bourbons the financial plight of many of the soldiers who had fought in Napoleon's armies was an important political issue.  Vernet produced many scenes like this showing veterans in a kindly light."

– from curator's notes at the Wallace Collection

attributed to Ramsay Richard Reinagle
Portrait of Sir William Cornwallis Harris
ca. 1823
oil on canvas
National Portrait Gallery, London

François-Joseph Navez
Study of Mademoiselle Luisa at the Home of Portaels
1824
oil on paper, mounted on canvas
Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh

Charles Lock Eastlake
The Champion
1824
oil on canvas
Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery

François Gérard
Portrait of Charles X, King of France
1825
oil on canvas
Wellington Collection, Apsley House, London

"In 1824 Gérard was commissioned by the government to paint a portrait of the new king, Charles X, in his coronation robes.  It was exhibited at the 1825 Salon, where it enjoyed considerable success.  . . .  Charles-Philippe (1757-1836) was a grandson of Louis XV and became Comte d'Artois at birth.  As a young prince he acquired a rather notorious reputation at the French Court, which together with his strong belief in aristocratic rights and privileges made him a particularly hated figure by revolutionists, and in 1789 his brother, Louis XVI, ordered him to leave France, from whence he eventually settled at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh.  From this time until his death Charles became increasingly devout in his Catholic faith and traditional in his views.  The French monarchy was restored in 1814, and in 1824 on the death of his brother, Louis XVIII, Charles became king, aged 67.  From his coronation onwards Charles' attempts to reverse the ideals of the revolution made him deeply unpopular, and in July 1830 public revolts forced him to abdicate and flee to Britain."  

– from curator's notes at the Wellington Collection

John Linnell
Portrait of Miss Jane Puxley
1826
oil on canvas
Yale Center for British Art

Pieter Christoffel Wonder
Study for Patrons and Lovers of Art
ca. 1826-30
oil on canvas
National Portrait Gallery, London

"This is a preliminary study for Wonder's painting of an imaginary gallery hung with pictures from famous British collections.  The portraits depict the main art collectors of the period.  The composition celebrates the role of individual benefactors in the much celebrated foundation of the National Gallery (1824).  On the left, kneeling in front of Titian's Bacchus and Ariadne, is George Watson Taylor (1771-1841), a collector of Italian Renaissance paintings.  On the right, top hat in hand, is Sir John Murray (ca. 1768-1827) who commissioned Wonder's painting.  Next to him, leaning forward, is the Reverend William Holwell-Carr (1758-1830), a benefactor of the newly formed National Gallery.  Behind them, holding his palette, is the artist himself."

– from curator's notes at the National Gallery

Richard Parkes Bonington
Amy Robsart and the Earl of Leicester
ca. 1827
oil on canvas
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford

Ary Scheffer
Portrait of Charlotte Rothschild, Baroness Anselm de Rothschild
ca. 1827-28
oil on canvas
National Trust, Waddesdon Manor, Buckinghamshire