Eugène Delacroix
Columbus and His Son at La Rábida
Eugène Delacroix
La Liberté guidant le Peuple
Eugène Delacroix
Woman with a Parrot
Eugène Delacroix
Le Massacre de Scio
Eugène Delacroix
Greece on the Ruins of Missolonghi
Eugène Delacroix
1798-1863
BIOGRAPHIA
Eugène Delacroix was born in Charenton-Saint-Maurice,
France, on April 26, 1798. He received his
artistic training in Paris and became known
as a leading figure of the French Romantic
era of the 19th century. Inspired by history,
literature and exotic locales, Delacroix
painted such famous works as "Liberty
Leading the People" and "The Death
of Sardanapalus." He died in Paris on
August 13, 1863.
Ferdinand-Eugène-Victor Delacroix was born
on April 26, 1798, in Charenton-Saint-Maurice,
France. His father, Charles, was a minister
of foreign affairs and served as a governmental
prefect in Marseilles and Bordeaux. His mother,
Victoire Oeben, was a cultured woman who
encouraged young Delacroix's love of literature
and art.
Delacroix's father died when he was 7 years
old, and his mother passed away when he was
16. He attended the Lycée Louis-le-Grand
in Paris but left school to begin his artistic
studies. Sponsored by a helpful and well-connected
uncle, he joined the studio of the painter
Pierre-Narcisse Guérin. In 1816, he enrolled
at the École des Beaux-Arts. Delacroix also
made many visits to the Louvre, where he
admired the paintings of such Old Masters
as Titian and Rubens.
Many of Delacroix's early paintings had religious
subjects. However, the first work he exhibited
at the prestigious Paris Salon, "Dante
and Virgil in Hell" (1822), took its
inspiration from literature.
For other works of the 1820s, Delacroix turned
to recent historical events. His interest
in the Greek War of Independence, and his
distress at the atrocities of that war, led
to "The Massacre at Chios" (1824)
and "Greece on the Ruins of Missolonghi"
(1826).
Even at this early stage of his career, Delacroix
was fortunate enough to find buyers for his
work. He was hailed as a central figure in
the Romantic era of French art, along with
Théodore Géricault and Antoine-Jean Gros.
Like these other painters, he portrayed subjects
fraught with extreme emotion, dramatic conflicts
and violence. Often inspired by history,
literature and music, he worked with bold
colors and free brushwork.
Delacroix continued to impress the critics
and his clients with works such as "Death
of Sardanapalus" (1827), a decadent
scene of a defeated Assyrian king preparing
to commit suicide. One of his most famous
paintings was "Liberty Leading the People,"
a response to the July Revolution of 1830,
in which a woman holding a French flag leads
a band of fighters from all social classes.
It was purchased by the French government
in 1831.
After traveling to Morocco in 1832, Delacroix
returned to Paris with new ideas for his
art. Paintings such as "The Women of
Algiers in Their Apartment" (1834) and
"Moroccan Chieftain Receiving Tribute"
(1837) defined his Romantic interest in exotic
subjects and faraway lands. He also continued
to paint scenes borrowed from the work of
his favorite authors, including Lord Byron
and Shakespeare, and he was commissioned
to paint several rooms at the Palais Bourbon
and the Palace of Versailles.
From the 1840s onward, Delacroix spent more
time in the countryside outside Paris. He
enjoyed friendships with other well-known
cultural figures such as the composer Frédéric
Chopin and the author George Sand. In addition
to his literary subjects, he produced flower
still lifes and multiple paintings titled
"The Lion Hunt."
Delacroix's last major commission was a set
of murals for the Church of Saint-Sulpice
in Paris. They include "Jacob Wrestling
with the Angel," a scene of intense
physical combat between two figures in a
dark forest. This commission occupied Delacroix
throughout the 1850s and into the following
decade. He died on August 13, 1863, in Paris.
THE ROMANTICISM
The Romanticism was a cultural movement that
started in Europe. It was somewhat of a reaction
to the Industrial Revolution which occurred
during the same time period. The movement
affected philosophical thinking, literature,
music, and art. When was the Romantic style
of art popular? The Romantic Movement started
at the end of the 1700's and reached its
peak in the early 1800s.
Eugene Delacroix - The foremost French Romantic
painter, Delacroix's paintings often depicted
scenes of drama and war. Perhaps his most
famous painting is Liberty Leading the People.
Caspar David Friedrich - A German artist
who painted sublime landscapes which often
showed the power of nature. Henry Fuseli
- An English romantic painter who liked to
paint the supernatural. His most famous painting
is The Nightmare. Thomas Gainsborough - A
Romantic portrait artist famous for his painting
Blue Boy. Francisco Goya - A Spanish artist
who became known for his dark artwork as
well as his protests of war. J.M.W. Turner
- An English landscape artist who used sweeping
brushstrokes to express the emotions and
power of nature. Interesting Facts about
Romanticism It was one of the first times
in the history of art that landscapes became
a significant subject for painting. Another
art movement took place at the same time
called Neoclassicism. Neoclassicism was very
different and focused on moral purpose, reason,
and discipline.
ROMANTICISM
IN ARTE EST LIBERTAS
MOVEMENTS-ARTISTS