Women of Algiers

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Eugène Delacroix. Women of Algiers in their Apartment. 1834. Oil on canvas. 180 × 229cm. Louvre.
The Women of Algiers (study). 1832, 10×13cm, Louvre (Mounay ben Sultan, left woman)
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
The Women of Algiers (study). 1832, 10×13cm, Louvre (right group)

Women of Algiers in their Apartment (French: Femmes d'Alger dans leur appartement) is an 1834 oil on canvas painting by Eugène Delacroix.

It is located in the Louvre, Paris, France. The painting was first displayed at the Salon, where it was universally admired. King Louis Philippe bought it and presented it to the Musée du Luxembourg, which at that time was a museum for contemporary art. After the death of the artist in 1874 the painting was moved to the Louvre, where it is held today.[1]

The painting is notable for its sexual connotations; it depicts Algerian concubines of a harem with a hookah, used to smoke hashish or opium. In the 19th century, the composition was known for its sexual content and its orientalism. The painting served as a source of inspiration to the later impressionists,[2] and a series of 15 paintings and numerous drawings by Pablo Picasso in 1954.[3][lower-alpha 1]

History

The French conquest of Algeria had begun in 1830; toward the end of 1831 the young diplomat Charles de Mornay was sent to the Sultan of Morocco. At that time it was common to take artists along, in order to visually document such a journey.[5] Previously, when Delacroix was studying under Pierre Guérin, he had become friends with a fellow student, Henri Duponchel, who had recently become director of scenic design at the Paris Opera (and would later become its managing director). Duponchel was in the social circle of Mornay's mistress, the actress Mademoiselle Mars, and recommended Delacroix for this assignment.[6][7]

In contrast to the chief of the diplomatic mission, who missed Parisian life and found the region and its people simply barbaric, Delacroix greatly relished the atmosphere, the colors, the objects, the people, and the architecture of this exotic world. All the same, Delacroix recorded in his notebook that although North Africa seemed surrounded by beauty, in regards to human rights and equality before the law there was much in need of improvement.[7]

Because Islam forbade naturalistic images and women were veiled in public, it was difficult for Delacroix to find female models to draw from; men predominate in his sketchbooks. As soon as he would seek to sketch from afar the women who would hang their washing out on roof terraces, they would immediately alert their husbands.[1] He was only let into Jewish households; there he would later paint the Jewish Wedding and The Jewish Bride.[8] Thus he had no luck in Morocco. He finished his sketches for this painting at the last moment in Algiers, which by then was securely held by the French, where he lingered for a few days on the way back to France. A former Christian who had converted to Islam and had collaborated with the French, is supposed to have allowed him entry into his harem.

<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

Having walked down some dingy corridor, you enter the part of the house which is reserved for [the women]. The eye is truly dazzled by the bright light, the fresh faces of the women and children amidst a mass of silk and gold. For a painter, it is a moment of fascination and strange happiness.

The harem

Bay of Tangier in Morocco, watercolor, 1832, 13×18cm

Harem scenes in paintings and books were very popular in Delacroix's time. French Orientalist painting took off with Napoleon's Egyptian campaign of 1798, the year in which Delacroix was born. A further high point followed the French enthusiasm for all things Greek during the Greek revolution in 1821-30, during which time Victor Hugo authored the volume of poems Les Orientales and Delacroix contributed two paintings, The Massacre at Chios (1824) and Greece Expiring on the Ruins of Messolonghi (1826), a forerunner of his most famous painting Liberty Leading the People (1830).

European men made the harem out to be a kind of plush private bordello; this painting has more than a little of this notion in it. The problem for European artists was that no European could obtain access to a harem. Their fantasy depictions of it were therefore obviously pure inventions and often hardly believable. (see Jean-Léon Gérôme's 1876 Pool in a harem, for example) In contrast, Delacroix could rely upon his own eyes, which lends his work a special heft, believability and authority.

Nevertheless, this painting is a mixture of observation and generally accepted European conventions. Other than the black slave, who appears to be leaving the room, the women are conspicuous in their luxurious idleness. In reality, however, the harem would be teeming with children and all kinds of activities- the women would have been in no way alone and idly awaiting the return of their man.[7] This is even more amazing as Delacroix himself noted in his journal that children were not to be overlooked. The natural and domestic setting thus becomes a bordello,[clarification needed] such as would have been easy to find in Paris.

See also

Notes

  1. Charles F. Stuckey thinks the pose of the rightmost sitting figure was the inspiration for the foreground figure in Paul Gauguin's When Will You Marry, a pose that evidently fascinated Gauguin judging by his several studies of it.[4]

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Hagen, p. 361
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Picasso: Challenging the Past National Gallery p 109-114
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Pages from the Morocco Notebook 1832, watercolor, 19×13cm. Musée du Louvre, Departement des Arts graphiques, Paris. Accessed on 13 September 2010
  6. Marrinan 2009, pp. 195–196.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Hagen, p. 358
  8. The Jewish Bride. 1832, watercolor, 29×24cm, Musée du Louvre, Paris

References

External links