French painter, whose
work exemplified 19th-century Romanticism, and
whose influence extended to the Impressionists, hence the reason for including
him here.
Delacroix was born on April 26, 1798,
at Charenton-Saint Maurice, and he studied under the French painter Pierre Guérin.
He was trained in the formal Neo-Classical style of the French painter Jacques-Louis
David, but he was strongly influenced by the more colourful, opulent style of
such earlier masters as Peter Paul Rubens and Paolo Veronese. He also absorbed
the spirit of his contemporary Théodore Géricault, whose early works exemplify
the violent action, love of liberty, and budding Romanticism of the turbulent
post-Napoleonic period.
  
Delacroix's artistic career began
in 1822, when his first painting, The Barque of Dante (1822, Louvre,
Paris), was accepted by the Paris Salon. He achieved popular success in 1824
with Massacre at Chios (Louvre),
which portrays the then topical and heroic subject of the Greek struggle for
independence. On a trip to England in 1825, he studied the work of English painters
including J.M.W.Turner.
The influence of Richard Parkes Bonington, who painted in bright, jewel-like
colours, is evident in Delacroix's subsequent works, such as Death
of Sardanapalus (1827, Louvre). A fully fledged work of his mature style,
it is a lavish, violent, colourful canvas in which women, slaves, animals, jewels,
and fabrics are combined in a swirling, almost delirious composition. The subject
of the painting is the decision made by an ancient king to have his possessions
(including his women) destroyed before he kills himself.
Delacroix's most overtly Romantic
and perhaps most influential work is Liberty
Leading the People (1830, Louvre), a semi
allegorical glorification of the idea of liberty. This painting confirmed the
clear division between the Romantic style of painting, which emphasized colour
and spirit, and the concurrent Neo-Classical style (in the development of which
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres was a leading figure), which emphasized line and
cool detachment.
Delacroix remained the dominant French
Romantic painter throughout his life. A trip to North Africa in 1832 provided
subjects for more than 100 sensuous canvases. In addition, he received many
government commissions for murals and ceiling paintings. Many of his late works,
especially animal pictures, hunt scenes, and marine subjects, are superb, but
others exhibit a certain dryness of execution and lack of inspiration. He also
illustrated various works of William Shakespeare, Sir Walter Scott, and Goethe.
Delacroix's technique, in which
he applied contrasting colours with small strokes of the brush, creating a particularly
vibrant effect, was an important influence on the Impressionists. He is also
well known for his Journals, which display considerable literary talent
and express his views on art, politics, and life. Delacroix died in Paris on
August 13, 1863. Back to
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“You are the Victor Hugo of painting.”
“No, you are wrong, Monsieur, I am a pure classicist.”
—Delacroix to an admirer, 1840
Delacroix Reconsidered
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MUSÉE NATIONAL EUGENE DELACROIX

6, rue de Furstenberg, Paris 6e.
Phone number : 01 44 41 86 50.
Schedule : 9h45-17h15, closed on Tuesdays.
The last home and studio of Delacroix (1798-1863). Works and documents by the
artist and his relations.
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