CHASSÉRIAU, Théodore - b. 1819 Sainte-Barbe de Samana, d. 1856 Paris - WGA

CHASSÉRIAU, Théodore

(b. 1819 Sainte-Barbe de Samana, d. 1856 Paris)

French painter and printmaker. In 1822 Chassériau moved with his family to Paris, where he received a bourgeois upbringing under the supervision of an older brother. A precociously gifted draughtsman, he entered Ingres’s studio at the age of 11 and remained there until Ingres left to head the Académie de France in Rome in 1834. He made his Salon début in 1836 with several portraits and religious subjects, including Cain Accursed (Paris, private collection), for which he received a third-class medal. Among his many submissions in subsequent years were Susanna Bathing (1839, exhibited Salon 1839; Paris, Louvre), a Marine Venus (1838; exhibited Salon 1839; Paris, Louvre) and the Toilet of Esther (1841, exhibited Salon 1842; Paris, Louvre); these three paintings of nude female figures combine an idealization derived from Ingres with a sensuality characteristic of Chassériau.

In the 1840s he conceived an admiration for Delacroix and attempted, with considerable success, to combine Ingres’s classical linear grace with Delacroix’s Romantic colour. His chief work was the decoration of the Cour des Comptes in the Palais d’Orsay, Paris, with allegorical scenes of Peace and War (1844-48), but these were almost completely destroyed by fire. There are other examples of his decorative work, however, in various churches in Paris. Chassériau was also an outstanding portraitist and painted nudes and North African scenes (he made a visit there in 1846).

Andromeda and the Nereids
Andromeda and the Nereids by

Andromeda and the Nereids

Andromeda in Greek mythology, princess of Ethiopia, daughter of King Cepheus, king of Ethiopia, and Cassiopeia. According to most legends Cassiopeia angered Poseidon by saying that Andromeda (or possibly Cassiopeia herself) was more beautiful than the nereids. Poseidon sent a sea monster to prey upon the country; he could be appeased only by the sacrifice of the king’s daughter. Andromeda in sacrifice was chained to a rock by the sea; but she was rescued by Perseus, who killed the monster and later married her. Cassiopeia, Cepheus, and Andromeda were all set among the stars as constellations.

The painting was one of Chass�riau’s masterpieces exhibited at the Salon of 1841.

Desdemona Retiring to her Bed
Desdemona Retiring to her Bed by

Desdemona Retiring to her Bed

The painting takes its themes from Shakespeare, borrowing the composition that Chass�riau established in the eighth of the Othello prints that he engraved in 1844. Unfairly accused of faithlessness by her husband, the Moor Othello, a general in the service of the Venetian Republic, Desdemona has a premonition of her imminent death.

Medea about to Kill her Children
Medea about to Kill her Children by

Medea about to Kill her Children

This painting was executed after a canvas by Delacroix (now in the Mus�e de Lille).

Orientalist Interior: Nude in a Harem
Orientalist Interior: Nude in a Harem by

Orientalist Interior: Nude in a Harem

Women at their toilettes had been a popular theme since the Renaissance, and orientalist scenes, usually in Turkish costume, had circulated since that time. These scenes had usually been boudoir pictures, however, private paintings and therefore private subjects. In the nineteenth century these subjects enter more frequently into the public sphere. Views of the (wholly invented) Harem offered a sexually exoticized, and some argue inherently politicised, new subject in Orientalism, a new genre.

Chass�riau painted three Harem interiors after his trip to North Africa, the first dated 1849, and the last 1854; the painting here is dated between these two dates.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 8 minutes):

Gioacchino Rossini: L’Italiana in Algeri, overture

Peace
Peace by

Peace

This is a from the decoration of the building of the Cour des Comptes, burnt in 1871.

Reverend Father Dominique Lacordaire
Reverend Father Dominique Lacordaire by

Reverend Father Dominique Lacordaire

The painting portraying the Reverend Father Dominique Lacordaire of the Order of the Preaching Friars (1802-1861), one of Chass�riau’s masterpieces, was exhibited at the Salon of 1841.

Sappho Leaping into the Sea from the Leucadian Promontory
Sappho Leaping into the Sea from the Leucadian Promontory by

Sappho Leaping into the Sea from the Leucadian Promontory

This watercolour drew its inspiration from the Nouvelles M�ditations Po�tiques Alphonse Lamartine, which follows the pathetic version of Sappho’s death told the first time in Ovid’s Heroides.

Self-Portrait
Self-Portrait by
The Artist's Sisters
The Artist's Sisters by

The Artist's Sisters

The painting portrays Marie-Antoinette, called Ad�le (1810-1869), and Genevi�ve, called Aline (1822-1871), sisters of the painter.

The Tepidarium
The Tepidarium by
The Tepidarium (detail)
The Tepidarium (detail) by

The Tepidarium (detail)

The Toilet of Esther
The Toilet of Esther by

The Toilet of Esther

Esther, a young Jewess chosen by the Persian king Ahasuerus to be his wife, prepares herself to go to him to plead that he save the Jews of the kingdom whom his grand vizier intends to massacre.

The biblical theme serves only a pretext for painting a colourful Oriental scene. In this work Chass�rieau seeks the synthesis between a typical Ingres-style theme and the kind of handling used by Delacroix. Hence his Esther resembles oriental women with the curves and arabesques that his teacher Ingres would have preferred, whereas the fabrics and precious articles are treated in the manner of Delacroix.

The painting was one of Chass�riau’s masterpieces exhibited at the Salon of 1842.

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