As the movement picked up more speed, artists
from all over Europe voyaged to this foreign land, hoping to capture
something missing in their own society. This desire is evident throughout
the work produced from the period, which is mostly filled with images
of wives in their house lying about, children entertaining others and
enticing female slaves, opposite of the European society. Orientalism
paintings did not portray the hard backbreaking labor, which many people
endured, but most of the artwork was of social events, exotic and even
erotic scenes. Nothing was remotely close to the dark atmosphere of
industrial, poor, city life. The artists traveled to find a different
world, capture it through their brush and then bring it back to display.
Romanticists believed that these images would revitalize Europe's spirituality
making the society more profound and meaningful.
| The last of
the great artists of the Renaissance and the first modern;"
---Baudelaire on Delacroix |
| "What
makes men of genius, or rather, what they make, is not new ideas,
it is that idea - possessing them - that what has been said has
still not been said" |
|
-Eugene
Delacroix
|
Eugene Delacroix, made a name for himself
in the early 19th century from his inspiring and controversial paintings,
such as "Liberty Leading the People". Delacroix
rediscovered the spirit of Michelangelo and Rubens, but the masterpieces
that he created under the influence are of a very different kind. Delacroix's
artistic influence on history as one of the first artists to step into
the exotic and alien world of the Orient. His art portrayed more novel
and exciting works, straying from the conventional portraits and topographical
studies. Also, not only was his subject matter inspiring and original,
but his technique outlined what many artists latter copied as the quintessential
Orientalism technique. Delacroix was named a master of color and his
influence on Cezanne and Matisse is clear in their own work. In his
own words:
"The work of a painter who is not
a colorist is illumination rather than painting
. If onbe intends somethings
other than cameos, color is, strictly speaking, one of the foudning
principles of painting, no less so than chiaruscuro, proportion and
perspective...Color gives the appearance of life."

The
Fanatics Of Tigers
Delacroix's
fantastic ability as an artist to unite allegory and history, and
mold it all into a tumultous scene filled with mythological, historical,
literary and realistic traits. He was able to convey the turbulent
movement of brightly colored forms without disturbing the harmony
of their arrangement and their overall composition in light and space.
He applied contrasting colors with
small strokes of the brush that created a particularly vibrant effect,
invoking an exotic feel through the audience not only from the subject
matter but also from the actual painting style and colors.
~Colonialism
and Imperialism
~ The Romantic Movement
~How
the Orient Came To Be ~
~
Orientalism: An Artistic Movement
~Delacroix's Pre Orient Work~
Delacroix's
Post Orient Work ~ The Days After
Delacroix ~
~
Bibliography ~