Napoleon Bonaparte in the Uniform of the First Consul Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres (1780-1867)
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres – Napoleon Bonaparte in the Uniform of the First Consul
Edit attribution
Download full size: 2665×4202 px (2,7 Mb)
Painter: Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres
Location: Museum of Fine Arts, Liege (Musée des beaux-arts).
Ingres was neither a revolutionary, a conservative, nor a romantic. Most of all he was interested in form. Not perfect form, but related to the peculiarity of the objects depicted. "Consul Napoleon" is the first Napoleonic portrait by Ingres. The second portrait was painted two years later, when Napoleon was already emperor. We see a portrait of a young man in a red velvet uniform. He is standing full-length next to the table, with his right hand on a scroll.
Description of Jean Auguste Engres’ painting "Consul Napoleon
Ingres was neither a revolutionary, a conservative, nor a romantic. Most of all he was interested in form. Not perfect form, but related to the peculiarity of the objects depicted.
"Consul Napoleon" is the first Napoleonic portrait by Ingres.
The second portrait was painted two years later, when Napoleon was already emperor.
We see a portrait of a young man in a red velvet uniform. He is standing full-length next to the table, with his right hand on a scroll. Even then the famous Napoleonic gesture was born - his left hand is hidden behind the edge of the uniform. In the background are dark draperies and curtains chosen to match, which further emphasize the solemnity of the moment. From the window you can see the castle.
Engres was the first to reduce art to a peculiar vision of the artist. Although his canvases have a classical orientation, his work was of great interest to artists of subsequent generations of Impressionists, Post-Impressionists, and even Pablo Picasso himself.
Napoleon was of interest to Ingres not so much as a great conqueror, but as a historical figure capable of setting goals and achieving them. In the artist’s mind, Bonaparte is a hero of France.
Engres has never been a painter-battalist. That is why the painting does not depict General Napoleon, a man with a unique military career who had already gone through a number of famous campaigns, but the politician Napoleon, who completely changed the political life of the country. This can be seen in the consul’s civilian clothes and in his facial expressions as conveyed by the artist.
To some extent, the painting was unsuccessful. Engres was going to send the portrait to an exhibition, but by then Napoleon had assumed the imperial title. Accordingly, the painting, which depicted him as a consul, lost relevance.
Today, "Portrait of the Consul" is considered one of the best depictions of the young Napoleon.
Кому понравилось
Пожалуйста, подождите
На эту операцию может потребоваться несколько секунд.
Информация появится в новом окне,
если открытие новых окон не запрещено в настройках вашего браузера.
You need to login
Для работы с коллекциями – пожалуйста, войдите в аккаунт (open in new window).
You cannot comment Why?
The picture has something of this: people, wear, music, man, woman, portrait, performance, costume, fame, dress, pants, jewelry, outfit, festival.
Perhaps it’s a painting of a man in an orange outfit standing in front of a table with a black tablecloth on it and a chair.