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Delacroix: The Late Work

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1998 marks the bicentennial of the birth of the great French romantic painter Eugene Delacroix (1798-1863).

A pivotal figure in the history of 19th-century art, Delacroix stands both at the culmination of the great painterly tradition of Titian, Veronese, Rubens and Rembrandt and at the beginning of something quite new and modern, as witnessed by the reverence given to him by such artists as Renoir, Cezanne, Picasso and Matisse, who were profoundly influenced by his work.

Accompanying an international exhibition that begins in Paris and travels to Philadelphia Museum of Art in September 1998, this book presents subjects ranging from saints and warriors to mythical goddesses, from Arab hunting scenes and tigers to sumptuous bouquets of flowers.

Delacroix's late work reveals a deepening spiritual intensity that has more to do with aesthetic reflection and recollection than with the expansive narrative that characterized his grand public commissions.

Focusing on the artist's last works allows further insight into this most remarkable and protean figure in the history of art.

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Product Details
Thames & Hudson Ltd
0500092753 / 9780500092750
Hardback
759.4
05/10/1998
United Kingdom
English
408p. : ill. (some col.)
31 cm
general /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More
Published to mark the bicentennial of the birth of Delacroix, and to accompany an international exhibition in Paris and the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 1998
Published to mark the bicentennial of the birth of Delacroix, and to accompany an international exhibition in Paris and the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 1998 ACVC Art & design styles: Romanticism, AFC Painting & paintings, AGB Individual artists, art monographs, GBCR Bibliographies, catalogues