Ingres' La Grand Odalisque
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, La Grande Odalisque, 1814, Oil on canvas,
36" x 63" (91 x 162 cm),
(Musée du Louvre, Paris)
Ingres and La Grande Odalisque
It would be easy to characterize Ingres as a consistent defender of the
Neo-Classical style from his time in David's studio into the middle of
the 19th century. Remember that the Apotheosis of Homer dates to 1827.
But the truth is more interesting than that.
Ingres actually returned
to Neo-Classicism after having rejected the lessons of his teacher,
David, and after having laid the foundation for the emotive
expressiveness of Romanticism, the new style of Gericault and the young
Delacroix that Ingres would eventually defend against. Ingres' early
Romantic tendencies can be seen most famously in his painting, La Grande
Odalisque of 1814.
Here
a languid nude is set in a sumptuous interior. At first glance this
nude seems to follow in the tradition of the Great Venetian masters,
see for instance, Titian's Venus of Urbino of 1538. But upon closer examination, it becomes clear that this is
no classical setting.
Instead, Ingres has created a cool aloof
eroticism accentuated by its exotic context. The peacock fan, the
turban, the enormous pearls, the hookah (a pipe for hashish or perhaps
opium), and of course, the title of the painting, all refer us to the
French conception of the Orient. Careful—the word "Orient" does not
refer here to the Far East so much as the Near East or even North
Africa.
In the mind of an early 19th century French male viewer, the
sort of person for whom this image was made, the odalisque would have
conjured up not just a harem slave, itself a misconception, but a set
of fears and desires linked to the long history of aggression between
Christian Europe and Islamic Asia. Indeed, Ingres' porcelain sexuality
is made acceptable even to an increasingly prudish French culture
because of the subject's distance.
Where, for instance, the Renaissance
painter Titan had veiled his eroticism in myth, Ingres covered his
object of desire in a misty exoticism. Some art historians have
suggested that colonial politics also played a role. France was at this
time expanding its African and Near Eastern possessions, often
brutally. Might the myth of the barbarian have served the French who
could then claim a moral imperative? By the way, has anyone noticed
anything "wrong" with the figure's anatomy?
Where and When

1814
Check this out as well
Extra vertebrae in Ingres' La Grande Odalisque, Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine
Orientalism at the Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History, Metropolitan Museum of Art



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