Watercolors of the Acropolis: Émile Gilliéron in Athens
THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART BULLETIN | VOLUME 76 | NUMBER 4

Watercolors of the Acropolis: Émile Gilliéron in Athens

Mertens, Joan R., and Lisa Conte
2019
48 pages
52 illustrations
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In the days before color photography, hand-colored drawings and photographs were the principal means of documenting polychrome Greek art. Beginning in the late 1870s, Émile Gilliéron recorded major archaeological discoveries in Greece shortly after their excavation. This Bulletin, accompanying an exhibition of five watercolors by Gilliéron, features the Swiss draftsman’s drawings of sculptures from the Athenian Acropolis.

On view for decades after their acquisition, Gilliéron’s watercolors were eventually retired to The Met's basement, likely in the late 1940s, before the advent of modern conservation practices. Reproductions and copies fell out of fashion, and Gilliéron’s work remained in storage until 2015. In addition to telling the story of the watercolors during Gilliéron’s time, this Bulletin follows the conservators’ heroic efforts to rehabilitate these forgotten pieces. Images of the conserved watercolors, published here for the first time, provide fascinating insight into the sculptures found at the Acropolis as they appeared when they were first unearthed around the turn of the century.

Met Art in Publication

Reproduction of Two Lions Savaging a Bull, Emile Gilliéron père Swiss, Watercolor and graphite on paper, Greek
Emile Gilliéron
second quarter of the 6th century BCE

Citation

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Mertens, Joan R., and Lisa Conte. 2019. Watercolors of the Acropolis: Émile Gilliéron in Athens. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art.