Die Entführung von Rebecca

1846
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 801
Seine gesamte Karriere hindurch ließ sich Delacroix von den Romanen von Sir Walter Scott inspirieren. Dieses Gemälde zeigt eine Szene aus Ivanhoe: Rebecca, die in einer Burg gefangen gehalten wurde, wird von Sarazenensklaven im Auftrag des christlichen Ritters Bois-Guilbert davongetragen, der sie schon lange begehrte. Die gekrümmten Posen und der verdichtete Platz, welche unvermittelt von einem hohen Vordergrund über ein tiefes Tal zur Festung dahinter übergehen, sorgen für einen intensiven dramatischen Effekt. Kritiker zensierten die romantischen Eigenschaften des Gemäldes, als es auf dem Pariser Salon 1846 ausgestellt wurde, dennoch inspirierte es Baudelaire zu dem Kommentar, „Delacroix' Malerei ist wie Natur; sie besitzt eine grausame Leere."

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Titel: Die Entführung von Rebecca
  • Künstler: Eugène Delacroix, Frankreich, 1798–1863
  • Datum: 1846
  • Medium: Öl auf Leinwand
  • Dimensionen: 100,3 x 81,9 cm
  • Anerkennung: Catharine Lorillard Wolfe Collection, Wolfe Fund, 1903
  • Akzession Nr.: 03.30
  • Curatorial Department: European Paintings

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Cover Image for 6028. The Abduction of Rebecca

6028. The Abduction of Rebecca

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KEITH CHRISTIANSEN: This dramatic painting by Eugène Delacroix draws on a scene from Sir Walter Scott's novel, Ivanhoe. At the lower right is a knight, Sir Brian de Bois-Guilbert. He has sacked the castle, which is shown burning in the distance, and he has ordered his slaves to carry off the beautiful heroine Rebecca. Research Curator Asher Miller:

ASHER MILLER: This picture stands out as one of Delacroix's highest achievements in a type of painting in which he was extraordinarily gifted—the pictorial expression of the written word. Drama, action and movement are evoked by means of the instability of form. Notice the figure's blurred contours echoed in the vaporous disintegration of the burning castle. The composition unfolds slowly but rewards handsomely with patient observation. What emerges is that the visual center of the painting—Rebecca's limp body—lies at the intersection of two strong diagonals, like an X. One begins with the horse's head and continues down through the right leg of the slave at right. The other, a little harder to see at first, begins at the lower left with the drum, continues up through the horse's hindquarters and across Rebecca's waist. There is rhyme and alliteration in the repetition of forms—heads, arms, hands, legs, human and equine. While the first blooming of Romanticism is associated with the 1820s, Delacroix's example endured as a path of freedom of painterly expression for younger painters well into the century, including the Impressionists.

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