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Prayer in the Mosque

by 1874
Not on view
Gérôme’s title supplies just enough information to identify the subject as prayer in a mosque, a Muslim house of worship, announcing a world that the artist presumed was unfamiliar to fellow Europeans. The scene is rendered with impressive precision, imbuing the picture with a sense of authenticity: note the scuffs in the red velvet garments worn by the man in the foreground. However, Gérôme brought together elements that, in combination, are not accurate to any given place, time, or custom. He based the interior on the ʿAmr ibn al-ʿAs Mosque in Cairo, first constructed about 642 CE, but he probably did not witness a service there.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Prayer in the Mosque
  • Artist: Jean-Léon Gérôme (French, Vesoul 1824–1904 Paris)
  • Date: by 1874
  • Medium: Oil on canvas
  • Dimensions: 35 x 29 1/2 in. (88.9 x 74.9 cm)
  • Classification: Paintings
  • Credit Line: Catharine Lorillard Wolfe Collection, Bequest of Catharine Lorillard Wolfe, 1887
  • Object Number: 87.15.130
  • Curatorial Department: European Paintings

Audio

Cover Image for 6032. Prayer in the Mosque

6032. Prayer in the Mosque

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NARRATOR—This painting represents worshipers in the Mosque of Amir in Cairo, which the artist Jean-Leon Gérôme had visited in 1867. Like virtually all of Gérôme's works, this painting is distinguished by its smooth execution and photographic exactness of detail. Gérôme became one of the most virulent critics of the loose, sketchy technique of the Impressionists, and he often worked from photographs that he had taken during his various expeditions.

European colonialist expansion into North Africa and the Middle East was one of the defining phenomena of the nineteenth century. In France, this movement began with Napoleon's military incursions into Egypt and Palestine, and it was accompanied by an ever-increasing fascination with all things Oriental. Gérôme was one of the most celebrated of the Orientalist painters. After establishing a reputation in Paris as a specialist in archaeologically exacting scenes from classical antiquity, he made the first of many trips to the East in the mid-1850s. Thereafter he produced a whole series of paintings documenting the people and places he encountered in his travels.

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