The Sisters Zénaïde and Charlotte Bonaparte
The Sisters Zénaïde and Charlotte Bonaparte | |
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Artist | Jacques-Louis David |
Year | 1821 |
Type | Oil on canvas, portrait painting |
Dimensions | 129.5 cm × 100.6 cm (50.98 in × 39.60 in) |
Location | Getty Museum, Los Angeles |
The Sisters Zénaïde and Charlotte Bonaparte is an 1821 portrait painting by the French artist Jacques-Louis David.[1] It is a dual portrait of Charlotte Bonaparte and Zénaïde Bonaparte, the daughters of the former King of Spain Joseph Bonaparte and his wife Julie Clary.[2] They were the nieces of the deposed French Emperor Napoleon. It was painted when they were living in Brussels and they are shown reading a letter from their father in Philadelphia where he had gone after the Battle of Waterloo. It was commissioned by Joseph and shipped to his house in the United States an displayed at the 1823 exhibition Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.[3]
David, a major figure in French painting during the Napoleonic era, had gone into exile in Brussels after the Restoration of the Monarchy in France. He was on friendly terms with the sisters and taught Charlotte drawing.[4] The composition reflects the Empire Style and features a red velvet couch featuring golden bees, the emblem of the Bonaparte dynasty. Today the painting is in the collection of the Getty Museum in Los Angeles, having been acquired in 1986[5]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Bibliography
[edit]- Bordes, Phillipe. Jacques-Louis David: Empire to Exile. Yale University Press, 2007.
- Fredericksen, Burton B. Masterpieces of Painting in the J. Paul Getty Museum: Second Edition. Getty Publications, 1988.
- Stroud, Patricia Tyson. The Man Who Had Been King: The American Exile of Napoleon's Brother Joseph. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014.