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Portrait of Napoleon III (Flandrin)

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This article is about the portrait of Napoleon III by Jean-Hippolyte Flandrin. For other uses, see Portrait of Napoleon III. Painting by Hippolyte Flandrin
Portrait of Napoleon III
ArtistHippolyte Flandrin
Year1861
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions212 cm × 147 cm (83 in × 58 in)
LocationMusée de l'Histoire de France, Paris

Portrait of Napoleon III (initially called in French Portrait de S. M. l'Empereur, 'Portrait of His Majesty the Emperor') is an oil painting of 1861 by the French painter Hippolyte Flandrin, depicting France's Emperor Napoleon III standing in his Grand Cabinet. It is held at the Musée de l'Histoire de France, in Paris. At its first presentation in the Universal Exhibition in 1862, the painting attracted praise for its true-to-life representation of Napoleon III.

In 1853, the newly-appointed Emperor of the French Napoleon III commissioned Jean-Hippolyte Flandrin, a pupil of Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres and specialized painter of religious figures, to work on a standing portrait of him. The Emperor, displeased by Flandrin's depiction of him, cancelled the commission, and preferred Franz Xaver Winterhalter's painting of him in his coronation robes, with its more glorified and distinguished idealization. Reinstated in 1861, Flandrin recommenced work on his portrait, incentivized by a retrospective commission of 20,000 francs.

According to Karine Huguenaud, Flandrin's portrait is a "penetrating psychological study of the emperor", extraordinarily capturing Napoleon III's "distant and inscrutable look". Standing in his Général de Division uniform, Napoleon III is depicted in the Grand Cabinet at the Tuileries Palace amidst pointed attributes: a marble bust of Napoleon Bonaparte, crowned with laurel, over his right shoulder and a Napoleonic eagle in the background. On his desk are French maps and a copy of Julius Caesar's Commentarii de Bello Gallico. "This", exulted writer Théophile Gautier, "is without doubt the first 'real' portrait which we have of Your Majesty", referring to the realistic approach in Flandrin's work.

The Portrait of Napoleon III was first shown at the 1862 Universal Exhibition in London, on donation from the Emperor. Flandrin's painting was a standout wherever it was exhibited: the Universal Exhibition, Paris Salon (1863), at the Paris Ecole des Beaux-Arts (1864), and the Paris Exposition universelle (1867). The critics were positive: the sincerity of the subject exercised both intimacy and fascination, winning favor over Winhalter's coronation portrait. By 1884, Flandrin's painting was returned to the French government and displayed in the Palace of Versailles.

References

  1. "Portrait de S. M. l'Empereur". Database of the artistic exhibitions called "Salons", made by the Musée d'Orsay (in French). Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  2. ^ "Napoleon III, Emperor of the French". Foundation Napoleon. Retrieved October 2, 2017.
  3. ^ Huguenaud, Karine. "Standing Portrait of Napoleon III". Foundation Napoleon. Retrieved October 2, 2017.
  4. Jouineau, André; Mongin, Jean-Marie (2018). "L'Armée française de la guerre franco-prussienne. 1870–1871, des Cent-Gardes aux Moblots". SOLDAT (in French) (7). Heimdal: 8.
  5. Gay, Peter (1993). The Cultivation of Hatred. Norton Company. p. 241. ISBN 9780393033984.
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