Portrait des sœurs Zénaïde et Charlotte Bonaparte

Jacques-Louis David · PD

Portrait des sœurs Zénaïde et Charlotte Bonaparte


Détails

Année
1821
Technique
huile sur toile
Type
peinture
Dimensions
129,5 × 100,6 cm

L'histoire

By 1821 the Bonapartes were scattered. David himself, once Napoleon's official painter, was living out his exile in Brussels, banned from France after the emperor's fall. That year the wife and two daughters of Joseph Bonaparte, refugees in Belgium, came to sit for him. The girls lean together holding a letter from their father, who had fled to Philadelphia after Waterloo, and their closeness is the point of the picture. Look at the sofa and you find bees stitched into it, the Napoleonic emblem kept quietly alive in a family that no longer ruled anything. The same year, far off on Saint Helena, Napoleon died. The Getty version is thought to be David's original, worked and reworked, with visible changes still readable beneath the surface.

Portrait des sœurs Zénaïde et Charlotte Bonaparte — Jacques-Louis David — MuseScope