
Jean-Léon Gérôme · PD
Бонапарт перед сфинксом
Сведения
История
Gérôme worked this up in 1867, with the centenary of Napoleon's birth two years off and France in the mood to remember him. He knew Egypt firsthand, having traveled there several times since the 1850s, so the light and the sand carry real weight. He puts young General Bonaparte alone on horseback in the desert, halted in front of the Great Sphinx, his army a thin line far behind him. When Gérôme showed it, he called it simply Oedipus, nudging you to read the young commander as the Greek hero who answered the monster's riddle and saved a city. The Sphinx keeps its face turned away, so the two of them seem locked in a private standoff. That framing stuck. For decades after, cartoonists borrowed the same pose whenever they wanted to size up a man's ambition against something far older than he was.




