A Travessia do Mar Vermelho (The Crossing of the Red Sea) - Nicolas Poussin
National Gallery of Victoria Melbourne
OST - 155x215 - 1633-1634
The Crossing of the Red Sea is a
painting by Nicolas Poussin, produced
between 1633 and 1634. It depicts the crossing of the Red Sea by
the Israelites, from chapter 14 of the book of Exodus. It was made as part of a pair of paintings
(the other being The Adoration of the Golden
Calf) commissioned by Amadeo dal Pozzo, Marchese di Voghera
of Turin, a cousin to Cassiano dal Pozzo,
Poussin's main sponsor in Rome. By 1685 the pair had passed to the Chevalier de
Lorraine and in 1710 they were bought by Benigne de Ragois de Bretonvillers.
In 1741 the pair was bought from Samuel
by Sir Jacob
Bouverie, whose son William became
the first Earl of Radnor. The
Earls of Radnor owned the pair from then until 1945, when it was split for the
first time and The Adoration of
the Golden Calf was sold to the National Gallery in London. The Crossing of the Red Sea was acquired by Kenneth Clark for the National Gallery of Victoria in
1948 using money from the Felton Bequest, a fund originally left to
the gallery in 1904 by the industrialist Alfred Felton. In 2011 it underwent a major conservation
project.


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