Paris - França
Museu do Louvre Paris
OST - 621x979 - 1807
The Coronation
of Napoleon (French: Le
Sacre de Napoléon) is a painting completed in 1807 by Jacques-Louis
David, the official painter of Napoleon, depicting
the coronation
of Napoleon I at Notre-Dame
de Paris. The painting has imposing dimensions, as it is almost 10
metres (33 ft) wide by a little over 6 metres (20 ft) tall. The work
is held in the Louvre in
Paris.
The work was
commissioned by Napoleon orally in September 1804,
and Jacques-Louis David started
work on it on 21 December 1805 in the former chapel of the College of Cluny,
near the Sorbonne, which served as a workshop. Assisted by his
student Georges Rouget, he put the
finishing touches in January 1808.
From 7
February to 21 March 1808, the work was exhibited at the Salon annual painting
display in 1808, and it was presented to the Salon decennial prize competition
in 1810. The painting remained the property of David until 1819, when it was
transferred to the Royal Museums, where it was stored in the reserves until
1837. Then, it was installed in the Chamber Sacre of the museum of the
historical Palace of Versailles on the orders of King Louis-Philippe. In
1889, the painting was transferred to the Louvre from Versailles.
David was
commissioned by American entrepreneurs to paint a full size replica, in 1808,
immediately after the release of the original. He began work that year,
painting it from memory, but didn't finish until 1822, during his exile
in Brussels. The replica was eventually returned to France in
1947, to the original's place in the Palace of Versailles.
The painting
is a subject of The Public Viewing David's 'Coronation' at the Louvre', a
painting by Louis-Léopold Boilly done
in 1810, currently housed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
The
composition is organised around several axes, and incorporates the rules of neoclassicism. One axis is
that which passes through the cross and has a vertical orientation. A diagonal
line runs from the pope to
the empress. All eyes are
turned towards Napoleon, who is the center of the composition.
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