A Favorita do Emir (La Favorite d'Émir) - Jean-Joseph Benjamin-Constant
National Gallery Washington D.C. Estados Unidos
OST - 142x220 - 1879
Jean-Joseph
Benjamin-Constant was among the preeminent painters of orientalist subjects in
France in the latter decades of the 19th century. In 1859, he enrolled at the
École des Beaux-Arts in Toulouse where he remained until 1866 when a municipal
scholarship allowed him to continue his artistic training in Paris. In 1871,
Benjamin-Constant embarked upon an extended sojourn, spending the better part
of two years abroad, traveling first through Moorish Spain before joining
Charles Joseph Tissot, French plenipotentiary to Morocco. During the artist's
16-month stay he collected artifacts and made sketches and studies that would
provide the basis for his numerous compositions in the years to come.
By the
mid-1870s, Benjamin-Constant had established a reputation as painter of
orientalist subjects, ranging from grim and occasionally violent genre scenes,
to opulent and visually alluring harem scenes. The Favorite of the Emir,
painted in 1879, is typical of the latter category. Like many of his
contemporaries, Benjamin-Constant was an admirer of Eugéne Delacroix.
Benjamin-Constant's first teacher, Jules Garipuy, had been a student of
Delacroix. In this painting, Delacroix's influence is evident not only in the
subject matter but also in the lush palette and painterly surface.
Benjamin-Constant puts his own distinctive stamp upon the work, however. This
is most notable in the spatial construction of the painting and the sharp
contrast he established between the rich patterning of the fabrics displayed in
the foreground and the flat planes of vivid color in the background.
Benjamin-Constant
took great delight in the juxtaposition of the richly embroidered fabric
against the smooth pale flesh of the women's arms and chests and the subtle
variations between the two women. On the right, the darkhaired woman gazes
directly at the viewer while her companion is shown fully in repose, her body
relaxed and her eyes closed as if lulled to sleep by the musician seated behind
her. The paleness of her skin and her rich auburn hair suggest that she is not
a native. Playing upon contemporary fantasies of European beauties who have
been spirited away to lead the pampered, cloistered life of a courtesan in a
harem—the inclusion of the man standing guard in the background at the far
right of the composition serves as a reminder of the locale—Benjamin-Constant
introduced an erotic charge into this exotic and visually seductive painting.
This painting, the first by the artist to enter the Gallery's collection, is a
gift of the United States Naval Academy Museum.
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