Templo de Al Khazneh, Petra, Jordânia (El Khasne Petra) - Frederic Edwin Church
Petra - Jordânia
Olana Historic Site, Hudson, Estados Unidos
OST - 153x127 - 1874
El Khasné, Petra is an 1874 oil painting by American
landscape artist Frederic Edwin Church. It is a depiction
of the Al-Khazneh temple in the historical city of Petra, Jordan,
which Church visited during an extended trip to the Middle East and Europe in
1867 and 1868. He visited the tomb with American missionary D. Stuart Dodge in February 1868 and
made sketches there. The painting is located at Olana State Historic Site, the preserved
homestead where Church lived in his later years. It may be the last canvas that
he painted entirely with his right hand, owing to worsening rheumatoid
arthritis.
The mausoleum is carved out of sandstone and at the time was
only approachable by the depicted passageway, called the Siq. Church composed
the painting as he would have first glimpsed the temple; he frames it with the
dark rock in a manner that is unconventional for its time. Church found the
site "astonishing" and wrote in his diary of a "beautiful temple
... shining as if by its own internal light", which he described as a
salmon color. The composition is unlike those of the paintings that had made
Church famous; there is no panoramic view, no conveyance of a "greater
whole", and little sense of depth. The narrow passage has a stream
running through it, and the two Bedouin figures
at left, barely discernible, provide a sense of scale.
Church set out for Petra from Jerusalem with a large entourage
of 21 men who provided meals and protection, and got on well with them. The area
was popular with artists but considered dangerous; Church reported that an
artist had been shot before him. Taking sketches of sacred locales was not
necessarily seen as an innocent activity. As Church wrote:
“We went straight to the famous Khasné, first as being the best
of all the temples at Petra—I saw it, was astonished and then deliberately
opened my three legged stool, sat upon it, opened my sketchbook, spread out the
paper, sharpened the pencil, took a square look at the Temple and an askant one
at the Bedawins and made my first line—they made no motion and after a few
rapid touches, I felt that the mystery was solved in my favor—I could sketch
without let or hindrance, a freedom unaccorded before.”
The painting was a gift to Church's wife. He designed it, along
with its frame, for the sitting room in which it still hangs at the Olana site.
Its salmon color is reflected in the interior decoration. It was shown at the
National Academy in 1874.

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