Welcome
Search: Advanced ImageBase Search
FAMSF imagebase search results

Search Results

 

Image 1 of 1

 

Ferdinand-Victor-EugËne Delacroix, artist
French, 1798 - 1863
Macbeth consultant les sorciËres (Macbeth Consults the Witches/ Macbeth. Toil and Trouble...), 1825
lithograph
50 x 36.4 cm (sheet)
Museum Purchase, Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts Endowment Fund 1995.42

Zoom this image Open Zoom Window

printer, Bertauts

Artist Credit: all

Artist Biography: Born to Victorie Delacroix and the diplomat and statesman Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand Perigord. His early education was at the Lycee Imperial. In 1816 he began to study painting under Pierre Guerin at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, where he received a formal classical training in the manner of David. Delacroix's eclectic interests extended beyond the academic study of works by Michelangelo, Rubens, Veronese, and Tintoretto at the Louvre, to being influenced by the romantic poets of his time like Byron, as well as Dante, Shakespeare, medieval history, and the Orient. His debut at the Salon of 1822 with the painting The Bark of Danle (Paris, Musee du Louvre) established Delacroix as one of the leading artists of French romanticism. He traveled to England in 1825 with his close friend Richard Parkes Bonington to study the use of color in the paintings of such artists as Sir Thomas Lawrence, William Etty, and Sir David Wilkie. During his stay he also filled many sketchbooks with studies of antiquities and animals. In 1832 he accompanied the Comte de Mornay to Morocco, Algiers, and southern Spain, creating many vividly colored works of North Africa and its exotic peoples. ~~Reference: Delteil, Loys. Le Peintre graveur illustrÈ, Ingres & Delacroix, vol. 3( Paris: 1908)~

Related Keywords
Trouble and Toil Witches the Consults sorcières les consultant Macbeth Fund Endowment Arts Graphic Achenbach Purchase Museum Europe France Print lithograph Ferdinand Victor Eugène Delacroix French Bertauts 6233305135030024 A056697 1995.42 AFGA

   Copyright © 2006 Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco