Anne-Louis Girodet: The Entombment of Atala
A novella written in 1801 by the French writer Francois-René de Chateaubriand entitled
Atala
tells of the tragic love story of Chactas, a Natchez Indian and Atala
the half-caste Christian daughter of Simagan, the chief of the
Muscogees, an enemy Indian tribe, who had captured and sentenced Chactas
to death. Atala eventually frees him from captivity and they run away
together. They are helped by Père Aubry, a Christian missionary and
hermit, who takes them to his cave and gives them refuge. Atala falls
in love with Chactas, but cannot marry him as she has taken a vow of
chastity. In despair she takes poison. Père Aubry assumes that she is
merely ill, but in the presence of Chactas she reveals what she has
done, and Chactas is filled with anger until the missionary tells them
that in fact Christianity permits the renunciation of vows. They tend
her, but she dies. [summary from
my daily art display]
In the sunset, in a cave, the old hermit, Père Aubry, is supporting
the corpse of the half-caste Atala. Chactas the Indian, stricken with
grief, clings passionately to the young woman's knees. Atala, torn
between her love for Chactas and the vow she took to remain a virgin and
a Christian, committed suicide. With a crucifix clutched in her hand
and the drapery of her dress clinging to her bust, she is both pure and
sensual. After their all-night vigil, the two men will bury her in the
cave. A verse from the Book of Job is carved on the cave wall: "When it
is yet in flower, and is not plucked with the hand, it withereth before
all herbs."
The exoticism, the defense of the innocence of primitive peoples and the
religious sentiment that characterized the novel are all transposed
into the picture. Girodet has not merely illustrated a single scene from
Chateaubriand's novel, he has synthesized several passages. He has also
forsaken the antique subjects dear to his master, David, for new
subject matter: for Girodet, unlike David, painting no longer has a
moral or political function. [above passages from
the Louvre web site]