Louis-Léopold Boilly: The Public Viewing David’s "Coronation" at the Louvre
Another treasure from Boilly. I really like paintings of paintings - particularly when they place the artwork in a social context, as this one does.
Here the public views David's enormous painting of Napoleon crowning Empress Josephine, which was exhibited in the Louvre on three separate occasions in 1808–10. Its display was widely reported in the newspapers. A man in military garb reads the description to enable viewers to identify the various figures in David's picture, while Boilly scattered further portraits including his own, at far right, among the spectators. One of Boilly's most ambitious compositions, painted in 1810 it was exhibited at the Galerie Lebrun, Paris, in 1826, in the first posthumous retrospective of works by David and his school. [This is the Metropolitan Museum's gallery label for this painting.]
Here
the public views David's enormous painting of Napoleon crowning Empress
Josephine, which was exhibited in the Louvre on three separate
occasions in 1808–10. Its display was widely reported in the newspapers.
A man in military garb reads the description to enable viewers to
identify the various figures in David's picture, while Boilly scattered
further portraits including his own, at far right, among the spectators.
One of Boilly's most ambitious compositions, painted in 1810 it was
exhibited at the Galerie Lebrun, Paris, in 1826, in the first posthumous
retrospective of works by David and his school. - See more at:
http://www2.metmuseum.org/collections/search-the-collections/438099#sthash.CwNw4Nv2.dpuf
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