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Demosthenes on the Seashore

Demosthenes on the Seashore

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Andromeda

Andromeda

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Angelica and the wounded Medoro

Angelica and the wounded Medoro

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Anna teaches Maria to read

Anna teaches Maria to read

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Après le naufrage

Après le naufrage

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Arab horseman attacked by a lion

Arab horseman attacked by a lion

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Arab rider

Arab rider

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Arabs skirmishing in the mountains

Arabs skirmishing in the mountains

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Arabs traveling

Arabs traveling

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A Turk surrenders to a Greek horseman

A Turk surrenders to a Greek horseman

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Bacchus and Ariadne

Bacchus and Ariadne

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Basket of flowers

Basket of flowers

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Flower still life

Flower still life

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Botzaris surprises the Turkish camp and falls fatally wounded

Botzaris surprises the Turkish camp and falls fatally wounded

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Christ on the Sea of Galilee

Christ on the Sea of Galilee

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Christopher Columbus and his son at La Rábida

Christopher Columbus and his son at La Rábida

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Christ on the cross

Christ on the cross

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Christ on the Mount of Olives

Christ on the Mount of Olives

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Christ on the Sea of Galilee

Christ on the Sea of Galilee

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Christ in the storm on the Sea of Galilee

Christ in the storm on the Sea of Galilee

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Clorinde frees Olindo and Sophronia

Clorinde frees Olindo and Sophronia

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Confrontation of knights in the countryside

Confrontation of knights in the countryside

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Dante and Virgil in hell

Dante and Virgil in hell

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The prisoner of Chillon

The prisoner of Chillon

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Kunstdrucke von Eugène Delacroix

Collection: Art prints by Eugène Delacroix

Eugène Delacroix is one of the central figures of 19th century French painting, but less as a unified role model than as an artist whose work clearly demonstrates the tensions, transitions and unanswered questions of the era. His significance lies not in the establishment of a uniform style or program, but in the consistency with which he understood painting as a means of expressing subjective experience, historical imagination and formal experimentation - often contradictory, often controversial and always in dialogue with tradition and the present.

Born near Paris in 1798, Delacroix received a classical education, which familiarized him early on with academic history painting, antique models and Renaissance painting. At the same time, he developed a strong interest in color as an independent carrier of meaning and in pictorial themes that defied rational order and moral unambiguity. His early works already show this ambivalence: they move between literary inspiration, dramatic exaggeration and a pictorial language that deliberately dispenses with clarity and formal calm. Delacroix's proximity to Romantic literature - especially Byron and Shakespeare - shaped his understanding of painting as an emotional and psychological medium.

His work is characterized less by a rejection of tradition than by its productive transformation. Delacroix remained committed to the large-format history painting, but he increasingly dissolved its classical order in favor of moving compositions, strong contrasts of light and dark and a free brushwork that was often left visible. For him, color does not primarily serve to describe things, but rather to heighten tension and atmosphere. Contemporaries therefore accused him of ambiguity, formal restlessness or a lack of drawing - accusations that Delacroix consciously accepted without programmatically exaggerating them.

His trip to North Africa in 1832 marked an important turning point, but less as an exotic revelation than as an expansion of his visual repertoire. The studies he made there show a precise, often sober observational interest in light, clothing, architecture and everyday gestures. In his later paintings, however, these impressions were greatly transformed: Delacroix's Oriental paintings are not ethnographic documents, but constructed pictorial spaces in which memory, imagination and painterly freedom merge. It is precisely this distance from documentary accuracy that makes them both fascinating and problematic.

Delacroix's relationship with the official art world remained ambivalent. He exhibited regularly at the Paris Salon and received state commissions, but was repeatedly at the center of fierce criticism. His diaries bear witness to a pronounced self-confidence, but also to doubts, health problems and the awareness that he was stylistically caught between two camps. He was neither a consistent revolutionary nor a pure academic, but an artist who worked within existing structures at their limits.

In retrospect, Delacroix appears less as an undisputed pioneer of modernism than as a catalyst: his conception of color, his emphasis on the painterly surface and his openness to subjective and literary pictorial sources had a lasting effect on later generations without solidifying into a fixed legacy. It is precisely this openness - the juxtaposition of classical aspirations and painterly freedom, of historical gravity and emotional intensity - that makes his work connectable to this day, but also difficult to evaluate unequivocally.