Showing posts with label harem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label harem. Show all posts

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Oil Paintings by Paul Désiré Trouillebert

Diana the Huntress (alternatively ‘Polująca Diana’ or ‘Diana Chasseresse’) by Paul Desiré Trouillebert

The Harem Servant Girl (Servante du harem, 1874) by French painter Paul Désiré Trouillebert (1869-1900)

The Nude Snake Charmer (La charmeuse de serpents), oil on canvas painting (possibly painted around 1880) by Paul Trouillebert

Paul Desiré Trouillebert (1869-1900), the famous French painter of Barbizon School is known for his portrait paintings and landscapes. He was interested in Orientalism and produced paintings of with oriental settings. For instance, he painted a portrait of a half-nude young servant woman (The Harem Servant Girl) in an ancient Egyptian style of the Greco-Roman Dynasty. The Hookah, the banana plant and the headgear of the girl are typical of oriental settings. Similarly, in the Nude Snake Charmer, the theme itself and the cobra represent oriental ideas.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Favorite of the Emir by Benjamin Constant

Image: Favorite of the Emir (1879) by French painter Jean Joseph Benjamin Constant (1845-1902), oil on canvas painting, 142.24 cm x 220.98 cm (56 in x 87 in), located at National Gallery of Art, Washington DC, USA.

The painting depicts the favorite woman of the Emir, a slave or Eunuch and another woman of the Emir’s harem. A harem refers to the sphere of women in a polygynous in households or palaces and their quarters which is enclosed and forbidden to men. The word originated in the Near East and came to the West via the Ottoman Empire, and the word has been recorded in the English language since 1634. A centuries-old theme in Western culture is the depiction of European women forcibly taken into Oriental harems.

The harem exerted a certain fascination on the European imagination, especially during the Age of Romanticism, due in part to the writings of the adventurer Richard Francis Burton. Many Westerners imagined a harem as a brothel consisting of many sensual young women lying around pools with oiled bodies, with the sole purpose of pleasing the powerful man to whom they had given themselves.

A harem need not necessarily consist of women with whom the head of the household has sexual relations (wives and concubines), but also their children and other females. It may include staff such as slave women and eunuchs. It is being more acknowledged today that the purpose of harems was for the royal upbringing of the future wives of nobles and royal men. Some women of Ottoman harem played very important political roles, and at times it was said that the empire was ruled from the harem.

It is claimed that harems existed in Persia under the Ancient Achaemenids and later Iranian dynasties -- the Sassanid Chosroes II reportedly had a harem of 3000 wives, as well as 12,000 other women -- and lasted well into the Qajar Dynasty. Ancient Egyptian pharaohs are said to have made a ‘constant demand’ of provincial governors for more beautiful servant girls. In Mexico, Aztec ruler Montezuma II, who met Cortes, kept 4,000 concubines; every member of the Aztec nobility was supposed to have had as many consorts as he could afford.

Harem is also the usual English translation of the Chinese language term hougong, meaning the palaces behind. Hougong are large palaces for the Chinese emperor's consorts, concubines, female attendants and eunuchs. The women who lived in an emperor's hougong sometimes numbered in the thousands.

Monday, June 14, 2010

Moorish Woman Leaving the Bath in the Seraglio

Scan of painting: ‘Moorish Woman Leaving the Bath in the Seraglio’ (1854) painting by French painter Theodore Chasseriau, oil on canvas, 67 cm x 54 cm, located in Musée des Beaux-Arts, Strasbourg, Germany.

Harem, painting by Théodore Chassériau

Image: Harem, 19th century oil on canvas painting by French painter Théodore Chassériau (1819-1856) who was a noted for his portraits, historical and religious paintings, murals and Orientalist paintings.

The Toilette of Esther by Théodore Chassériau

Image: The Toilette of Esther or La toilette d'Esther, an 1841 oil-on-canvas painting by French romantic painter Théodore Chassériau (1819-1856), with dimensions 45.5 cm x 35.5 cm (17.9” x 14.0”), presently located in Musée du Louvre, Paris, France.

The Toilette of Esther depicts an incident from the Book of Esther, when Esther prepared herself to meet the ruler of Persia King Ahasuerus, who subsequently married her.

The theme of the painting is derived from the Book of Esther (2:8-9, 15), in which King Ahasuerus seeks a new queen after renouncing his wife Vashti. Esther, a woman of great beauty, finds favor with Hegai, the eunuch in charge of preparing women for presentation to the king. After seeing Esther, Ahasuerus chooses her as his wife. She later reveals that she is Jewish, and wanted the king to spare the lives of the Jews in his empire.

The choice of this Old Testament story about a young woman in a harem freed Chassériau to take advantage of elements of the Orientalist and Romantic movements. The presence of Asian women and ample jewelry further romanticizes Esther’s figure. Having previously painted a ‘Birth of Venus’ and a ‘Susanna and the Elders’, Chassériau found another theme in Esther which permitted a frankly sensual presentation of the female body.

It has been noted by art historians that the painting, ‘The Toilette of Esther’, later inspired painters such as François-Léon Benouville and Gustave Moreau. Vincent Pomarède of the Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon described the work as ‘one of the most famous (paintings) in the Louvre’.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Painting by Gerome

Image: 'Harem Women Bathing', painting by French painter and sculptor Jean-Leon Gerome.

The terrace of the seraglio by Gerome

Image: The terrace of the seraglio, painting by French painter and sculptor Jean-Leon Gerome.

The Hookah Lighter, painting by Jean-Leon Gerome

Image: The Hookah Lighter (1898), oil on canvas painting by French painter and sculptor Jean-Leon Gerome.

The hookah or waterpipe is a single or multi-stemmed device made of copper or glass for smoking tobacco. In a hookah the smoke is cooled and filtered by passing through water. Originally from India, hookah has gained popularity in the Middle East and is gaining popularity in North America, Europe, Australia and Brazil.

Pool in a Harem by Gerome

Image: Pool in a Harem (Une piscine dans le harem) 1876 oil on canvas painting by French artist Jean-Leon Gerome, dimensions 73.5 cm x 62 cm currently located at Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia.