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More information on this artwork on this websites
Buy Fine-Art Reproductions or create your own Custom Portrait from Photo. | Eugène Delacroix - Girl Seated in a Cemetery
thekingskeep.wordpress.com/tag/pain... Posts about painting written by Lady
www.eternels-eclairs.fr/tableaux-delacroi... Le site des Éternels Éclairs vous propose de visiter sa Galerie de tableaux...
www.eternels-eclairs.fr/tableaux-delacroi... Le site des Éternels Éclairs vous propose de visiter sa Galerie de tableaux...
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WahooArt.com (Eugène Delacroix)
Arts & Entertainment > Hobbies & Creative Arts > Artwork
https://EN.WahooArt.com/Art.nsf/Buy?Open&RA=7Z4QB8
WahooArt.com-A-7Z4QB8-GroupSetPrints-30x38inches-GS-L------(1)-Canvas-EN-USD
GroupSetPrints [{A-7Z4QB8}]-GroupSet(GS-L------(1)-Canvas)-PROMOTION(BGYKD05)-Dim(30 x 38 inches (76 x 97 cm))-Shipping(Slow)-Textured-Eugene Delacroix-Girl Seated in a Cemetery
https://WahooArt.com/Art.nsf/O/7Z4QB8/$File/Eugene-Delacroix-Girl-Seated-in-a-Cemetery.JPG
Girl Seated in a Cemetery is a painting by the French artist Eugène Delacroix. Believed to be a preparatory work in oil for the artist's later Massacre at Chios, Orphan Girl at the Cemetery is nevertheless considered a masterpiece in its own right. An air of sorrow and fearfulness emanates from the picture, and tears well from the eyes of the grief-stricken girl as she looks apprehensively upward. The background depicts her melancholy; in the dimness of the sky and the abandoned laying-ground. The girl's body language and clothing evoke tragedy and vulnerability: the dress drooping down from her shoulder, a hand laid weakly on her thigh, the shadows above the nape of her neck, the darkness at her left side, and the cold and pale coloring of her attire. All these are combined to emphasize a sense of loss, of unreachable hope, her isolation, and the absence of any means of help, as she is also looking on toward an unseen and unknown spectacle or spectre. For Delacroix, colors were the most important ingredients for his paintings. Because of this artistic taste and belief, he did not have the patience to create facsimiles of classical statues. He revered Peter Paul Rubens and the Venetians. He chose the use of colorful hues and exotic themes for his paintings, drawing inspiration from other inspirational places, resulting in works described as glossy and abundant with movement.
Eugène Delacroix
Eugène Delacroix
Oil
Oil