VOIR LA PEINTURE EN ICONOCLASTE: JEFF WALL ET LA MORT DE SARDANAPALE Cover Image

VOIR LA PEINTURE EN ICONOCLASTE: JEFF WALL ET LA MORT DE SARDANAPALE
VOIR LA PEINTURE EN ICONOCLASTE: JEFF WALL ET LA MORT DE SARDANAPALE

Author(s): Julien Zanetta
Subject(s): Photography
Published by: Universitatea Babeş-Bolyai, Facultatea de Teatru si Televiziune
Keywords: Romanticism; adaptation; photography; memory.

Summary/Abstract: In the Salon of 1827, Eugène Delacroix presents a painting that will create a scandal: The Death of Sardanapalus. Crudely depicting the death of an Assyrian monarch that decides to destroy his possessions before committing suicide, Delacroix’s work emblematizes the romantic aspirations, against the neo-classical canon. More than a hundred and fifty years later, Canadian photographer Jeff Wall adapts this painting in one of his first notable oeuvre: The Destroyed Room. Showing a ransacked and ravaged chamber, this work precisely recreates the atmosphere of the Sardanapalus, through the lens of iconoclasm. By doing so, Wall both offers a tribute to Delacroix, and presents a reflection on his own art: iconoclasm, against common ideas, can be a perpetuation of a tradition, a prolongation of the reflection for art’s sake.

  • Issue Year: 04/2010
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 126-136
  • Page Count: 1
  • Language: French
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