80
MUSEUMS AND EXHIBITIONS REVIEWS
From
Delacroix to Matisse: Drawings from the Algiers Museum of Art
Photo: Painting of
the Tepidarium
by
Théodore
Chassériau,1853.
Musée d'Orsay,
Paris
The
Algiers Museum of Fine Arts houses a collection of 8,000 works, dating from
the 14th to the 20th century, including a Print Department with nearly 1,750
drawings and engravings. A selection of around 60 French drawings, from the
19th and early 20th centuries, will give the public an idea of the wealth and
diversity of this collection that is little-known in France. On the one hand,
the exhibition will present works by “Orientalist” artists such as Chassériau,
Decamps, Delacroix and Fromentin, on the other, it will focus on some of the
key figures in French drawing: Degas, Derain, Millet, Puvis de Chavannes and
Seurat. It will be complemented by a section on the history of the museum and
the restoration carried out for the exhibition.

Photo: Painting of
Entry of the
Crusaders into Constantinople on 12 April 1204
, by Delacroix, 1840 (240 Kb); Canvas, 411 x 497 cm (162 x 195 1/2 in); Musée
du Louvre, Paris
Ferdinand-Victor-
Eugène Delacroix was born on April
26, 1798, in Charenton-St-Maurice, France, and died on August 13, 1863 in
Paris, France. In 1815 he became the pupil of the French painter Pierre-Narcisse
Guerin and began a career that would produce more than 850 paintings and great
numbers of drawings, murals, and other works. In 1822 Delacroix submitted his
first picture to the important Paris Salon exhibition: Dante and Virgil
in Hell. A technique used in this work--many unblended colors forming
what at a distance looks like a unified whole--would later be used by the
impressionists. His next Salon entry was in 1824: Massacre at Chios.
Continues on the following pages.