
It would take three more years for Cabanel to win the critics and judges to his side with the monumental Death of Moses and from there, a consistent legacy of muscular, melodramatic work made him the anchor of the French academy.

“…That’s my reward for all the trouble I gave myself not to submit an average piece of work…” wrote Cabanel in a letter to his friend and patron Alfred Bruyas. Sybille Bellamy-Brown quotes the judges response in her book on Cabanel Procès verbaux de l’Académie des Beaux-Arts, saying “…The movement is wrong, the draughtsmanship imprecise, the execution deficient…” and on top of that, it was considered too romanticist in its style. The salon judges were first shocked, and then displeased. If he had aimed to cause some drama, he succeeded. Five angels fall in Milton’s work: Moloch, Belial, Mulciber, Mammon and Beelzebub, and this of course is Beelzebub, better known today as Lucifer.Īfter his previous rejection by the salon, Cabanel submitted the Fallen Angel, the first depiction of the devil submitted by a student. John Milton’s Paradise Lost had already inspired generations of artists, but Cabanel brought a unique fire to the story’s fallen angels. “An oversized and inept composition” was their savage feedback.Įnter the sexy angel. Pulling from classic greek theater, he painted a large-scale nude of the athletic Orestes, son of Agamemnon, and the academy judges hated it. Perhaps salon tradition dictated a sleepy Jesus, but it looks like Cabanel was playing it safe.Īnd then in 1846, Cabanel hit a speed bump. But these paintings, while skillful, lack any real emotion.
Dark angel quotes trial#
His Prix de Rome winner was another Christ, this time on trial at the Praetorium, confronted by Pontius Pilate. His painting in the salon was of a sorrowful Christ in the Guardian of Olives. Cabanel’s early work played to the academic tastes of the time, focusing on religious themes.

Cabanel had joined the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris at 17, had exhibited work in the Paris Salon at 21, and won the prestigious Prix de Rome scholarship at 22. The year was 1847, and the 24-year-old Alexandre Cabanel was on his well on way to becoming one of the foremost geniuses of French academic painting. Cast from heaven-this is the moment before he rises again.

His posture appears reposed, but each muscle is flexed with potential energy. His mane of hair snaps in the wind, and brows curl over red-rimmed eyes and a tear of anger. A winged nude shields his face behind flexed arms. The L’Ange Dechu, or Fallen Angel, may be one of the hottest artworks ever made.
