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Arab Kneeling in Prayer

Charles Bargue (French, 1826-1883)ca. 1875

The Walters Art Museum

The Walters Art Museum
Baltimore, United States

Charles Bargue produced relatively few paintings and is best known for his prints and drawing manuals. In his early career, he produced lithographs after his own comedic genre paintings as well as the nudes and genre scenes of others. Bargue never showed his paintings at the Salon but did exhibit a series of reproductive lithographs at the Salons of 1867 and 1868. He died insane in a mental asylum in April 1883. He was largely forgotten for a long time, but in recent years, has begun to attract increasing market and scholarly interest. Bargue has often been cited as a pupil of Gérôme, but contemporary texts stress that he was an assistant and collaborator. The two men worked together on the first two volumes of a major drawing manual, "Cours de Dessin," which was published in three parts between 1868 and 1872.

"Arab Kneeling in Prayer," is a charcoal study for a figure in the grisaille painting "Arabs at Prayer," a work that, unusually for Bargue, was a multifigure scene. The drawing has a shiny quality due to the application of a fixative that has created a yellow halo around the figure. Bargue demonstrates the newly spontaneous and sophisticated style that he began to develop around 1870, and which is also evident in the third part of the drawing manual "Cours de Dessin," published under his name alone. The feet of the kneeling man, for example, are rendered in rapidly marked angular and broken lines in a kind of visual shorthand. The drawing can thus be dated to the final years of Bargue's life, perhaps to around 1875. There are a number of related preparatory drawings. These include three charcoal figure studies also in the Walters Art Museum (37.1222, 37.1328, and 37.1339). One of these is a variant of the same kneeling figure, while the other two show prostrate figures at prayer. There is also a rapidly worked compositional oil sketch, recently on the art market (Sotheby's New York, 23 October 1997). These preparatory studies all document the thought and detailed process behind Bargue's finished works. It is probable that these studies and the grisaille were all leading towards a final colored composition that, as yet, remains unlocated.

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  • Title: Arab Kneeling in Prayer
  • Creator: Charles Bargue (French, 1826-1883)
  • Date Created: ca. 1875
  • Subject Keywords: man; prayer; devotion; genre; biblical/religious
  • External Link: For more information about this and thousands of other works of art in the Walters Art Museum collection, please visit art.thewalters.org
  • Roles: Artist: Charles Bargue (French, 1826-1883)
  • Provenance: Goupil, Paris; purchased by William T. Walters (through George A. Lucas as agent), Baltimore, 1883; inherited by Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1894; by bequest to Walters Art Museum, 1931.
  • Object Type: drawings
  • Medium: charcoal on smooth, moderately thick, blued white wove paper
  • Inscriptions: [Signed] Lower right, in ink: C. Bargue; [Number] Top right verso, in graphite: 57
  • Exhibitions: French Masterworks on Paper. The Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore. 1992., Italian Vistas: Selections from the Permanent Collection. The Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore. 1992-1993., The Essence of Line: French Drawings from Ingres to Degas. The Walters Art Museum, Baltimore; Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore; Birmingham Museum of Art, Birmingham; Tacoma Art Museum, Tacoma. 2005-2006., A Connoisseur's Portfolio: Nineteenth-century Drawings and Watercolors in the Walters Art Gallery. The Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore. 1983., Gérôme and His Circle: Travel, Art, and Business in the Middle East. 2015-2016.
  • Dimensions: H: 9 7/16 x W: 7 3/8 in. (23.9 x 18.8 cm); Mat H: 19 1/4 x 14 1/4 in. (48.9 x 36.2 cm)
  • Credit Line: Acquired by William T. Walters, 1883
  • Classification: Painting & Drawing
  • Accession Number: 37.1338
The Walters Art Museum

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