James Ensor took on religion, politics, and art in this scene of <span class="text-link" onclick="javascript:link(84, 1717, event);">Christ entering contemporary Brussels in a Mardi Gras parade. In response to the French <span class="text-link" onclick="javascript:link(84, 380, event);">pointillist style, Ensor used <span class="text-link" onclick="javascript:link(84, 375, event);">palette knives, spatulas, and both ends of his brush to put down patches of colors with expressive freedom. He made several preparatory drawings for the painting, including one in the J. Paul Getty Museum's collection.
Ensor's society is a mob, threatening to trample the viewer--a crude, ugly, chaotic, dehumanized sea of masks, frauds, clowns, and <span class="text-link" onclick="javascript:link(84, 1378, event);">caricatures. Public, historical, and <span class="text-link" onclick="javascript:link(84, 1406, event);">allegorical figures, along with the artist's family and friends, make up the crowd. The haloed Christ at the center of the turbulence is in part a self-portrait: mostly ignored, a precarious, isolated visionary amidst the herdlike masses of modern society. Ensor's Christ functions as a political spokesman for the poor and oppressed--a humble leader of the true religion, in opposition to the atheist social reformer Emile Littré, shown in bishop's garb holding a drum major's baton and leading on the eager, mindless crowd.
After rejection by Les XX, the artists' association that Ensor had helped to found, the painting was not exhibited publicly until 1929. Ensor displayed Christ's Entry prominently in his home and studio throughout his life. With its aggressive, <span class="text-link" onclick="javascript:link(84, 374, event);">painterly style and merging of the public with the deeply personal, Christ's Entry was a forerunner of twentieth-century <span class="text-link" onclick="javascript:link(84, 1411, event);">Expressionism.
Explore this painting in The Scandalous Art of James Ensor on Google Arts & Culture