The Orientalist Sale

The Orientalist Sale

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 15. Arnaut at Rest.

Property from a Private Collection

Jean-Léon Gérôme

Arnaut at Rest

Auction Closed

April 25, 02:17 PM GMT

Estimate

250,000 - 350,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

Property from a Private Collection


Jean-Léon Gérôme

French

1824 - 1904

Arnaut at Rest


signed J.L. GEROME to the wall upper left

oil on panel

Unframed: 35.5 by 25cm., 14 by 9¾in.

Framed: 55.5 by 45.2cm., 21¾ by 17¾in.

Acquired directly from the artist by Goupil & Co., Paris, 24 January 1865

Acquired from the above by Colnaghi, London, 30 March 1865

James Coates, London

Mr and Mrs Joseph Tannenbaum, Toronto

Coral Petroleum Inc. (their sale: Sotheby's New York 22 May 1985, lot 43)

Sale: Sotheby's, New York, 13 October 1993, lot 39

Galeria d'Orsay, Paris, 1995

Sale: Christie's, New York, 14 February 1996, lot 23

Purchased at the above sale by the present owner

Paris Photographs: Gérôme Oeuvres, Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, Cabinet des Estampes, 28 volumes of mounted photographs of Gérôme's paintings and sculptures, the gift of his widow, vol. XVII

Catalogue de Paris, 1883

Edward Strahan, Gérôme: A Collection of the Works of J. L. Gérôme in One Hundred Photogravures, I, New York, 1881-83 (illustrated)

Lynne Thornton, Les Orientalistes: Peintres voyageurs 1828-1908, Paris, 1983, p. 119 (illustrated)

Gerald Ackerman, The Life and Works of Jean-Léon Gérôme, London, 1986, pp. 218-9, no. 158 (illustrated)

Gerald Ackerman, Jean-Léon Gérôme, monographie révisée, catalogue raisonné mis à jour, Paris, 2000, p. 258, no. 158 (illustrated)

Hélène Lafont-Couturier et. al. Gérôme & Goupil: Art & Enterprise, Paris, 2000, (exh. cat.), p.122

Ottawa, The National Gallery of Canada, The Other Nineteenth Century: Painting and Sculpture in the Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Tannenbaum, 1978, exh. cat. no. 35 (illustrated)


Gérôme’s Arnaut at Rest is a masterful representation of a subject – that of the Arnaut, or bashi-bazouk - that fascinated Gérôme and which he explored in numerous compositions. Seated in a shady Cairo interior, a lone Arnaut enjoys a moment of rest from duty to smoke an Ottoman huqqa, or narguile, through a snaking mouthpiece. Beside him, a mother-of-pearl inlaid gueridon table, rests a half-drunk glass of tea. Of note are the figure’s distinctive white pleated kilt, depicted with expert handling of light and shadow as hundreds of knife edge pleats cascade over the seated man’s crossed legs. Equally skillful is Gérôme’s handling of the other fabrics, including the silk shirt with its subtle sheen where it has caught the light, and of the magnificent Cairene mashrabiye lattice-work window overlooking the sun-drenched street below.


Arnauts were irregular soldiers in the Ottoman army and hailed from Albania and the Balkans. They were deployed across the Empire, but mainly in Cairo and Egypt. The strain on the Ottoman feudal system caused by the Empire's wide expanse required heavier reliance on these irregular soldiers, who were armed and maintained by the government. These soldiers neither received pay nor wore uniforms and distinctive badges. Because they were not formally trained, they could not serve in major military operations; however, they were useful for other tasks, such as reconnaissance and outpost duty. The Arnauts were deployed across the Empire, including in Cairo, where Gérôme would have encountered them from the day he first set foot in Egypt in 1856. Proud of their Balkan heritage, they always retained their distinctive costume. As irregulars, they were at liberty to supplement their income by other means, whether as guards, animal handlers, or modelling for travelling artists.


Gérôme at times painted Arnauts relaxing, dancing, merry-making, playing chess or music, for example in Café House, Cairo (Casting Bullets). However, in a different vein he also depicted them as figures for Ottoman authority, as in Egyptian Recruits Crossing the Desert (1857), in which Arnauts lead forced conscripts on their march; or to represent Muslim piety as in Prayer in the House of an Arnaut Chief. The conception of Gérôme’s paintings of bashi-bazouks was based not only on his usual sketches but also on photographs he had taken with Auguste Bartholdi in 1856. A photograph from the Gérôme/Morot Collection at the Musée d’Orsay shows a male model posing in Arnaut dress which was no doubt crucial in helping Gérôme capture the patterns of light and shadow on the kilt.