National Gallery of Australia | Audio Tour | French Painting Podcast
National Gallery of Australia | Audio Tour | French Painting
National Gallery of Australia
Eugène ISABEY, Storm with a Shipwreck [La tempête, naufrage] 1835 - episode of National Gallery of Australia | Audio Tour | French Painting podcast

Eugène ISABEY, Storm with a Shipwreck [La tempête, naufrage] 1835

44 seconds Posted Nov 26, 2007 at 12:57 am.
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Show notes
Eugène Isabey was a deeply Romantic painter. His work during the 1820s and 1830s is characterised by a concern with the unpredictable nature of the elements, the response of the individual to nature, and a refined, vigorous application of paint that emphasised the artist’s hand.
Storm with a Shipwreck is one of Isabey’s key Romantic seascapes. He depicts the sea as an abstract force that has the power to annihilate man and his work – our attention is drawn to the corpse of a sailor and part of the wreck of his ship in the lower corner. The violent sea and clouds and the dark, ominous rocky outcrop suggest a place of absolute danger. In this way, Isabey invokes the sublime, which was so closely associated with the sea: the sea as a space of imminent threat and an incomprehensible infinitude. Isabey’s application of paint matches the subject of work; each is as theatricalised and energetic as the other.