passer le menu
Musée du Louvre logo, louvre.fr homepage

Overview
Curatorial Departments
Near Eastern Antiquities
Egyptian Antiquities
Greek, Etruscan, and Roman Antiquities
Islamic Art
Sculptures
Decorative Arts
Paintings
Introduction
Selected Works
Latest Acquisitions
Traveling Works
Works in Focus
Bibliography
Timeline
Maps
Research Centers
Prints and Drawings
Kaleidoscope
Databases


Home - Collection - Curatorial Departments - Paintings - Selected Works - French Painting

Paintings : French Painting

Théodore Géricault
The Woman with Gambling Mania
1819-1824?
© Musée du Louvre/A. Dequier - M. Bard
Enlarge (new window)
Details
Technical information
Théodore Géricault
The Woman with Gambling Mania
1819-1824?
Oil on canvas
H. 77 cm; W. 64 cm
Gift of the Friends of the Louvre, 1938
R.F. 1938-51
Paintings
Interactive floor plans
Author(s)
Vincent Pomarède
first pageprevious page... 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 ...next pagelast page
Back to list Send to a friend (new window) Print (new window)
Add to My Album
 

The Woman with Gambling Mania

Together with a second portrait of a woman (Musée de Lyon) and three others of men (Ghent, Winterthur, and Springfield), this image of a monomaniac most likely dates from around 1820.
Description

Mental illness


One feature of Romanticism was its exploration of reason and madness. Like the doctors of the time, the Romantics believed that the effects of mental illness could be read in the face of the sufferer. In the series to which this painting belongs, Géricault painted people who have crossed the sanity threshold into extreme situations. He was himself in a state of depression after finishing The Raft of the Medusa and it was perhaps at the suggestion of Dr. Georget, in charge of the Salpêtrière hospital in Paris, that he painted portraits of mental patients as testimony to his own artistic striving for utter realism. Free of all attempt at narrative or symbol, this work is characterized by technical assurance, spontaneous brushwork, a harmonious blending of greens and browns, and the framing in white of the stricken, imploring face. One can only admire the sober power of this portrait of a woman who has lost her reason.

Society and madness


Géricault painted a series of portraits of monomaniacs, people whose mental disturbance focuses on a specific aspect of life while leaving them normal in other respects. In these individualized, acutely insightful works. the painter encapsulates specific forms of mania: compulsive kidnapping of children (Springfield Museum of Art), delusions of military grandeur (Winterthur, Oskar Reinhart Collection), kleptomania (Ghent, Musée des Beaux-Arts, and Musée de Lyon), and gambling (Louvre). In addition to their artistic value, these paintings are remarkable testimony to the relationship between society and psychiatry in the 19th century.

A doctor's collection in Baden-Baden


This picture was acquired by the Friends of the Louvre and donated to the museum in 1938. Discovered by chance in the collection of a doctor in Baden-Baden, the portrait - together with the four others found at the same time - belonged to the painters Henri Harpignies and Charles Jacque, before its acquisition by the Louvre. However it had been separated from its companion pieces, which were sold individually at different times.

first pageprevious page... 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 ...next pagelast page
Back to list Back to top

Thematic Trail

Italian Renaissance Painting
While the great European powers battled for control of Italy, Italian fifteenth- and sixteenth-century artists broadened the field of Western painting.

All the thematic trails

Atlas Database

Base Atlas
© Musée du Louvre
Collection databases
View many of the 35,000 works on display, and consult the relevant technical information and accompanying commentaries by curators.

Resources

Explore the history of art and civilizations in the sections In-Depth Studies and A Closer Look. The Magazine takes a fresh, unconventional look at the museum and its collections.
In-depth studies
A closer look
Parallel