| Support Type: | Canvas |
| Paint Type: | Oil Paint |
| Current Location: | Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon (Musée des Beaux-Arts) in Lyon, France. |
| Location History: | The painting was executed following a commission from the French Ministry of the Interior and was presented at the Salon of 1840 at the Louvre in Paris. After a transfer from the church of Saint-Jean-d\'Angély in Charente-Maritime, the monumental canvas was moved to its current home, the Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon. |
Commissioned in 1839 by the Ministry of the Interior for the Church of Saint-Jean-d'Angély, Chassériau's monumental Christ in the Garden of Olives (1840, oil on canvas, 452 x 357 cm) was his first major religious composition. Chassériau had been the prodigy of the Neoclassical master Ingres, but he had fallen fiercely under the spell of Delacroix. This work is a technical reconciliation of this impossible choice: the result is not a compromise, but a haunting synthesis of the two masters' poles of painting. The composition physically enacts this tension: the broad, stable horizontal format is anchored by Christ’s sculptural form (the strict Ingresque draftsmanship), yet the lighting is a pure Delacroix fever dream. The scene presents Christ kneeling on the Mount of Olives. Above him, three angels float, bearing the instruments of the Passion: the Cross, the Crown of Thorns, and the chalice, offering him not deliverance, but the confirmation of his death sentence. In the foreground, the three sleeping apostles, Peter, John, and James the Greater, slump in a clutter of limbs, rendered with a shocking psychological naturalism. The clarity of Chassériau’s line was bequeathed to him by Ingres. The smooth, luminous paint and the sculptural modeling of the nude bodies, Christ’s pearlescent torso, the folded fabrics, announce his academic pedigree. But the reason for the painting is pure Romanticism. This is not a triumphant or stoic Christ. His back is turned, his head bowed, his posture one of total abandonment and despair. Chassériau has eliminated the supernatural fire of Delacroix's version and replaced it with a cold, shimmering light that illuminates Christ's fear in The Agony in the Garden as a psychological state. The single point of radiant light from the hovering angels illuminates his face, making the landscape behind him dissolve into a murky, atmospheric gloom. Here is the complexity that the surface hides. The same year he painted this sacred masterwork, Chassériau submitted his mythological painting Diana Surprised by Actaeon to the Salon. It was rejected outright. The artist was branded a heretic for his classical nudity. In a panic of professional suicide, Chassériau rushed the enormous canvas of the church to the Salon as his sole entry. The art critic Stéphane Guégan notes that Chassériau's "exploration of Christ's moment of supreme resignation" was not just theology. It was the artist painting his own desperate rejection, the fear of death, and the hope for redemption through the grace of the State Church. Chassériau operated a revolutionary fusion. Delacroix uses swirling, broken brushstrokes to convey tumultuous chaos. Chassériau locks that same romantic torment inside Ingres's cold glass case. The sleeping forms of the apostles are rendered with the same attention to surface reality as the nude living by Ingres, but here the subject is the brutal irrationality of sleep. Christ is frozen in the split second of his "yes" - the moment he ceases to beg and accepts the chalice. Christ in the Garden of Olives offers a divine drama that is about the interior life of the soul, not the external miracles. It is an artifact of an artist trying to "rob" the expressive fire of Delacroix while wearing the polished armor of Ingres. It is a painting of staggering emotional maturity, a testament that rejects the victory of the cross in favor of the agony of the doubt that preceded it. In this, Chassériau created a uniquely modern Christ: not a king or a martyr, but a man in the dark, terrified of what he must do.
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