Louvre hosts 1st Delacroix retrospective in half a century
PARIS — He’s one of French art’s most famous — but least understood — masters.
Now the Louvre in Paris is seeking to reinterpret the work of Eugene Delacroix in a retrospective that goes beyond the brief years in which he painted his most recognizable masterpieces, such as “Liberty Leading the People,” which has graced postage stamps and bank notes in France as well as a Coldplay album cover.
Alongside the Mona Lisa, Delacroix’s famed image of a bare-chested revolutionary woman brandishing a flag and bayonet, from 1830, is the Louvre’s most visited painting.
Visitors who know little about Delacroix’s extensive career will be enlightened in the Louvre’s show entitled “Delacroix 1798-1863,” which opens Thursday.