Eug�ne Delacroix, in full FERDINAND-VICTOR-EUGENE DELACROIX
(b. April 26, 1798, Charenton-Saint-Maurice, Fr. d. Aug. 13, 1863,
Paris), the greatest French
Romantic
painter, whose use of color was influential in the development of both
Impressionist
and
Post-Impressionist
painters. His inspiration came chiefly from historical or contemporary
events or literature, and a visit to Morocco in 1832 provided him with
further exotic subjects.
Eugene Delacroix is numbered among the greatest and most influential of
French painters. He is most often classified as an artist of the
Romantic
school. His remarkable use of color was later to influence
Impressionist
painters and even modern artists such as
Pablo Picasso.
Ferdinand-Victor-Eugene Delacroix was born on April 26, 1798, in
Charenton-St-Maurice, France. In 1815 he became the pupil of the French
painter Pierre-Narcisse Guerin and began a career that would produce more
than 850 paintings and great numbers of drawings, murals, and other works.
In 1822 Delacroix submitted his first picture to the important Paris Salon
exhibition:
Dante and Virgil in Hell.
A technique used in this work many unblended colors forming what at
a distance looks like a unified whole would later be used by the
impressionists. His next Salon entry was in 1824:
Massacre at Chios.
With great vividness of color and strong emotion it pictured an incident
in which 20,000 Greeks were killed by Turks on the island of Chios. The
French government purchased it for 6,000 francs.