Artwork Page for The French Soldier (Le Soldat français)

Details / Information for The French Soldier (Le Soldat français)

The French Soldier (Le Soldat français)

1818
(French, 1792–1845)
published by
Support
Wove paper
Credit Line
Catalogue raisonné
Fonds Français vol. IV, p. 313, no. 40; de La Combe p. 220 no. 74; Béraldi vol. IV, p. 117, no. 74
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Lithography was invented in 1798 by the German Aloys Senefelder. Although the technique was introduced in France in 1801, it was predominantly used for commercial ventures until 1815 when lithographic workshops—like that of François Delpech, who printed The French Soldier—were established in Paris. In 1814 Napoleon Bonaparte abdicated the throne and was banished to the island of Elba before being permanently exiled on Saint Helena. With the ensuing void in leadership, an idealized version of the Napoleonic era developed and Charlet was one of many artists who used art to glorify the French military. The French soldier depicted here, victorious against the prone Englishman, reloads his rifle and, although wounded, courageously continues to fight. The couplet from Horace beneath the scene comments that nothing can shatter the steadfastness of an honorable man.
A vertically oriented black and white lithograph depicts three soldiers with light skin tones in fine hatching amid battlefield ruins. Centered, a man in a tall fur hat bites a cartridge while holding a rifle. To the left, a soldier kneels to bandage the bare foot of a man lying in the foreground. Behind them, a broken wheel and jagged beams blend into dark, swirling clouds. Script below reads, "Le Soldat Français."

The French Soldier (Le Soldat français)

1818

Nicolas Toussaint Charlet, Delpech

(French, 1792–1845)
France, 19th century

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