The Cleveland Museum of Art

Collection Online as of March 15, 2026

The Good Samaritan

c. 1865–70
(French, 1826–1898)
Sheet: 21 x 29.4 cm (8 1/4 x 11 9/16 in.)
Location: Not on view

Did You Know?

Shortly after this watercolor was completed, Gustave Moreau sold it to one of his important patrons and supporters, the collector Edmond Taigny.

Description

Gustave Moreau was distinctive within Symbolism—a movement focused on imagination and interiority—for the fact that he realized relatively traditional subjects often drawn from mythology and religion. Here, Moreau depicts a scene from the Good Samaritan, a story from the Bible’s New Testament about a wounded traveler who is helped by a passerby, despite the ideological and religious differences between the two. Moreau presents the narrative’s most poignant moment, showing the Samaritan giving up his own horse to help his fellow man. The artist used dense, jewellike layers of watercolor to give the scene an emotional and otherworldly tone.
  • {{cite web|title=The Good Samaritan|url=false|author=Gustave Moreau|year=c. 1865–70|access-date=15 March 2026|publisher=Cleveland Museum of Art}}

Source URL:

https://www.clevelandart.org/art/2024.32