Harem scenes in paintings and books  

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Image:Musk, Hashish and Blood, a French language collection of tales by Hector France,.jpg
Musk, Hashish and Blood (1886) is a French language collection of tales by Hector France "The adventures of a modern man among the cruel men and the passionate women of Algiers," reads the jacket copy of the pulpy paperback. Orientalist imagery of veiled temptresses and sword-wielding hunks abound.

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Harem scenes in paintings and books were very popular in early 19th century. The Great Odalisque (1814, 1819) by Ingres started the fashion for this type of subject matter, depicting harems, Turkish baths, tepidaria and seraglios. Orientalism reached its first high point during Napoleon's Egyptian campaign of 1798. Delacroix was under the influence of the harem lure when he painted The Women of Algiers (1834).

European men made the Harem out to be a kind of plush private bordello; the paintings have more than a little of this notion in it. The problem for European artists was that no European could obtain access to a Harem. Their fantasy depictions of it were therefore obviously pure inventions and often hardly believable. (see Jean-Léon Gérôme's 1876 Pool in a Harem, for example).

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White women as slaves in Islamic harems had long inspired European fantasies, since Floris and Blancheflour right up to the middle of the 20th century with the especially successful Angelique novels, in which the Arabian rulers are portrayed as dark and sinister.

The women are presented as objects of desire, more or less willing, at the mercy of the whims of their possessors, and awaiting to be allowed or forced to serve him. Considering the repressive sexual mores of the 19th and early 20th centuries this fantasy, which purports to give an authentic account of Islam, appears completely comprehensible; even today it is still often projected upon Oriental standards and, for instance, appears in historical films with or without documentary pretensions.

Harem scenes in paintings and books (another description centering around The Women of Algiers)

Harem scenes in paintings and books were very popular in the time of Delacroix's The Women of Algiers. Orientalism reached its first high point during Napoleon's Egyptian campaign of 1798, the year in which Delacroix was born.

European men made the Harem out to be a kind of plush private bordello; this painting has more than a little of this notion in it. The problem for European artists was that no European could obtain access to a Harem. Their fantasy depictions of it were therefore obviously pure inventions and often hardly believable. (see Jean-Léon Gérôme's 1876 Pool in a Harem, for example) In contrast, Delacroix could rely upon his own eyes, which lends his work a special heft, believability and authority.

Nevertheless this painting reflects anything but reality, but rather presents a mixture of observation and generally accepted European conventions. Other than the black slave, who appears to be leaving the room, the women are conspicuous in their luxurious idleness. In reality, however, the Harem would be teeming with children and all kinds of activities- the women would have been in now way alone and idly awaiting the return of their man. This is even more amazing as Delacroix himself noted in his journal that children were not to be overlooked. The natural and domestic setting thus becomes a bordello, such as would have been easy to find in Paris.

Therefore Delacroix did not reproduce reality, but his own fantasy, supported by observation. He referred to sketches he had made on site, but freely elaborated upon them. Moreover it obviously depicts white women; the one on the right in the finished painting, who bears a definite resemblance to the woman sketched on site, is known to be a Parisian model and long acquaintance of Delacroix's. White women as slaves in Islamic harems had long inspired European fantasies, right up to the middle of the 20th century with the especially successful Angelique novels, in which the Arabian rulers are portrayed as dark and sinister.

The women are presented as objects of desire, more or less willing, at the mercy of the whims of their possessors, and awaiting to be allowed or forced to serve him. Considering the repressive sexual mores of the 19th and early 20th centuries this fantasy, which purports to give an authentic account of Islam, appears completely comprehensible; even today it is still often projected upon Oriental standards and, for instance, appears in historical films with or without documentary pretensions.

Of course a Harem is also associated with empire; an excess of women on one side must be obtained by a dearth thereof on the other. Empire is connected to power, and the ...

European harem depictions


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