
Eliezer et Rébecca
Historical Context
Eliezer and Rebecca from 1800 at the Musee de Marseille is a very early work showing Ingres still working in David's Neo-classical manner. The Old Testament subject of Abraham's servant finding a bride for Isaac was a standard academic composition that tested the artist's ability to organize a multi-figure narrative. Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, David's greatest pupil and the defender of the classical French tradition against the Romantic movement, dominated French painting through the middle decades of the nineteenth century from his position at the head of the Académie des Beaux-Arts and the École des Beaux-Arts. His doctrine of the primacy of line over color — inherited from David but pursued with a fanatical intensity David himself had not required — defined the terms of the great debate between Classicism (Ingres) and Romanticism (Delacroix) that structured French cultural life from the 1820s to the 1860s. His influence on subsequent French painting — including Degas, Renoir, and ultimately Picasso — was foundational.
Technical Analysis
The composition shows the young Ingres absorbing Davidian principles of figure arrangement and classical setting. The handling already shows signs of his distinctive precision.
Look Closer
- ◆This early Ingres already shows the analytical figure grouping he would develop throughout his career — Eliezer and Rebecca are spatially separated by the well between them, the architecture organizing the biblical encounter.
- ◆The well as the scene's central prop — around which all the figures are arranged — is the meeting point of providence and human action in the story, and Ingres makes it the compositional hub.
- ◆The multiple women drawing water in the background establish the specific social context of the scene — this is a communal water source, not an isolated encounter.
- ◆Ingres's Davidian training is visible in the crisp outlines and the cool, clear light — the classical vocabulary of his teacher fully absorbed and being applied to a biblical subject.
See It In Person
More by Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres

Madame Jacques-Louis Leblanc (Françoise Poncelle, 1788–1839)
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres·1823

Portrait of Luigi Edouardo Rossi, Count Pellegrino
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres·c. 1820

Edmond Cavé (1794–1852)
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres·1844
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Madame Edmond Cavé (Marie-Élisabeth Blavot, born 1810)
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres·ca. 1831–34



