
Mercure, d'après la fresque de Raphaël à la Farnésine
Historical Context
This copy of Mercury after Raphael's Farnesina fresco from 1809 at the Beaux-Arts de Paris reflects Ingres's systematic study of Raphael's works during his Rome years. Copying the master was both a training exercise and an act of devotion for the artist who considered Raphael the ultimate model of artistic perfection. 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 copy demonstrates Ingres's careful study of Raphael's fresco technique. His translation of the figure to oil shows precision in reproducing the master's forms and proportions.
Look Closer
- ◆Ingres's Mercury is a direct copy after Raphael's fresco — but his copy reveals what he found in the original: the precise contour of the god's profile, the torsion of the body turning in the celestial space.
- ◆The copy's purpose was absorption — Ingres learning Raphael's compositional intelligence by physically replicating the master's decisions about foreshortening and spatial placement.
- ◆Mercury's caduceus — the winged staff twined with serpents — is rendered with the heraldic clarity of Raphael's original, each detail of the attribute precisely transcribed.
- ◆The Farnesina vault's illusionistic space is echoed in Ingres's copy — Mercury appears to exist in the ceiling's fictive architecture, a spatial illusion Ingres must accurately reproduce.
See It In Person
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