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Napoleon Reviewing the Guard in the place du Carrousel by Horace Vernet

Napoleon Reviewing the Guard in the place du Carrousel

Horace Vernet·1841

Historical Context

Napoleon Reviewing the Guard from 1841 at the Wallace Collection depicts one of the most iconic images of Napoleonic military ceremony. Vernet's review scenes create a visual mythology of imperial military pageantry. Vernet's position as the official painter of the July Monarchy and later Second Empire gave him unparalleled access to military subjects, and his technique combined careful documentation with dramatic compositional flair. Horace Vernet's Napoleonic subjects belong to the most commercially and critically successful category of his enormous output — paintings that combined historical documentation of the Napoleonic wars with the emotional appeal of martial patriotism for French audiences who had lived through the Revolutionary and Imperial periods. Vernet's father and grandfather were both significant painters, and he inherited both the technical facility and the commercial instinct that made the Vernet family dominant in French painting across three generations. His military paintings combined accuracy of uniform and equipment (based on careful research and personal observation) with the compositional drama of historical painting, making him the foremost recorder of the French military experience from the Revolutionary wars to the colonial campaigns of Algeria.

Technical Analysis

The military review is rendered with characteristic precision and ceremonial grandeur. Vernet's handling of the massed troops and equestrian emperor creates a definitive image of imperial power.

Look Closer

  • ◆Napoleon is rendered on horseback at the composition's commanding center, elevated above the reviewing troops on the place du Carrousel.
  • ◆The Old Guard's distinctive bearskin hats create a repeating dark vertical mass that frames the emperor and marks his troops' elite status.
  • ◆Vernet captures the breath of horses visible in cold air — a detail of experienced military observation that grounds the scene in seasonal reality.
  • ◆The Tuileries arch in the background localizes the ceremony within the symbolic heart of imperial Paris, identifying the specific venue with precision.

See It In Person

Wallace Collection

London, United Kingdom

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil paint
Dimensions
62 × 93.2 cm
Era
Romanticism
Style
French Romanticism
Genre
Mythology
Location
Wallace Collection, London
View on museum website →

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Self-Portrait in Rome by Horace Vernet

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