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Studies for The Martyrdom of Saint Symphorien (Lictors, Stone Thrower, and Spectator)
Historical Context
These studies for the Martyrdom of Saint Symphorien from 1833 at the Fogg Museum document the complex preparatory process for Ingres's most ambitious religious composition. The painting, showing the young Christian martyr being led to execution at Autun, required years of studies before its exhibition at the 1834 Salon. 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 oil studies show individual figures and groups being developed with Ingres's characteristic precision. The strong modeling and expressive poses reveal his systematic approach to building dramatic narrative compositions.
Look Closer
- ◆The lictors' muscular poses are painted from life studies — Ingres documented each figure in careful preparation, and the oil studies at Fogg reveal the anatomical observation underlying the final composition's heroic bodies.
- ◆The stone thrower's action is frozen at the moment of maximum physical effort — back arched, arm extended behind, weight transferred — a pose that Ingres derived from his study of ancient frieze sculpture.
- ◆The spectator figure provides the viewer's emotional proxy — watching the martyrdom with the combined horror and devotion that the scene required from its original religious audience.
- ◆The warm brown oil on panel ground shows through in the unpainted areas, establishing the mid-tone from which Ingres worked toward lighter and darker passages in these intensive preparation studies.
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



