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The Spring - Eurydice bitten by a serpent while picking flowers (Eurydice's death)
Eugène Delacroix·1850
Historical Context
The Spring representing Eurydice from 1850 at the Sao Paulo Museum is another panel from the Four Seasons cycle. Delacroix treats the myth of Eurydice's death by snakebite as an allegory of spring's tragic interruption. Delacroix's method combined rapid, gestural underpainting with careful final glazing, creating surfaces of extraordinary richness and warmth; his studio practice was meticulous despite the apparent spontaneity of the results. Eugène Delacroix, the greatest painter of the French Romantic movement, combined the emotional intensity and coloristic ambition of his Romantic program with a classical learning that made his art simultaneously revolutionary and deeply rooted in the European tradition. His visits to Rubens's works in Belgium, his admiration for Constable's color which he encountered at the Salon of 1824, and his long study of Venetian colorism were the foundations of a painting practice that combined observation, emotion, and historical imagination in ways that no French painter had previously achieved. His journals and correspondence document one of the most intellectually rigorous artistic minds of the nineteenth century.
Technical Analysis
The pastoral composition captures the moment of tragedy in a spring landscape. Delacroix's warm palette and fluid brushwork create a scene of mythological pathos.
Look Closer
- ◆Eurydice's collapse at the moment of snakebite is rendered as a graceful swoon — Delacroix mythologizing death in the Romantic convention of beautiful feminine suffering.
- ◆Spring flowers and lush vegetation surround the fallen figure — the cruelty of death in the season of renewal giving the allegory its seasonal poignancy.
- ◆The São Paulo Museum series shares the same handling and palette across all four canvases — the series identity visible in consistent color relationships.
- ◆Delacroix's figure of Eurydice owes to Raphael's recumbent female forms filtered through Rubens — the Romantic painter's deep engagement with earlier masters.

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