A sweeping golden cloak, pristine military attire and commanding a white stallion while staring directly into the viewers eyes as he points his army towards victory. That is how Napoleon Bonaparte is portrayed in the famous, Napoleon Crossing the Alps painting. The artist behind this is Jacques-Louis David, known for painting in the Neo-Classicism style, in which contemporary figures were painted to resemble classical ideal forms and mythological heroes.

Napoleon Crossing the Alps 1800 – 1801 Jacques-Louis David

For Napoleon, this painting was more than just a symbol of materialistic narcissism. It was propaganda.

Napoleon Crossing the Alps depicts what the title denotes, Napoleon leading French Infantry over the Swiss Alps to battle the Austrians. At the time of this painting (1800 – 1801), Napoleon’s rise to power was rapidly accelerating. With the horrors of The Terror having only ended a few years before, to many French people Napoleon was their saviour. He appeared to be pulling France out of a decade of struggle and into a period promising prosperity. At this moment in history, it seemed clear that Napoleon, both politically and militarily, was the victor.

However, as our perception of history evolves with each generation and event that occurs, so does society’s view of historical figures.

Bonaparte Crossing the Alps
1848 – 1850 Paul Delaroche

 

Almost fifty years later, another painting depicting the same moment in history was created. Paul Delaroche was commissioned to paint this exact moment, but in the emerging style of Realism. Bonaparte Crossing the Alps placed Napoleon on the back of a struggling mule, his uniform covered in a coat for warmth as he is guided through hazardous terrain with his infantry following closely. Lacking the heroicness of its predecessor, it is a gritty, more realistic depiction of the event. At the time of this painting’s completion in 1850, thirty-six years had passed since Napoleon’s ultimate exile to a British-owned island, and twenty-nine years since his death.

Napoleon had lost, and the juxtaposition between these two paintings reflects his fall.

Although he will always be known as a genius military strategist, the apotheosis that was once associated with his name has been stripped away over time and in history. Delaroche’s painting proves this. No longer is an idealised version of Napoleon accepted in today’s society; his name now seems to lend itself to ‘short jokes’ and images of pomposity. At his peak, no one could have imagined that this revered icon would be viewed by history as a brilliant yet deeply flawed man.

When we spoke in class of revolutions and how they are perceived overtime, it became evident that the outcome ultimately determined the way in which they are viewed. This assumption does not only apply to revolutions, but to any event or figure that history has deemed notable enough to remember. Napoleon Bonaparte lost. It is partly because of this that history has painted him as a failed pretender to absolute rule. If he were to have won, our textbooks may have described him as a very different man. For as Winston Churchill once said, “history is written by the victors.”

 

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