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Image
28. La Bastille dans les prémiers jours de sa demolition
[The Bastille Early in Its Demolition] |
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Scarcely
two months after the assault on the Bastille on July 14,
1789, Hubert Robert exhibited at
the Salon a small painting entitled La Bastille dans les
premiers jours de sa démolition (Paris, Musée Carnavalet)[Image
28],
signed and dated July 20, 1789. As
in the print Demolition of the
Bastille [Image
3], Robert
chose an early stage of the events following the momentous
day of July 14th. Atop
the walls of the prison, a group of people (numbering at least
fifty) smash the crenellations and topple the loosened stones
into the moat below. Dramatically
composed, Robert’s
painting shows the northwest tower
slightly left of center with the Bastille’s short, northern side in shadow
on the left and its long side, half-illuminated by the sun,
spreading towards the right, where smoke billows back and frames
the Bastille. In the foreground, a scattering of observers,
set off against the white dust rising from the broken stones,
view the on-going demolition, with the falling white blocks
of stones vividly contrasting with the aged brown walls of
the fortress.
The
painting’s
presence at the Salon was scarcely recorded even though one
critic observed that the Salon opened “amongst the tumult
of arms, in the middle of the most astonishing revolution” [“parmi
le tumulte des armes, au milieu de la révolution la plus étonnante”]. The
few critical responses to Robert’s
painting that exist range from admiration to rejection. One
writer mentioned that Robert’s
buildings “offers one very faithful image” [“offrent
une si fidelle image”], while
another critic felt that “he ought to have taken a harsher
stance in his view of the Bastille” [“il auroit
du prendre un parti plus sèvere pour sa vue de la Bastille”]. In
fact, “he
could have frightened instead of making an agreeable painting” [“il
pouvoit effrayer, au lieu d’en
faire un tableau agréable”]. The “agreeable” denotes
Robert’s style, which was distinguished
by “sharp and truthful effects, picturesque
sites and a facile touch” [“les
effets piquans et vrais, les sites pittoresques, et la touche
facile”]. The
first author praised the truth of the work, and presumably
appreciated the “agreeable” part
of the painting while the other wanted a more political painting
that would convey the horror of the prison. What was unremarked
was the artist’s
use of an exaggerated Piranesian scale
to suggest the sublime and, accordingly, the terrible. As
Burke had stated in his treatise on the sublime, “Greatness
of dimension is a powerful cause of the sublime.... ...an(sic)
hundred yards of even ground will never work such an effect
as a tower an(sic) hundred yards high....”
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Image
3. Démolition
du Château de la Bastille. [Demolition of the Bastille] |
Robert’s
painting representing the destruction of the Bastille was presumably
first sketched on the spot. Given
its swift execution, what is depicted could be read as a continuing
symbol of violence, a reminder
of that day in July when the Bastille was “taken” (prise,
part of the title of any number of prints), alluded to here
by the smoke and fire reminiscent of the burning carts of hay
which the crowd had set on fire on the 14th. Indeed,
some might have regarded the figures atop the parapets as participants
remaining from the charge on the Bastille of July 14th,
that is, as some of the original violators of persons and property. Others
might have been reminded of the visits of representatives of
the National Assembly as well as those of various citizens/tourists
atop the walls of the Bastille who wanted to share in the destruction
of this site of “despotism” as
well as the fight for freedom. While
the painting does not record violence against people, as do
the many scenes of July 14th itself,
it does document the attack on property and the continuing
assault on royal authority embodied, so to speak, by the fortress
itself. Criticized as too agreeable and hence too ambiguous,
the painting, like the print Demolition du Château de la
Bastille [Image
3], nevertheless, operates visually within
the realm of symbolic violence.
Notes