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  1. The Raft of the Medusa (French: Le Radeau de la Méduse [lə ʁado d(ə) la medyz]) – originally titled Scène de Naufrage (Shipwreck Scene) – is an oil painting of 1818–19 by the French Romantic painter and lithographer Théodore Géricault (1791–1824). Completed when the artist was 27, the work has become an icon of French Romanticism.

  2. Jun 6, 2024 · The Raft of the Medusa, painting (1819) by French Romantic painter Theodore Gericault depicting the survivors of a shipwreck adrift and starving on a raft. Gericault astonished viewers by painting, in harrowing detail, not an antique and noble subject but a recent gruesome event.

  3. Jan 13, 2022 · The Raft of the Medusa by Théodore Géricault, currently located at the Louvre Museum, is regarded as a seminal work of French Romanticism. The Raft of Medusa painting portrays a scene that followed after the French naval ship Méduse‘s wreck, which went aground off the coastline of modern-day Mauritania on the 2nd of July, 1816. Following ...

  4. Dec 12, 2023 · The epic painting The Raft of the Medusa features a gruesome mass of figures afloat at sea, some dead, some struggling for life, in a tangled mass positioned on a crudely-made raft.

  5. In 1819, a young man bolted through the streets of Paris. Years later, he said he must have looked crazy as he ran all the way home. He was the painter, Eugène Delacroix, and he had just seen Théodore Géricault’s astonishing painting, The Raft of the Medusa, in the painter’s studio. Today, visitors to the Louvre museum stop in front of ...

  6. Jun 27, 2022 · Théodore Géricault completed The Raft of the Medusa when he was 27, and the work has become an icon of French Romanticism. It is a direct precursor of Delacroix’s Massacre at Chios and Liberty Leading the People .

  7. Apr 22, 2021 · The Raft of the Medusa painting was created in 1818-1819, near the beginning of the Romanticism art movement. It’s a contemporary piece because it was created within two years of an event that took place in 1816.

  8. Dec 6, 2023 · He examined images of the raft’s design and the Medusa’s carpenter, who had built the raft, gave Géricault a miniature copy of it. Géricault began drawing the bodies of the living and the dead, then working out the scene in watercolor and oil sketches trying to figure out what the show the viewers and just how to do it.

  9. The Raft of the Medusa was a polarizing political commentary that is generally considered to be the young Géricault's masterpiece, and is still one of the most talked about paintings in the world today.

  10. On 2 July 1816, the French frigate La Méduse, flagship of a convoy carrying soldiers and settlers to the colony of Senegal on Africa’s west coast, ran aground on the reefs of Arguin, an island off the coast of Mauritania.