The Death of Caesar (Gérôme)

It depicts the moment after the assassination of Julius Caesar, when the jubilant conspirators are walking away from Caesar's dead body at the Theatre of Pompey, on the Ides of March (March 15), 44 BC.The painting is kept at the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, Maryland.Characteristically, Gérôme has depicted not the incident itself, but its immediate aftermath.The illusion of reality that Gérôme imparted to his paintings with his smooth, polished technique led one critic to comment, "If photography had existed in Caesar's day, one could believe that the picture was painted from a photograph taken on the spot at the very moment of the catastrophe."[1]Gérôme's depiction of the aftermath of violence can also be seen in The Execution of Marshal Ney, The Duel After the Masquerade, and Jerusalem.The Walters indicates that the work has been included in the following exhibitions:[1] This article about a nineteenth-century painting is a stub.
Jean-Léon GérômeOil on canvasWalters Art MuseumBaltimoreFrenchassassination of Julius CaesarCaesarTheatre of PompeyIdes of MarchMarylandThe Execution of Marshal NeyThe Duel After the MasqueradeJerusalemHenry WaltersThe Cock FightPhryne Before the AreopagusCleopatra and CaesarThe Slave MarketBashi-BazoukPrayer in the MosquePollice VersoReception of the Grand Condé at VersaillesThe Snake CharmerA Chat by the FiresideThe Tulip FollyThe Christian Martyrs' Last PrayerSlave Market in Ancient RomeBonaparte Before the SphinxBathshebaPygmalion and GalateaThe Birth of VenusTruth Coming Out of Her WellOmphaleTanagraList of pupils