详情
HENRY LE JEUNE, A.R.A. (1819-1904)
'Thy Will be Done'
oil on panel
1138 x 938 in. (28.9 x 23.8 cm.)
来源
Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, London, 9 December 1980, lot 213.
The Forbes Collection; Christie's, London, 19 February 2003, lot 155, where purchased by the present owner.
展览
London, British Institution, 1857, no. 415.
Louisville, Kentucky, The JB Speed Art Museum; New York, The Forbes Magazine Galleries; Mephis, Tennessee, The Dixon Gallery and Gardens; Birmingham, Alabama, Birmingham Art Museum; Williamstown, Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute; Naples, Florida, The Society of Four Arts; Leeds, Leeds City Art Gallery, Virtue Rewarded: Victorian Paintings from the Forbes Magazine Collection, 1988-90, no. 42.
Chichester, The Bishop’s Palace, A Brush with the Millennium: Aspects of Christian Art Over Two Centuries, 2000, no. 8.
特别通告
-
荣誉呈献

拍品专文

This is a powerful depiction of the Agony in the Garden, on the Mount of Olives, in which, between the Last Supper and his arrest, Christ retired to pray. 'Agony' in this context derives from the Greek meaning a contest, and Le Jeune, through juxtaposing the solitary figure of Christ against the immensity of a luminous and starry heaven brilliantly alludes to the conflict between the two sides of Christ's nature: the human, that feared his imminent suffering, and would have avoided it, and the divine, which gave him strength. The title of the picture derives not only from the Lord's Prayer, but also to the scriptural reference: 'Father, if it be thy will, take this cup away from me. Yet not my will but thine be done'.

The apostles Peter, James and John had accompanied Jesus into the Garden of Gethsemane but then withdrew from him. According to Luke's Gospel there then 'appeared to him an angel from heaven bringing him strength, and in anguish of spirit he prayed the more urgently'. In earlier depictions of the subject artists often gave the angel physical form, perhaps holding the instruments of the Passion, or a chalice and wafer, even though the gospel's reference to a cup was purely metaphorical. Le Jeune's approach is more subtle and only hints at spiritual visitation through the dramatic use of light. However, in the tangle of thorns at Christ's feet, and in the tree behind, naturalistic though they are, reference is obliquely made to Christ's impending fate on the cross.

As the critic of the Art Journal noted, the picture is 'a work that only an artist of elevated mind could have produced'. The picture is one of the finest of a group of religious works produced by Le Jeune in the 1840s and 50s. In 1845 he became drawing master at the RA and in 1848 he became the curator. Later in his career he turned to more profitable genre scenes of the countryside, and children.

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