Scene in the Jewish Quarter of Constantine
Théodore Chassériau, 1851
About this artwork
Théodore Chassériau's *Scene in the Jewish Quarter of Constantine* (1851), an oil on canvas, captures an intimate glimpse into North African daily life during his transformative 1846 trip to Algeria. Unlike many Orientalist painters who romanticized the exotic from afar, the Dominican-born French Romantic artist spent months in Constantine, sketching over a thousand detailed studies of real scenes and architecture. He marveled at the timeless quality of Arab and Jewish communities perched high in the mountains, blending ethnographic curiosity with artistic vision. This tender domestic moment shows a mother and grandmother tending an infant in an ingenious rocking cradle, a rare view into private Jewish homes. Chassériau was fascinated by North African Jewish women, who unlike Muslim counterparts did not veil, allowing him to portray their features and expressions with direct observation. Rich textiles, warm tonalities, and precise architectural details highlight the painting's documentary authenticity. Synthesizing his teachers Ingres's linear elegance and Delacroix's vibrant color, Chassériau's work elevated Orientalism with lived experience. It influenced later artists and fueled his career until his early death at 37 in 1856, making this a gem of 19th-century European painting at The Met.