Chimera

Description

This sumptuously colored, circular plaque depicts a chimera, a mythical hybrid of multiple animals, launching into the air from a rocky precipice with a nude woman clinging to him. It is the earliest and largest surviving product of the five-year collaboration between painter Gustave Moreau and enameler Frédéric Charlot de Courcy. In enamel painting, vitreous powders are mixed with a volatile oil, painted onto a metal support, and fired in a kiln. Artists, collectors, and critics admired the material’s jewel-like surfaces, bright colors, and ability to appear variably translucent and opaque.

Provenance

Private collection, France, possibly by descent. Roberto Polo, Paris, by the 1990s; private collection, Europe, after 2011; consigned to Oscar Graf, Paris, 2023; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago, 2024.

Chimera

Frédéric Charlot de Courcy

1869

Accession Number

272685

Medium

Enamel on copper

Dimensions

Diam.: 34 cm (13 7/16 in.); D.: 3.9 cm (1 1/2 in.)

Classification

enamel

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Purchased with funds provided by Constance T. and Donald W. Patterson