The Death of Sardanapalus, oil painting created in 1826/27 by French Romantic artist Eugène Delacroix. The massive canvas explodes onto the senses with wild movement and sumptuous colour, an orgy of indulgent exoticism. The violence and chaos of the scene shocked contemporary viewers, but the work was later viewed as one of the artist’s masterpieces.
Like his friend Théodore Géricault, Delacroix retained certain classical elements from his early training but also showed a daring energy, a rich, individualistic use of colour, and a love of the exotic that made him a trailblazer. Sardanapalus was an Assyrian ruler in ancient legend with a taste for extreme decadence. In response to the shame of a major military defeat, Sardanapalus ordered the death of his horses, slaves, and concubines and made a huge pyre on which he burned himself to death along with all his palace treasures. Delacroix reveled in such Byronic drama; the painting was inspired by Lord Byron’s 1821 play Sardanapalus.
In The Death of Sardanapalus, Delacroix appears to have abandoned any attempt at realistic perspective or compositional coherence. Distorted bodies and objects swirl around in a nightmare world choked with intense colour and hot, encroaching shadow. The detailed painting of glittering jewels and rich fabrics clearly conveys the extravagant world being depicted, while the cool detachment with which Sardanapalus surveys the mayhem around him strikes a sinister mood. Delacroix experiments with gray and blue tones on human skin to give shape to his unconventional modeling of bodies. The uninhibited exploration of violence, along with the frantic energy and bold colouring techniques, spoke volumes to later artists.