The Sleeping Gypsy
The Sleeping Gypsy, oil painting created in 1897 by French naïve artist Henri Rousseau. This work is perhaps the most important of the period when Rousseau began to receive recognition as an artist and is one of the most famous images of the modern era.
Rousseau was entirely self-taught and did not embark upon an artistic career until relatively late in life. He worked in a number of minor administrative jobs before retiring on a small pension to paint full time, and he exhibited regularly at the Salon des Indépendants. Throughout his life he had a great love of music, and he supplemented his income by teaching music and later by taking in art students. Rousseau worked slowly and carefully, using many layers of paint and exotic, jewellike colours, and he had a fairly small output. His work was generally ridiculed during his life and was mostly regarded as uneducated and immature.
The Sleeping Gypsy is stunning in the simplicity of its composition combined with the subtlety of its execution. The beautiful and monumental figure of a dark-skinned woman sleeps quietly while a lion sniffs at her shoulder. The whole scene is bathed in the eerie light of a full moon. The image is intensely dreamlike yet also strangely real, evoking both peace and danger, mystery and whimsy.
Rousseau offered to sell the painting to the town of Laval, his hometown, but the town’s mayor regarded the work as childish and turned it down. Nonetheless, Rousseau’s simplified forms and imaginative use of space and symbol were admired by many avant-garde artists, especially those who made the transition into Modernist painting, among whom were Pablo Picasso, Robert Delaunay, and Henri Matisse.