Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


Liberty Leading the People

Liberty Leading the People
French: La Liberté guidant le peuple
The painting after the 2024 restoration
ArtistEugène Delacroix
Year1830
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions260 cm × 325 cm (102.4 in × 128.0 in)
LocationLouvre, Paris[1]

Liberty Leading the People (French: La Liberté guidant le peuple [la libɛʁte ɡidɑ̃ pœpl]) is a painting of the Romantic era by the French artist Eugène Delacroix, commemorating the July Revolution of 1830 that toppled King Charles X (r. 1824-1830). A bare-breasted “woman of the people” with a Phrygian cap personifying the concept and Goddess of Liberty, accompanied by a young boy brandishing a pistol in each hand, leads a group of various people forward over a barricade and the bodies of the fallen while holding aloft the flag of the French Revolution — the tricolour, which again became France's national flag after these events — in one hand, and brandishing a bayonetted musket with the other. The figure of Liberty is also viewed as a symbol of France and the French Republic known as Marianne. The painting is sometimes wrongly thought to depict the French Revolution of 1789.[2][3]

Liberty Leading the People is exhibited in the Louvre in Paris.

  1. ^ Dorbani, Malika Bouabdellah. "July 28: Liberty Leading the People". Musée du Louvre. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
  2. ^ Jones, Jonathan (1 April 2005). "Cry freedom". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 December 2023. It is the definitive image of the French Revolution - and yet Eugène Delacroix's Liberty Leading the People does not portray the French Revolution at all...This scene, it tells us, took place on July 28 1830.
  3. ^ Marilyn, Yalom (1997). A history of the breast. Random House. p. 122. ISBN 978-0-679-43459-7. as in Delacroix's famous painting Liberty Leading the People, which was not about the revolution of 1789, as most people assume, but the bloody uprising of 1830

Previous Page Next Page