The Attack at Dawn is a painting by French painter Alphonse de Neuville, from 1877. The painting depicts a French town under siege by Prussian troops during the Franco-Prussian War.

The Attack at Dawn
ArtistAlphonse de Neuville
Year1877
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions146.5 cm × 222 cm (57.7 in × 87 in)
LocationThe Walters Art Museum, Baltimore

History

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Alphonse de Neuville served as an officer in the Auxiliary Sappers and as aide-de-camp to General Callier during the Franco-Prussian War. He closely studied locations of battles and weaponry to recreate battle scenes.[1]

Composition

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The Attack at Dawn is a recreation of a Prussian assault on a French village. To the left of the painting, a bugler sounds the alarm. French troops rush from the inn, their uniforms identify them as Turcos or Algerian rifleman and mobiles or members of the Garde Mobile. The mountain in the background, helps to identify the location of the scene as a village near the Jura Mountains, located near the Swiss border.[1]

Analysis

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The paintings of de Neuville attempt to glorify France's heroic resistance rather than its military defeat.[2]

Off the Wall

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The Attack at Dawn was featured in Off the Wall, an open-air exhibition on the streets of Baltimore, Maryland. A reproduction of the painting, the original is part of The Walters Art Museum collection, was on display at Federal Hill Park.[3] The National Gallery in London began the concept of bringing art out of doors in 2007 and the Detroit Institute of Art introduced the concept in the U.S.. The Off the Wall reproductions of the Walters' paintings were done on weather-resistant vinyl and include a description of the painting and a QR code for smart phones.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b [Johnston, W. R., Nineteenth-Century Art: From Romanticism to Art Nouveau, The Walters Art Gallery, 2000]
  2. ^ The Walters Art Museum - The Attack at Dawn
  3. ^ Walters Art Museum - Off the Wall Archived 2012-11-19 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Smith, T., Walters Art Museum goes of the wall, The Baltimore Sun, September 11, 2012