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Cleveland Museum of Art

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Alexandre Cabanel — Aglaida and Boniface
Alexandre Cabanel

Aglaida and Boniface

1852

The French painter Alexandre Cabanel was a favorite of Emperor Napoleon III and a leader of the academic style that emphasized precise drawing and smoothly modeled forms. This painting depicts the wealthy Roman woman Aglaida and her concubine slave Boniface, here living as pagan sinners in Rome around 290 CE. On a trip to Tarsus on the Anatolian coast, Boniface converted to Christianity and was tortured and beheaded. Aglaida also converted to Christianity, gave all her possessions to the poor, and built a church for Boniface's relics.

Medium
oil on canvas

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Alexandre Cabanel, Aglaida and Boniface, 1852

The French painter Alexandre Cabanel was a favorite of Emperor Napoleon III and a leader of the academic style that emphasized precise drawing and smoothly modeled forms. This painting depicts the wealthy Roman woman Aglaida and her concubine slave Boniface, here living as pagan sinners in Rome around 290 CE. On a trip to Tarsus on the Anatolian coast, Boniface converted to Christianity and was tortured and beheaded. Aglaida also converted to Christianity, gave all her possessions to the poor, and built a church for Boniface's relics.

Medium
oil on canvas
Year
1852
Seen at
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH

Related themes

Unique Work, Painting, Oil on Canvas

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Cleveland Museum of Art