Bara (Henner)

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Jean-Jacques Henner: Bara

Bara (previously often spelled ’Barra’) is a painting by Jean-Jacques Henner exhibited at the Salon of 1882 and today part of the collection at the Petit Palais in Paris. It depicts a Republican boy-hero of the French Revolution, Joseph Bara, killed by the Vendeans in 1793.

The painting, oil on canvas, 85.5cm x 144cm[1] depicts the young Joseph Bara, laid out naked on the ground after his murder, against a brown background. His arms are stretched out, his head thrown back and his chest raised.[2] A few drops of blood are spattered on his straggling hair.[3] The pose is one of elegant and classical simplicity and aside from the indication of a wound to the head, the body is perfectly unblemished. In Bara’s hand is a drumstick (according to the painting’s catalogue entry, a dagger)[1] and the dimly distinguished form of a drum lies behind him on his left.[4]

The theme of the painting is an unusual one for Henner, who more commonly painted mythological subjects; a subject from near-contemporary France, presented with such direct indication of physical violence, was atypical of him.[5]

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