Eugene Delacroix and John Frederick Lewis were regarded as Oriental painters of those days. Eugene Delacroix Algiers' women (in the apartment) and John Frederick Luis Cairo luncheon were inspired by Middle Eastern art and culture. Eugene Delacroix Algiers' women (their apartments) are dyeing the canvas with oil. And today it is found in the Louvre museum in Paris. John Frederick Lewis' lunch in Cairo is a pencil, watercolor painting, body color, Arabian paper textile owned by a private owner of London.
By the formation of the French Oriental Painter Association, at the end of the 19th century, artists became able to regard themselves as part of a distinctive art movement, and the perception of practitioners changed. As an art movement, Orientalist paintings are generally regarded as one of many areas of academic art in the 19th century, but many different styles of orientalism are obvious. Art historians tend to distinguish between a rear list that carefully depicts what they have observed and two broad Orientalist artists who imagined the Orientalist scene without leaving the studio. 1863) and Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824-1904) are widely regarded as key figures of the Orientalism movement.
Osterheimer pointed out 19th century paintings by artists such as Jean-Léon Gérôme and Eugène Delacroix. Today, their work is called "orientalist". This is the term made by the theorian Edward Side that depicts the art depicting eastern culture from the perspective of Western imagination. In many cases, their painting depicts Oriental culture as a low-level, exotic, strange, primitive one. In the past 40 years, the conversation about these pictures has changed. Today, the discussion about Jerome's work in museums and classrooms will undoubtedly solve fundamentally flawed assumptions. "Prior to Saeed, many academic works were simply considered beautiful pictures," Osterheimer said. "Now they are discussed as 'other' representatives. "
The first time I visited the Sharjah Art Museum in the late 1990s was Shake Tariq bin Fasar Alcami, Sharjah Economic Development's former chairman, who went to see Shake Sultan Ben. · A masterpiece of Orientalist by Dr. Muhammad. Sharjah ruler Al Qasimi. I just came back from Paris and did not know the vibrant art scene when I was studying abroad for several years. Originally, the Sharjah Art Museum opened in 1995 as a wonderful mansion in the 19th century Bait Al Serkal and in two years it moved to the present permanent place. It was completed on Wednesday 9th April 1997 and became the first professional art museum in the Gulf region; the proof of the pioneering cultural role that Sharja held at that time continues to play its role.