Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Nicolacki Mitropolos in Voyage à Athènes et à Constantinopole, ou collection de portraits, de vues et de costumes grecs et ottomans, peints sur les lieux, d’après nature, lithographiés et coloriés

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Louis Dupré (draughtsman, 1789–1837)
Mademoiselle Van Cuttsem (colorist)
Chromolithograph
Paris, France: Dondey-Dupré, 1825
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


In February 1819, Louis Dupré accompanied three British art enthusiasts on their journey to Greece, a region teetering on the brink of revolution against the Ottomans. Until April 1820, they traveled through Corfu, Epirus, Thessaly, Central Greece, Attica, and the Saronic Islands. Dupré continued to Constantinople and Bucharest at the invitation of Prince Michael Soutsos of Moldavia (1784–1864), Great Dragoman of the Sublime Porte and a Phanariot Greek. Dupré recorded his experiences in portraits and costume studies, alongside drawings of antique monuments. Between 1824 and 1837, he published his drawings in a luxurious volume as forty chromolithographs, including visual celebrations of the Greek resistance that enjoyed reprints as far as the U.S. This portrait depicts patriot Nicolacki Mitropolos at the battle in Salona (modern-day Croatia) on Easter in 1821. The hero dramatically tramples an Ottoman while raising his flag.