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Why Born Enslaved! by Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux

Why Born Enslaved!

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Artist
Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux
Date
modeled 1868, carved 1873
Medium
Marble
Dimensions
22 7/8 × 16 × 12 1/2 in., 132.7 lb. (58.1 × 40.6 × 31.8 cm, 60.2 kg) Pedestal: 22 × 18 in., 1298 lb. (55.9 × 45.7 cm, 588.8 kg)
Culture
French
Classification
Sculpture
Department
European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
Gallery
548
Location
548
Credit
Purchase, Lila Acheson Wallace, Wrightsman Fellows, and Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Foundation Gifts, 2019

Description

Overview Why Born Enslaved! Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux French modeled 1868, carved 1873 On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 548 This bust is perhaps the most well-known nineteenth-century sculpture of an enslaved Black figure. A virtuosic display of artistic achievement, the composition was modeled after an unidentified woman whose features Carpeaux recorded in exquisite detail. Yet this bust is not a portrait. Rather, it depicts the Black figure as an enslaved and racialized "type." Created twenty years after the abolition of slavery in the French colonies (1848), the sculpture was debuted in Paris in 1869 under the title Négresse, a term that reinforces the fallacy of human difference based on skin color. The subject’s resisting pose, defiant expression, and accompanying inscription – "Pourquoi Naître Esclave!" (Why Born Enslaved!) – convey an antislavery message. However, the bust also perpetuates a Western tradition of representation that long saw the Black figure as inseparable from the ropes and chains of enslavement. The present bust is one of only two known versions carved in marble. View more