Le bivouac d’Austerlitz selon Louis-François Lejeune: Les guerres napoléoniennes entre construction identitaire et construction historique
Béatrice Denis
Université de Montréal Département d’histoire de l’art et d’études cinématographiques, 2020
ABSTRACT
Painter, soldier, and memorialist Louis-François Lejeune (1775-1848) conceived his battle paintings and his memoirs, Souvenirs d’un officier de l’Empire (1851), as historical testimonies of the Napoleonic period, destined for posterity. This twinning of paintings and memoirs mirrors the duality of Napoleonic propaganda as a whole, which disseminates a single version of military events with the help of unprecedented information tools such as the Bulletins de la Grande Armée. This written narrative, already thought of as historical, is picked up again in the paintings commissioned by the government. This master’s thesis argues that Lejeune contributes in a unique way to this historical narrative, first at an individual level by constructing his identity from his participation in the Napoleonic wars, and also at a state level. His Bivouac d’Austerlitz, presented at the 1808 Salon, was commissioned by the government as part of a larger order. It is shown that this painting fits first into Lejeune’s career, then into his cycle of battle paintings, and finally into the narrative of Austerlitz that Napoleon himself promoted. The episodic form of this painting can be explained by the deliberate pairing of written and pictorial narratives, which borrows from the 30th bulletin de la Grande Armée where Napoleon recounts the victory at Austerlitz. This painting thus contributes to the historical construction of the battle. As deep transformations threatened the academic genre hierarchy at the turn of the nineteenth century, the duality of Lejeune’s persona as soldier and painter helped promote the historical function given to paintings under Napoleon
https://papyrus.bib.umontreal.ca/xmlui/bitstream/1866/25087/2/Denis_Beatrice_2020_memoire.pdf
Nice find, I was just reading his memoirs 'from Valmy to Wagram',
thanks to his famous uniform, scarlet breeches and shako created by himself, he abused of the gullibility of the people in Spain one or two times, explaining he was a british officer and obtaining informations by such trick, but the second time a priest recognized imperial eagles on the sabretache...