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What and Where is Painting - Egyptian Couple Who Lost First-Born to Plague....

post #1 of 12
Thread Starter 
Help! My wife and I saw somewhere in recent years a painting of an Egyptian couple mourning the death of their first-born son - based on the Bible and the tenth of the Ten Plagues. They are shown, my wife recalls, with a sarcaphogus or coffin of some sort, and my wife says the wife/mother looks sort of like an image of Pocahontas. She thinks it's 19th century, but this is all uncertain. The couple, from what I recall, sort of dutifully carry out their responsibilities toward their dead child.

The painting is memorable as it's an unusual perspective - sort of sympathetic toward a couple who are not looked at kindly in the Bible; in a sense it makes the viewer sysmpathize with the couple and what they lost. May even be the Pharoah and wife. It's almost cute, I recall - perhaps a little primitive yet beautifully executed.

Does this ring a bell to anybody? Museums we've visited in recent years include those in Atlanta, San Francisco, Chicago, New York, Oberlin, London, Roanoke, Paris, Toledo, Seattle.
post #2 of 12
Pearce
post #3 of 12
Thread Starter 
Thanks, but I've seen many reproductions of the Pearce and the Alma 'Death of the Firstborn" paintings. What we saw did not look anything like this. As I wrote, it had two Egyptian parents standing, perhaps slightly on the primitive side. Slightly cute, perhaps, and definitely sympathetic.
Little emotion shown. Do you know where the painting you posted is, by the way? I found it difficult to find a location.
post #4 of 12
Don't know then, sorry.
post #5 of 12
Thread Starter 
Okay - I see it's in the Smithsonian.
Not the right one.
post #6 of 12
Wow, interesting painting I hadn't seen.
post #7 of 12
Not sure this totally fits your description:

post #8 of 12
Thread Starter 
And this is the other one I am not looking for - the Alma-Tadema I referred to. Again, we saw a painting with the parents standing as two, kinda childlike figures going about the unpleasant business of hardling the remains of their son. That's about all I remember.

Thanks, anyway. Now that two responders contributed the two relatively famous ones, other ideas please?
post #9 of 12
You and your wife combined the two in your heads.
post #10 of 12
Quote:
Originally Posted by mordecai View Post
Pearce
Quote:
Originally Posted by LaGourgandine View Post
Not sure this totally fits your description:
Both of these are infinitely sorrowful, and I now know who Lafont is. I like the second one more as it reflects the public nature of loss a monarchy would face. Although, I think the first is much more emotional. Thnx
post #11 of 12
Thread Starter 
"Both of these are infinitely sorrowful, and I now know who Lafont is"....

I don't think you know who I am, kiddo...
Anyways, I don't quite understand the above two posts, but can someone please tell me what painting we actually saw? Thanks.
post #12 of 12
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Styleforum › Forums › General › Entertainment and Culture › What and Where is Painting - Egyptian Couple Who Lost First-Born to Plague....