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Slaughtered Ox
Slaughtered Ox
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A Slaughtered Ox
ArtistRembrandt Edit this on Wikidata
Year1655
Dimensions94 cm (37 in) × 69 cm (27 in)
LocationRoom 844
CollectionDepartment of Paintings of the Louvre Edit this on Wikidata
IdentifiersJoconde work ID: 000PE008568
RKDimages ID: 232216

Slaughtered Ox, also known as Flayed Ox, Side of Beef, or Carcass of Beef, is a 1655 oil on beech panel still life painting by Rembrandt. It has been in the collection of the Louvre in Paris since 1857. A similar painting is in Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Glasgow, possibly not created by Rembrandt himself but probably by one of his pupils, perhaps Carel Fabritius.[1] Other similar paintings by Rembrandt or more likely his circle are held by museums in Budapest and Philadelphia.

The work follows in a tradition of artworks showing butchery, for example Pieter Aertsen's A Meat Stall with the Holy Family Giving Alms (1551) and Annibale Carracci's Butcher's Shop (c. 1583), and perhaps more specifically Joachim Beuckelaer's Slaughtered Pig (1563). Rembrandt made a drawing of a similar scene c. 1635. Another pre-1655 painting of a slaughtered ox (the example in Edinburgh, now attributed to Rembrandt's circle but formerly to Rembrandt) was perhaps inspired by a lost earlier work by Rembrandt himself. In northern Europe, November was traditionally the time for slaughtering livestock, before winter made feed difficult to find.

The painting measures 95.5 by 68.8 centimetres (37.6 in × 27.1 in), and is signed and dated "Rembrandt f. 1655". It shows the butchered carcass of a bull or an ox, hanging in a wooden building, possibly a stable or lean-to shed. The carcass is suspended by its two rear legs, which are tied by ropes to a wooden crossbeam. The animal has been decapitated and flayed of skin and hair, the chest cavity has been stretched open and the internal organs removed, revealing a mass of flesh, fat, connective tissue, joints, bones, and ribs. The carcass is carefully coloured, and given texture by impasto. In the background, a woman appears behind a half-open door, lifting the painting from still life into a genre painting, a scene of everyday life. It is sometimes considered a vanitas or memento mori; some commentators make references to the killing of the fatted calf in the biblical story of the Prodigal Son, others directly to the Crucifixion of Jesus.

The painting was possibly owned by Christoffel Hirschvogel in 1661. It was viewed by Joshua Reynolds in the collection of Pieter Locquet in Amsterdam in 1781, and later owned by Louis Viardot, who sold it to the Louvre in 1857 for 5,000 francs.

The work's muscular depiction inspired Honoré Daumier, Eugène Delacroix, a series of works by Chaïm Soutine, and Francis Bacon. Most particularly, Bacon's Figure with Meat depicts Pope Innocent X, as painted by Velazquez, accompanied by ghostly echoes of the carcass from Rembrandt's painting.

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from Grokipedia
Slaughtered Ox is a 1655 oil painting on an arched beech wood panel by the Dutch Golden Age artist Rembrandt van Rijn, measuring 94 cm by 69 cm, depicting the flayed carcass of an ox suspended by its hind legs in a dimly lit room, illuminated dramatically from the left to highlight the textures of flesh and bone. Housed in the Musée du Louvre in Paris since its acquisition in 1857, the work is signed "Rembrandt f. 1655" and stands out as one of the rare still lifes in Rembrandt's extensive oeuvre, which primarily focused on portraits, history paintings, and biblical scenes. The composition features a woman in the shadowed background behind a half-open door, adding a subtle narrative element to the otherwise stark scene of mortality. Rembrandt's masterful use of chiaroscuro—the stark contrast between light and shadow—emphasizes the ox's glistening viscera and flayed skin, creating a visceral sense of depth and realism that borders on the grotesque yet evokes profound emotional resonance. Painted during a period of personal and financial hardship for the artist, including his bankruptcy proceedings, the piece may draw from Rembrandt's own 1656 inventory, where a "Bœuf d'après nature" (ox from life) is listed, suggesting it was created as a study from a real subject. Art historians interpret the painting within Dutch 17th-century traditions, potentially as a memento mori symbolizing human transience or an allusion to the Prodigal Son's feast, though its exact intent remains debated due to Rembrandt's deviation from conventional still life norms. The work's influence extends beyond Rembrandt's era, inspiring later artists who grappled with themes of suffering and expressionism. Vincent van Gogh, in a letter from 1888, viewed it as an allegorical self-portrait of the artist's sacrificial labor, likening the ox to Christ's crucifixion and defending its profundity against critics. In the 20th century, Chaïm Soutine produced a series of over ten "Carcass of Beef" paintings starting in the 1910s, directly referencing Rembrandt's composition to explore visceral horror and personal anguish through distorted forms and vivid colors. These interpretations underscore the painting's enduring power as a meditation on life, death, and artistic creation.

Description

Composition and Subject Matter

The painting Slaughtered Ox depicts a flayed ox carcass suspended by its hind legs from wooden beams in a dimly lit interior space, likely a stable or butcher's shed, with the animal's head, horns, and skin removed to expose the raw musculature, bones, and viscera. The carcass dominates the composition, its splayed form filling much of the arched panel and drawing the viewer's eye through the stark revelation of the animal's internal structure. On the shadowed floor to the right of the carcass, a small white cat gazes toward it, introducing a subtle narrative element amid the scene's isolation. The work measures 94 cm in height by 69 cm in width and is executed in oil on a beech wood panel, its arched format enhancing the vertical emphasis on the hanging form. Rembrandt signed and dated the painting "Rembrandt f. 1655" in the lower foreground, positioned on a wooden sill or beam beneath the carcass. Dramatic lighting, emanating from an unseen source to the left, illuminates the textured surfaces of the flesh and bones while plunging the surrounding areas into deep shadow, thereby creating profound depth and directing focus squarely on the ox as the painting's core subject. This use of chiaroscuro aligns with Rembrandt's still life approach, emphasizing realism through selective illumination.

Artistic Technique

Rembrandt's Slaughtered Ox (1655) is executed in on a panel, a medium and support chosen for their and suitability in achieving intricate and long-term stability in a work of this scale. The panel measures approximately 94 by 69 centimeters, allowing for the intimate yet monumental depiction of the carcass. The artist applied paint in a rough, sculptural manner, employing the impasto technique to build thick layers, particularly on the exposed flesh, bones, and inner organs of the ox, which conveys a sense of moisture, texture, and three-dimensional volume. This pastose application creates low relief effects that draw the viewer's eye to the tactile qualities of the meat, emphasizing the painting's realism through visible brushwork rather than smooth blending. Such methods highlight Rembrandt's innovative handling of pigment to mimic organic forms, transforming the canvas into a lifelike simulation of decay and substance. Chiaroscuro plays a central role in modeling the forms, with dramatic contrasts between light and shadow accentuating the carcass's contours and enhancing its volumetric presence against the darkened interior. Light emanates from an implied source to the left, illuminating the ox while casting deep shadows that unify the composition and heighten the sense of depth and realism. This lighting technique not only sculpts the anatomical structure but also isolates the subject, making it appear almost luminous within the enveloping gloom. The palette is restrained and earthy, dominated by saturated reds, subdued browns, grays, and whites for the carcass itself, which evoke the raw tones of bloodied flesh and bone. These warm, organic hues contrast with the cooler, darker tones of the background architecture, such as subtle grays and umbers suggesting stone or wood, creating spatial recession through color gradation. Rembrandt's rendering of the ox's musculature demonstrates precise anatomical accuracy, derived from direct observation of animal carcasses and informed by his broader studies of human and animal anatomy during the 1650s. The depiction captures the layered textures of muscle, fat, and viscera with forensic detail, reflecting the artist's engagement with contemporary anatomical practices while prioritizing naturalistic fidelity over idealization.

Historical Context

Rembrandt's Career in 1655

In 1655, Rembrandt van Rijn, then aged 49, created The Slaughtered Ox during a tumultuous period marked by escalating financial pressures that had been building since the death of his wife, Saskia van Uylenburgh, in 1642. Following Saskia's passing, Rembrandt's personal life grew more complicated with subsequent relationships, including one with Geertje Dircx that led to legal disputes, while his expenditures on art collections and a lavish lifestyle exacerbated mounting debts from earlier investments, such as the 1639 purchase of his Amsterdam home. By the mid-1650s, these obligations had become unmanageable, culminating in his declaration of insolvency and the initiation of bankruptcy proceedings in July 1656, during which his possessions, including artworks, were inventoried and auctioned to satisfy creditors. This painting emerged in Rembrandt's mature phase, established in Amsterdam since the 1630s, after the height of his lucrative portrait commissions in the 1630s and early 1640s. By the 1650s, with fewer high-profile commissions, Rembrandt increasingly turned to more introspective genres, including still lifes like The Slaughtered Ox and ambitious history paintings such as Christ Presented to the People (1655), reflecting a deeper exploration of human emotion and dramatic narrative over societal portraiture. His workshop in Amsterdam remained active during this time, where pupils like Ferdinand Bol and Govert Flinck assisted in producing works under his supervision, though The Slaughtered Ox stands as an autograph piece, fully executed in his distinctive style with its masterful handling of light and texture. Amid personal isolation following family losses, Rembrandt's output in 1655 also included self-portraits that experimented with chiaroscuro effects and psychological depth, such as the Self-Portrait (c. 1655) in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, alongside the stark realism of his still lifes, signaling a shift toward more personal and experimental expressions in his later career. These works, produced in his Breestraat studio, underscore his continued innovation despite the encroaching financial crisis that would soon disrupt his professional stability.

Tradition of Butchery Paintings

The of butchery paintings emerged in the 16th-century , particularly in the , where artists like and his nephew pioneered market and scenes featuring slaughtered animals to contrasts between abundance and mortality. Aertsen's A Meat Stall with the Holy Family Giving (1551) vividly displays raw meats, including a partially skinned head, in a bustling foreground that overwhelms the viewer, while a distant background scene of the aiding the poor serves as a subtle reminder of spiritual priorities over worldly excess. Similarly, Beuckelaer extended this genre in Antwerp with crowded compositions of dead fowl, fish, and game amid vendors and produce, embedding vanitas-like symbolism where the carcasses evoked the frailty of flesh and the inevitability of death. Italian influences contributed to elevating the butchery motif within Baroque art, as seen in Annibale Carracci's The Butcher's Shop (c. 1583), which shifted toward naturalistic observation and sympathetic depiction of laborers handling carcasses, marking a reform against Mannerist artificiality and integrating everyday trades into elevated artistic discourse. This work, with its earthen palette and focus on butchers preparing lamb and beef, reflected the Carracci academy's emphasis on direct study of nature, transforming the raw subject of slaughter into a dignified genre scene that influenced northern artists by blending realism with implicit commentary on human labor and transience. By the 17th century, the Dutch still life tradition refined these precedents, incorporating animal carcasses as potent symbols of life's ephemerality within vanitas compositions that built upon earlier masters like Pieter Claesz, whose works featured decaying foods and objects to meditate on mortality drawn from Ecclesiastes. In this evolution, butchery scenes transitioned from the decorative, teeming abundance of 16th-century markets—crowded with produce and figures—to more somber, isolated presentations that isolated the carcass against dark backgrounds, heightening its contemplative isolation and moral weight. Rembrandt's Slaughtered Ox (1655) stands as a rare foray into this genre within his oeuvre, dominated by historical and portrait subjects, underscoring his deliberate invocation of these conventions to engage with themes of decay and introspection amid his personal challenges that year.

Symbolism and Interpretation

Vanitas and Memento Mori

In the Dutch Golden Age, the vanitas genre emerged as a prominent form of still-life painting that employed everyday objects or scenes—such as skulls, extinguished candles, or wilting flowers—to underscore the transience of life and the inevitability of death, drawing from Protestant moralizing traditions and emblematic literature. Art historian Eddy de Jongh has highlighted how such works, including depictions of slaughtered animals, served as reminders of mortality. Rembrandt's Slaughtered Ox (1655) positions the ox carcass as a potent vanitas symbol, its exposed flesh and viscera evoking the post-mortem decay of the physical body and the vulnerability inherent in mortality. The animal's flayed and segmented form, hanging limply, amplifies this theme by mirroring the fragility of human anatomy stripped of life. As a memento mori, the painting incorporates subtle elements like the ox's absent head—severed and unseen—and the shadowy, enclosed interior, which together foster quiet contemplation of death without explicit didactic symbols or moral exhortations. These features invite viewers to project human transience onto the carcass, aligning with broader vanitas conventions that avoided overt preaching in favor of evocative imagery. The distant figure of a woman in the background, partially visible through a half-open door and engaged in domestic activity, introduces a stark contrast: she embodies the persistence of daily life against the backdrop of death, thereby heightening the motif of impermanence without dominating the composition. Rembrandt elevates this vanitas motif beyond conventional didacticism through his hyper-realistic rendering, employing loose, textured brushstrokes and dramatic chiaroscuro to imbue the carcass with visceral presence, provoking an emotional and empathetic response that encourages profound reflection on mortality.

Biblical and Religious Allusions

Rembrandt's Slaughtered Ox (1655) invites interpretations rooted in Christian scripture, particularly through its central image of the suspended carcass, which scholars have linked to themes of sacrifice and redemption. One prominent allusion is to the Parable of the Prodigal Son in Luke 15:23, where the father commands the slaughter of the "fatted calf" to celebrate the son's return, symbolizing forgiveness and restoration. Art historian Kenneth M. Craig draws this parallel by comparing the painting to a 16th-century print by Philip Galle after Maerten van Heemskerck, which depicts a similar butchery scene in the context of the parable, suggesting Rembrandt's ox evokes communal joy amid personal hardship during his financial and familial struggles in 1655. The composition further resonates with New Testament imagery of Christ's Crucifixion, as the ox's flayed and hanging form mirrors the Savior's body on the cross, with exposed flesh recalling the scourging and wounds described in the Gospels (e.g., John 19:1-3). The carcass's splayed limbs and attachment to wooden beams reinforce this visual analogy, transforming a mundane still life into a meditation on atonement, a connection noted in scholarly analyses of Rembrandt's religious iconography. The shadowy female figure in the background adds narrative depth, interpreted by some as a subtle reference to other women witnesses at the Crucifixion (Mark 15:40-41), her contemplative pose suggesting mourning and devotion akin to those at Golgotha. This element enhances the scene's emotional layering without overt iconography. Rembrandt's Protestant upbringing in the Dutch Reformed tradition shaped this restrained approach, favoring implicit symbolism over the explicit devotional imagery common in Catholic art, as evidenced by his emphasis on personal faith and scriptural realism throughout his oeuvre.

Provenance

Early Ownership

The Slaughtered Ox, painted by in 1655 during a challenging period in his marked by financial difficulties, quickly garnered among collectors. It may have been listed in 's own 1656 (no. 108). It possibly appeared in the 1661 estate of the Amsterdam merchant Christoffel Hirschvogel, underscoring its early recognition and appreciation within elite Dutch circles. Throughout the late 17th century, following Rembrandt's death in 1669, the painting circulated among private Dutch collections, evidencing its sustained market value amid the booming Amsterdam art trade. It appeared in the 1674 inventory of Pieter van Cronenburg and Aerlant Roeters; the 1681 inventory of Pieter de Vos; and the 1700 post-mortem inventory of Lambert Doomer, a former pupil of Rembrandt. These records highlight the piece's appeal to connoisseurs who prized Rembrandt's innovative still lifes. In the 18th century, the painting entered the collection of Pieter Locquet le jeune in Amsterdam, where it remained until his death in 1782. British artist Joshua Reynolds encountered it during his 1781 European tour in Locquet's collection. The work was auctioned at Locquet's estate sale in Amsterdam from September 22–24, 1783 (lot 324), and soon after acquired by fellow Amsterdam collector Jan Danser Nijman, who held it until at least 1797. The ownership between 1797 and 1857 remains unclear. By the early 19th century, amid the extensive art acquisitions during the Napoleonic era, the painting transitioned to French ownership.

Acquisition by the Louvre

The painting entered the Louvre's collection in 1857 through purchase from Louis Viardot for 5,000 francs. Viardot, a prominent French writer and art critic who had acquired it earlier in the mid-19th century and appreciated its exceptional qualities within Rembrandt's oeuvre. Viardot, author of influential texts such as Les Merveilles de la peinture (1843), where he analyzed Rembrandt's innovative approach to light and realism, played a key role in elevating the work's recognition before its institutional transfer. This acquisition marked a significant addition to France's holdings of Dutch Golden Age masterpieces, reflecting growing 19th-century interest in Rembrandt's unconventional still lifes. Following its purchase, Le Bœuf écorché was integrated into the Louvre's Department of Paintings, specifically the Dutch school section, and has been on public display in Room 844 of the Richelieu Wing since the late 19th century, where it remains a focal point amid other Rembrandt works. The painting's placement underscores its status as one of Rembrandt's rare forays into still life, emphasizing the museum's commitment to contextualizing 17th-century Northern European art. In the 20th century, conservation efforts ensured the work's preservation. Technical analysis by the Rembrandt Research Project, including examinations confirming the artist's sole authorship and providing insights into his layered technique, such as preparatory underdrawings and modifications during execution. Today, Le Bœuf écorché is housed at the Musée du Louvre in Paris under inventory number MI 169, accessible to visitors in its dedicated gallery space. Public engagement has been enhanced since the 2010s through the Louvre's digitization initiatives, including high-resolution scans and interactive online reproductions available via the museum's collections portal and partnerships like Google Arts & Culture, facilitating global study and appreciation of the painting's tactile realism.

Variations by Rembrandt and His Circle

Rembrandt produced or oversaw several variations on the theme of the slaughtered ox during his Amsterdam period in the 1640s and 1650s, reflecting experimentation within his workshop. An early version, dated around 1640–1645 and housed in the Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum in Glasgow, depicts a flayed ox carcass suspended in a dark interior, with its horns and skin placed on a nearby slab and a woman sweeping the floor. This painting, signed by Rembrandt, is now widely attributed to his circle, possibly executed largely by an assistant, and serves as a precursor to his more refined 1655 composition in the Louvre. Pupils and followers in Rembrandt's workshop also created notable examples, adapting the master's motif while introducing distinct modifications. A mid-1640s painting in the Philadelphia Museum of Art, attributed to a follower of Rembrandt, shows a splayed ox carcass with smooth, grease-smeared flesh and exposed viscera, set in a rearranged room that includes added butchering tools for added realism. Similarly, a smaller 1639 oil on oak panel in the Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest, signed "R 1639," is ascribed to the School of Rembrandt or the brothers Adriaen and Isaac van Ostade, portraying a hanging ox in a subdued interior that echoes the master's early style. These works share core motifs with Rembrandt's Louvre painting, such as the suspended carcass in dimly lit, austere spaces that emphasize dramatic lighting contrasts to highlight the texture of the meat and bones, though variations appear in compositional details like the animal's positioning and incidental elements such as tools or figures. Authorship debates persist, informed by technical analyses of brushwork, pigment layers, and underdrawings, which often distinguish Rembrandt's direct involvement—characterized by bold impasto and nuanced tonal modeling—from the more tentative handling in studio productions. Most of these variations date from the 1640s to 1660s, aligning with Rembrandt's productive workshop phase in Amsterdam where such still lifes allowed for collaborative practice and stylistic exploration.

Influences on Later Artists

In the 19th century, Romantic artists such as Honoré Daumier and Eugène Delacroix drew inspiration from the muscular depiction and textural depth of Rembrandt's Slaughtered Ox, adapting the carcass motif in their sketches to heighten emotional intensity and explore the raw physicality of form. These responses reflected the painting's status as a "painter's painting," emphasizing its technical challenges in rendering flesh and light, which resonated with the era's emphasis on dramatic expression. Early 20th-century modernists, particularly , revisited the theme in the through a series of raw, distorted paintings that echoed Rembrandt's visceral textures while infusing them with expressionist and psychological turmoil. Soutine's Carcass of (ca. 1925), for instance, directly referenced the Louvre's Slaughtered Ox by depicting a suspended steer carcass, but transformed it using vivid, unstable colors to convey and existential dread, influenced by his personal experiences with and kosher prohibitions. This amplified the original's focus on organic materiality into a more anguished, modernist critique of the body. Francis Bacon's Figure with Meat (1954) explicitly incorporated elements from Rembrandt's work, positioning a screaming papal figure—derived from Velázquez's Portrait of Pope Innocent X—against a backdrop of dangling raw meat inspired by the Louvre carcass, to probe themes of violence, vulnerability, and the human condition. The painting's triptych-like composition and fleshy distortions extended Rembrandt's exploration of decay into a postwar context of existential horror, blending portraiture with the ox's symbolic weight. Rembrandt's Slaughtered Ox has left a broader legacy in abstract and contemporary art, shaping discussions on flesh, decay, and the body from the 1970s onward, as artists and critics reinterpreted its vanitas undertones in works addressing mortality, consumerism, and corporeal fragmentation across nearly four centuries.

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