Skip to main content
Joseph Accused by Potiphar's Wife
Joseph Accused by Potiphar's Wife
Joseph Accused by Potiphar's Wife

Joseph Accused by Potiphar's Wife

Maker (French, 1711-1781)
Datecirca 1740 - 1744
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions55 3/4 x 65 5/8 in. (141.6 x 166.7 cm)
Framed: 65 1/2 x 75 x 3 in. (166.4 x 190.5 x 7.6 cm)
Credit LinePurchase from gift of the Mark Morton Memorial Fund, and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Davidson
Object number1974.116
Status
Not on view
Description

At the right of Noel Hallé’s emotionally charged painting stands Joseph, who, according to the Old Testament story, rejected the advances of Potiphar’s wife. In their scuffle, she gained possession of his cloak, which she then used to suggest that he had initiated the attempted seduction. The subject of Hallé’s painting was rendered far less frequently than the preceding episode, in which Joseph flees the advances of Potiphar’s wife (Gen. 39). The many versions of the more famous scene generally feature two struggling figures, often in half length, and focus on Joseph’s escape and the procuring of his garment. The best-known precedent for Hallé’s theme is by Rembrandt, who depicts Potiphar listening to his wife’s accusations as Joseph looks on from the other side of the bed. Hallé places the figures on one side of the bed in a well-defined space, where the drama is clearly presented. His Potiphar shows astonishment at his wife’s announcement. Hallé added a servant who holds Joseph’s cloak, acting as an accomplice. His painting was well received in critical pamphlets when it was exhibited at the Salon of 1748. An anonymous author admired the novel treatment of the subject and especially the range of expression, “All the various passions in this painting form the happiest contrasts. It is assuredly the most successful work that Hallé has put before us.”

 

 

Resource: The David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art: A Guide to the Collection, Sue Taylor and Richard Born, eds. New York: Hudson Hills Press, 1990, p. 55.

 

Smart Publications:
The David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art
The Tragic Muse
At The Smart
No. 2
Mark Rothko
1962
The Magdalene Attended by Two Angels
Giuseppe Marchesi (called Il Sansone)
circa 1740 - 1750
Homer
Emile René Ménard
circa 1885
Potiphar's Wife
William Russell Flint
n.d.
Portrait of Lily Walton
Suzanne Valadon
1923
Angelica and Ruggiero
Cecco Bravo
circa 1640
Waterflowers
William Baziotes
1947
Portrait of Allan Frumkin
Philip Pearlstein
1965
The Anointment of King Solomon
Luca Giordano
1692 - 1694