
Cleveland Museum of Art
Leaving the Oasis
Jean-Léon Gérôme
- Date
- 1880s
- Medium
- oil on wood panel
- Culture
- France, 19th century
- Department
- Modern European Painting and Sculpture
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Leaving the Oasis repeats several themes in Gérôme's art—camel caravans, oases, and expansive desert landscapes. As an academic realist, Gérôme painted everyday scenes in a meticulous and polished style. Here he carefully rendered the unique forms of the figures' dress and the camels' physical features, as well as the colors of the changing sky and the violet shadows cast by the airborne dogs and the legs of the camels. Although the picture's smoothness and detail suggest a photographic image, Gérôme actually composed his paintings in the studio, basing them on memories and sketches from his visits to the Near East. Following his first trip to Egypt in 1856, he developed into a major figure among 19th-century "Orientalists"—artists who specialized in representing Near Eastern life, culture, and landscapes.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.

A Caravan in the Desert
Cleveland Museum of Art

Portrait of an Egyptian Fellah
Getty Museum

Young Greeks in the Mosque
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Lion on the Watch
Cleveland Museum of Art

Approach of the Simoom, Desert of Gizeh
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Ruins of Kom Ombo
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Alpine Landscape: The Handegg, Switzerland
Cleveland Museum of Art
On the Nile
Art Institute of Chicago

Resting
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Interior of the Temple of Aboo Simbel
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Rest on the Flight into Egypt
Cleveland Museum of Art

The Large Tree
Cleveland Museum of Art