Allegory of LIBERTY
French 19th Century Academic Drawing
Charcoal drawing heightened with
chalk on blue grey Ingres paper.
Profile of Liberty drawn in the style of a classical
stone relief.
This drawing is most likely the
work of a French art student during the late
19th or early 20th Century.
Liberty, shown in profile wears
the Phrygian Cap (Liberty cap) which was adopted
by the French revolutionaries of 1798 as a symbol
of liberation.
The Phrygian Cap or Bonnet
Rouge
The Phrygian Cap was an adaptation of a hat
worn by the ancient inhabitatns of Phygia and
was originally a symbol of the Persian deity
Mithras. In ancient Rome, this style of hat
was worn by newly freed slaves as a symbol of
their newly acquired citizenry.
An adaptation of the cap, made
of red woollen cloth to match the clothing of
the Sans Culottes, became popular in France
after the storming of the Bastille. It was known
in France as the Bonnet Rouge. The phrase "bonnet
rouge has also come to mean a revolutionary
or an extremist.
Dimensions: Around 9.5
X 12 inches (24 x 31 cm)
Condition: Very good. Sheet
very slightly wrinkled.
This image has also been adapted to make a greeting card which is available in Village Antique's Zazzle Gallery "Antique Images"