
Rebecca and the Wounded Ivanhoe
Eugène Delacroix
€53,90
Select sizeSize guide
- 380g/m² cotton canvas — certified museum quality
- Solid wood stretcher bar with 0.75” gallery wrap
- HD Giclée print — colour-true to the original
- Ready to hang — hanging hardware included
Rebecca and the Wounded Ivanhoe (1823) is one of Eugène Delacroix's earliest masterworks, painted when the artist was just twenty-five years old. Inspired by Sir Walter Scott's wildly popular 1820 novel Ivanhoe, this intimate oil on canvas depicts the compassionate Rebecca — a Jewish healer of noble character — tending to the gravely wounded knight Ivanhoe. The scene encapsulates the Romantic movement's fascination with medieval chivalry, literary narrative, and the charged interplay between human vulnerability and moral strength.
Delacroix renders the figures with remarkable psychological depth: Rebecca's expression radiates both tenderness and quiet resolve, while Ivanhoe's pallor conveys physical suffering. The warm, flickering palette and loose, expressive brushwork already hint at the bold colorism that would define Delacroix's later career. The composition draws on the tradition of history painting while infusing it with an emotional immediacy wholly characteristic of Romanticism. Held in the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, this work stands as a landmark of early nineteenth-century French painting.
This premium stretched canvas reproduction is printed on matte artist-grade canvas and hand-wrapped around a sturdy 0.75-inch wooden frame with a classic gallery wrap finish — ready to hang and worthy of any discerning collection.
| Artist | Eugène Delacroix |
| Year | 1823 |
| Medium | Oil on canvas |
| Dimensions | 25 3/8 × 21 1/8 in. (64.5 × 53.7 cm) |
| Collection | The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
| Movement | Romanticism |
| Available sizes | |
| Small | 20 × 25 cm (8″ × 10″) |
| Medium | 51 × 76 cm (20″ × 30″) |
| Large | 102 × 152 cm (40″ × 60″) |
| All sizes include a 0.75" gallery wrap. Ready to hang — no framing required. | |



