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Seeing double?: Check out re-imagined versions of classics from within the Louvre

ByAnesha George
Updated on: Nov 07, 2025 07:57 PM IST

The Copyist exhibition invites 100 artists from around the world to redraw works by master artists. Check out dramatic, political and digital-era re-imaginings.

(Wikimedia)

The Orphan Girl at the Cemetery, a 19th-century portrait by Eugene Delacroix, is a work of rich tones and dramatic lighting meant to evoke the vulnerability of a lonely young woman and her tragic place in society.

PREMIUM
In his collage, Louvre Remix, the Beninese sculptor Georges Adeagbo places Eugene Delacroix’s famous painting of Liberty striding through a battlefield beside Marie-Guillemine Benoist’s Portrait of a Black Woman dressed in the colours of the French flag – a seeming reminder that while the French standard (held aloft in the Liberty painting) signals freedom to those at home, it has meant very different things when it has travelled. (Mennour Archives, Paris)

The French-Algerian artist Djamel Tatah, reconfigures it as Sans Titre (Untitled; below), representing the richly layered subject of the original in flattened form and minimalist shades of brown and grey, against a two-tone background reminiscent of our era of digital art.

(Franck Couvreur)

.

(Wikimedia)

Eugene Delacroix’s 1830 masterpiece, Liberty Leading the People, represents the spirit of revolution in France, depicted here as a country united against oppression.

In her re-imagining (below), French-Swiss artist Agnes Thurnauer juxtaposes Delacroix’s imagery with an excerpt from Monique Wittig’s feminist novel Les Guérillères (The Women Warriors; 1969), which envisions a world in which women have overthrown patriarchy. Liberty rises from amid the sampling of text.

(ADAGP, Paris)

.

(Musée du Louvre)

The Slippers, by 17th-century Dutch artist Samuel Van Hoogstraten, showcases a scene of quiet domesticity. The unconventional lack of human figures prompts reflections on the space.

(Below) Finnish artist Henni Alftan offers a modern perspective. “I didn’t copy it exactly – I tried instead to extract the essential in order to evoke a sequence of spaces by representing only a narrow part of it,” Alftan said in a statement.

(Aurélien Mole)
(Wikimedia)

The Orphan Girl at the Cemetery, a 19th-century portrait by Eugene Delacroix, is a work of rich tones and dramatic lighting meant to evoke the vulnerability of a lonely young woman and her tragic place in society.

PREMIUM
In his collage, Louvre Remix, the Beninese sculptor Georges Adeagbo places Eugene Delacroix’s famous painting of Liberty striding through a battlefield beside Marie-Guillemine Benoist’s Portrait of a Black Woman dressed in the colours of the French flag – a seeming reminder that while the French standard (held aloft in the Liberty painting) signals freedom to those at home, it has meant very different things when it has travelled. (Mennour Archives, Paris)

The French-Algerian artist Djamel Tatah, reconfigures it as Sans Titre (Untitled; below), representing the richly layered subject of the original in flattened form and minimalist shades of brown and grey, against a two-tone background reminiscent of our era of digital art.

(Franck Couvreur)

.

(Wikimedia)

Eugene Delacroix’s 1830 masterpiece, Liberty Leading the People, represents the spirit of revolution in France, depicted here as a country united against oppression.

In her re-imagining (below), French-Swiss artist Agnes Thurnauer juxtaposes Delacroix’s imagery with an excerpt from Monique Wittig’s feminist novel Les Guérillères (The Women Warriors; 1969), which envisions a world in which women have overthrown patriarchy. Liberty rises from amid the sampling of text.

(ADAGP, Paris)

.

(Musée du Louvre)

The Slippers, by 17th-century Dutch artist Samuel Van Hoogstraten, showcases a scene of quiet domesticity. The unconventional lack of human figures prompts reflections on the space.

(Below) Finnish artist Henni Alftan offers a modern perspective. “I didn’t copy it exactly – I tried instead to extract the essential in order to evoke a sequence of spaces by representing only a narrow part of it,” Alftan said in a statement.

(Aurélien Mole)
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