The National Gallery, London

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Click for a zoom of Peter Paul Rubens, 'A Roman Triumph'.ZoomMore about this painting.

Detail from Peter Paul Rubens, 'A Roman Triumph', about 1630.
London, The National Gallery.
Room 29

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Black Presence in National Gallery Paintings

Warrior

In western European art black men represented in physical action were often painted in ways that made them appear threatening. The stereotype of the 'exotic warrior' who fights half naked and with an unparalleled ferocity is never far away in such images. Such ideas were the result of centuries of conflict, wars of occupation and expulsion, and often defeat of Europeans by African peoples, such as the renowned Moors.

Sometimes the men shown are in fact soldiers, included in representations of armies both ancient and contemporary. However, in this painting by Rubens, the black men are elephant handlers, bringing up the rear of an imagined Roman procession of maidens, musicians and sacrificial animals. Whilst the white men in the front calmly lead sheep or struggle determinedly to move a bull, this black figure is shown with a gleam of excited aggression in his eye, hand grasping a sharp tool as if it's a weapon. This contrast between different races perpetuates many stereotypes.

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