
Sigmund Freud, Der Wahn und die Träume (1907)Other painters with less psychological insight have placed sin [...] somewhere next to the Savior. Rops, however, put it in the very place of the Savior Himself. He seemed to know that when the repressed returns, it emerges from the very institution that repressed it.
A provocateur, close friends with Baudelaire, and a dark moralist of his time—who did not shy away from approaching erotic and blasphemous themes—Félicien Rops (1833-1898) was a sought-after artist.
He is particularly well-known for illustrating the works of authors such as Jules B. d’Aurevilly and Baudelaire's masterpiece The Flowers of Evil: writers whose works are considered founding contributions to Decadence, an artistic movement focused on pleasure, aestheticism and individualism, pushing the moral boundaries of late 19th century society.
Charles Baudelaire, in a letter written directly to Rops, perfectly summarizing the Decadent approach to hiding dark truths behind aesthetic beauty.You know what importance I attach to light and profound art, to seriousness masked by frivolity.
To truly understand Rops’s art, one must understand his unconventional life.
While legally married in Belgium to a wife who refused to grant him a divorce, Rops spent much of his time in Paris. There, he defied societal norms by moving in with Aurélie and Léontine Duluc, two sisters who ran a local fashion boutique. Rops lived with them in a scandalous ménage à trois (a three-way relationship) for the rest of his life. Léontine, with whom he had a daughter, became one of his most important muses.
In The Temptation of St. Anthony (1878), Rops approaches a medieval subject from a contemporary point of view.
Saint Anthony was a Christian saint who was said to have spent years in the desert as a hermit, where the devil plagued him with sinful visions that he overcame through prayer. In painting him, Rops built on a centuries-old tradition.
Unlike the medieval artists that came before him, Rops does not represent St. Anthony’s temptations through demons.
In his work, temptation is embodied by a naked woman - his mistres Léontine Duluc -, bound to a cross. A pig – hidden to Anthony, yet present to the viewer – symbolises man’s animal lust, as in Rops’ work Pornocrates, dating to the same year. Rops makes it clear that there is only one temptation here: that of the flesh.
The pig is also the traditional historical attribute of St. Anthony, because monks of his order historically kept pigs for the poor. Rops deliberately used this innocent historical fact as a clever shield: if accused of obscenity, he could claim it was merely a traditional religious symbol, while fully knowing his audience would read it as a symbol of pure lust.
To protect himself from censorship and outrage, Rops actively played innocent. In a letter to a friend, he used these traditional symbols to defend the painting against its critics:
Félicien Rops, in a letter to his friend François Taelemans.Keep above all any idea of an attack on religion or of erotica far from people's minds. When Goya has Lucifer take away the Holy Sacrament, he has no more anti-religious ideas than I do.
In Rops’s version, the nude woman appears proud and triumphant.
Did the grinning Devil hiding behind the cross violently shove the dead Christ aside, or does it seem the Savior is, not unwillingly, making way for her? The reclaiming of pleasures that Christian society deemed sinful is a theme often found in Decadent art, which rebelled against societal constraints. In a letter, Rops wrote:
Here is more or less what I wanted Satan to say to the good Anthony […] Even if the Gods are gone, Woman remains. The love of Woman remains and with it the abounding love of Life.
Years later, the work also caught the eye of Sigmund Freud.
To Freud, it was an astute representation of the psychological process of religious repression. According to him, Rops ‘seemed to know that the repressed thought returns at the very moment of its repression’. Indeed, Rops depicts his time’s complicated attitudes to sex with psychological sharpness – and makes us wonder how much of them still resound in our lives today.
We framed this masterpiece of decadence with our signature border and finished the edge in Walnut. The hem is hand-rolled and stitched in France.

