Salammbô
by STRATHMANN, Carl, Oil on canvas, 187 x 287 cm
Strathmann’s most famous picture is Salammb�, representing the fictional title character of a historical novel by Gustave Flaubert. Lovis Corinth wrote of the painting in 1903: “Soon, however, the model was sent home, and Strathmann gradually covered his Salammb�’s nakedness with more and more rugs and fantastical garments of his own invention, so that by the end only a mystical profile and the fingers of one hand peeped out from amongst a profusion of ornamental fabrics.”
Flaubert’s novel is set in Carthage immediately before and during the Mercenary Revolt (241-237 B.C.). It was enormously popular when first published and jumpstarted a renewed interest in the history of the Roman Republic’s conflict with the North African Phoenician colony of Carthage.
Salammb� is a priestess and the daughter of the foremost Carthaginian general. She is the object of the obsessive lust of Matho, a leader of the mercenaries. Matho steals the sacred veil of Carthage, the Zaïmph, prompting Salammb� to enter the mercenaries’ camp in an attempt to steal it back. The Zaïmph is an ornate bejewelled veil, the city’s guardian, and touching it will bring death to the perpetrator.