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Hugues Merle

 THE WILLIS (LA LÉGENDE DES WILLIS)


 The legend of the Willis depicts the power of the femme fatale to   Later in his career, Merle’s subject matter shifted to depictions of
 seduce and eventually destroy any man crossing her path. This is the   charming genre subjects of young women and children – works that
 scene represented by the French Academic painter, Hugues Merle   led him to become a commercially successful artist and a worthy
 in his Salon entry of 1848. Merle’s interpretation of the legend may   rival of William Bouguereau. Therefore, The Legend of the Willis,
 have been inspired by the prose of the German poet and literary   a painting which is unique and different for the artist, is all the
 critic Heinrich Heine (1797–1856) in his 1835 book, De l’Allemagne.   more interesting as we consider his career as a whole. It is one of
 This work also influenced the theme of the popular 19th century   Merle’s most evocative paintings. What at first appears as a tranquil
 ballet, Giselle. Heine wrote:  scene showing the evening sun disappearing over the horizon,
 instead signals the nocturnal appearance of the beautiful Willis
 There is a tradition of nocturnal dancing known in Slav countries under   they begin their night long dance of seduction. Some historians
 the name of Wili. The Wilis are affianced maidens who have died before   have hypothesized that the phrase “to give me the willies” is
 their wedding-day; those poor young creatures cannot rest peacefully in   based on this subject.
 their graves. In their hearts which have ceased to throb, in their dead
 feet, there still remains that passion for dancing which they could not   The Legend of the Willis was originally in the Second Empire
 satisfy during life; and at midnight they rise up and gather in bands on   collection of Didier Kahn-Sriber, where it graced the walls of his
 the highway and woe betide the young man who meets them, for he must   lavishly decorated mansion near the Avenue Foch in Paris.
 dance until he drops dead.

 Attired in their bridal dresses, with garlands of flowers on their heads,
 and shining rings on their fingers, the Wilis dance in the moonlight
 like the Elves; their faces, although white as snow, are beautiful in
 their youthfulness. They laugh with a deceptive joy, they lure you so
 seductively, their expressions offer such sweet prospects, that these
 lifeless Bacchantes are irresistible (Heinrich Heine, quoted in Cyril
 W. Beaumont, The Complete Book of Ballets, New York, 1938, p. 133).






















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