The Tepidarium (The Roman Women at the Baths)

E891753

The Tepidarium (The Roman Women at the Baths) is a 19th-century painting by Théodore Chassériau depicting elegantly posed Roman women in a warm bathhouse interior, celebrated for its sensual classicism and refined composition.

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All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
The Tepidarium (The Roman Women at the Baths) canonical 1

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf oil painting
painting
artForm easel painting
artHistoricalPeriod 19th century
artist Théodore Chassériau NERFINISHED
colorPalette warm tones
countryOfOrigin France
creator Théodore Chassériau NERFINISHED
culturalContext French 19th‑century academic painting
depictionType idealized female beauty
depicts Roman women
classical architecture
drapery
interior scene
jewelry
marble floor
mirror
nudity
ornamental columns
public baths
reclining female figure
servant woman
genre history painting
mythological painting
hasTitle Le Tepidarium NERFINISHED
The Roman Women at the Baths NERFINISHED
The Tepidarium NERFINISHED
influencedBy Ingres NERFINISHED
Roman art
classical antiquity
languageOfTitle French
movement Academic art
Romanticism NERFINISHED
notableFor careful treatment of light and shadow
classical subject in Romantic style
elegant poses
sensual depiction of the female body
relatedWorkByArtist Orientalist scenes by Théodore Chassériau
setting tepidarium NERFINISHED
style refined composition
sensual classicism
subjectMatter Roman women at the baths
theme eroticism
femininity
leisure
luxury

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Théodore Chassériau notableWork The Tepidarium (The Roman Women at the Baths)