A number of Academy graduate students who completed the full course of study were allowed to compete for the Grand Gold Medal, an honour that carried a six-year fellowship to work in Italy or France. Contestants had to create their compositions on a given topic, usually one the Academic Council had gleaned from
classical antiquity and the mythological repertoire. When the theme of the competition was announced, the contestants had to stay in isolated workshops for a full day, and had 24 hours to plan their entries and draw a sketch of a future picture. The Academy Council approved the sketch, which was not allowed to be changed. The Academy had been criticised for its use of "antiquated" subjects for years so in 1863, it announced contestants would be given general themes such as joy, anger, and longing instead of explicit subjects to give students a better opportunity to demonstrate their abilities and inclinations. The rendering specifics were left to the contestant. The Academy opened up the subject matter for
historical painters.
Genre painters had always had almost a free choice of subject. This announcement, however, also said: "Contestants will be allowed to participate only once, and for all the contestants there will be only one golden medal of the first class". To further complicate matters, an unusually large number of graduate students qualified for the contest that year. In previous years, fewer contestants competed for more medals, and could compete again the next year if unsuccessful. In 1863, the competition promised to be very tough; the chances for success were slimmer and failure would be final. == Initial protests ==