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Jacques-Louis David

Jacques-Louis David (French: [ʒaklwi david]; 30 August 1748 – 29 December 1825) was a French painter in the Neoclassical style, considered to be the preeminent painter of the era. In the 1780s, his cerebral brand of history painting marked a change in taste away from Rococo frivolity toward classical austerity and severity and heightened feeling,[1] harmonizing with the moral climate of the final years of the Ancien Régime.

Jacques-Louis David
33rd President of the National Convention
In office
5 January 1794 – 20 January 1794
Preceded byGeorges Auguste Couthon
Succeeded byMarc Guillaume Alexis Vadier
Personal details
Born(1748-08-30)30 August 1748
Paris, Kingdom of France
Died29 December 1825(1825-12-29) (aged 77)
Brussels, United Kingdom of the Netherlands
Political partyThe Mountain
Spouses
(m. 1782; div. 1793)
(m. 1796)
Alma materCollège des Quatre-Nations, University of Paris
Known for
Awards
MovementNeoclassicism
Signature

David later became an active supporter of the French Revolution and friend of Maximilien Robespierre (1758–1794), and was effectively a dictator of the arts under the French Republic. Imprisoned after Robespierre's fall from power, he aligned himself with yet another political regime upon his release: that of Napoleon, the First Consul of France. At this time he developed his Empire style, notable for its use of warm Venetian colours. After Napoleon's fall from Imperial power and the Bourbon revival, David exiled himself to Brussels, then in the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, where he remained until his death. David had many pupils, making him the strongest influence in French art of the early 19th century, especially academic Salon painting.

Early life edit

 
Portrait of David as a youth, c. 1765, by his tutor Joseph-Marie Vien

Jacques-Louis David was born into a prosperous French family in Paris on 30 August 1748. When he was about nine his father was killed in a duel and his mother left him with his well-off architect uncles. They saw to it that he received an excellent education at the Collège des Quatre-Nations, University of Paris, but he was never a good student—he had a facial tumor that impeded his speech, and he was always preoccupied with drawing. He covered his notebooks with drawings, and he once said, "I was always hiding behind the instructor's chair, drawing for the duration of the class". Soon, he desired to be a painter, but his uncles and mother wanted him to be an architect. He overcame the opposition, and went to learn from François Boucher (1703–1770), the leading painter of the time, who was also a distant relative. Boucher was a Rococo painter, but tastes were changing, and the fashion for Rococo was giving way to a more classical style. Boucher decided that instead of taking over David's tutelage, he would send David to his friend, Joseph-Marie Vien (1716–1809), a painter who embraced the classical reaction to Rococo. There, David attended the Royal Academy, based in what is now the Louvre.

 
Mademoiselle Guimard as Terpsichore, 1774–1775, an early work

Each year the Academy awarded an outstanding student the prestigious Prix de Rome, which funded a 3- to 5-year stay in Rome. Since artists were now revisiting classical styles, the trip provided its winners the opportunity to study the remains of classical antiquity and the works of the Italian Renaissance masters at first hand. Called pensionnaire they were housed in the French Academy's Rome outpost, which from the years 1737 to 1793 was the Palazzo Mancini in the Via del Corso. David made three consecutive attempts to win the annual prize, (with Minerva Fighting Mars, Diana and Apollo Killing Niobe's Children and The Death of Seneca) with each failure allegedly contributing to his lifelong grudge against the institution. After his second loss in 1772, David went on a hunger strike, which lasted two and a half days before the faculty encouraged him to continue painting. Confident he now had the support and backing needed to win the prize, he resumed his studies with great zeal—only to fail to win the Prix de Rome again the following year. Finally, in 1774, David was awarded the Prix de Rome on the strength of his painting of Erasistratus Discovering the Cause of Antiochus' Disease, a subject set by the judges. In October 1775 he made the journey to Italy with his mentor, Joseph-Marie Vien, who had just been appointed director of the French Academy at Rome.[2]

While in Italy, David mostly studied the works of 17th-century masters such as Poussin, Caravaggio, and the Carracci.[2] Although he declared, "the Antique will not seduce me, it lacks animation, it does not move",[2] David filled twelve sketchbooks with drawings that he and his studio used as model books for the rest of his life. He was introduced to the painter Raphael Mengs (1728–1779), who opposed the Rococo tendency to sweeten and trivialize ancient subjects, advocating instead the rigorous study of classical sources and close adherence to ancient models. Mengs' principled, historicizing approach to the representation of classical subjects profoundly influenced David's pre-revolutionary painting, such as The Vestal Virgin, probably from the 1780s. Mengs also introduced David to the theoretical writings on ancient sculpture by Johann Joachim Winckelmann (1717–1768), the German scholar held to be the founder of modern art history.[3] As part of the Prix de Rome, David toured the newly excavated ruins of Pompeii in 1779, which deepened his belief that the persistence of classical culture was an index of its eternal conceptual and formal power. During the trip David also assiduously studied the High Renaissance painters, Raphael making a profound and lasting impression on the young French artist.

Early work edit

 
Equestrian portrait of Stanisław Kostka Potocki (1781)

Although David's fellow students at the academy found him difficult to get along with, they recognized his genius. David's stay at the French Academy in Rome was extended by a year. In July 1780, he returned to Paris.[2] There, he found people ready to use their influence for him, and he was made an official member of the Royal Academy. He sent the Academy two paintings, and both were included in the Salon of 1781, a high honor. He was praised by his famous contemporary painters, but the administration of the Royal Academy was very hostile to this young upstart. After the Salon, the King granted David lodging in the Louvre, an ancient and much desired privilege of great artists. When the contractor of the King's buildings, M. Pécoul, was arranging with David, he asked the artist to marry his daughter, Marguerite Charlotte. This marriage brought him money and eventually four children. David had about 50 of his own pupils and was commissioned by the government to paint "Horace defended by his Father", but he soon decided, "Only in Rome can I paint Romans." His father-in-law provided the money he needed for the trip, and David headed for Rome with his wife, Charlotte, and three of his students, one of whom, Jean-Germain Drouais (1763–1788), was the Prix de Rome winner of that year.

 
Oath of the Horatii (1784)

In Rome, David painted his famous Oath of the Horatii, 1784. In this piece, the artist references Enlightenment values while alluding to Rousseau's social contract. The republican ideal of the general became the central focus of the painting with all three sons positioned in compliance with the father. The Oath between the characters can be read as an act of unification of men to the binding of the state.[4] The issue of gender roles also becomes apparent in this piece, as the women in Horatii greatly contrast the group of brothers. David depicts the father with his back to the women, shutting them out of the oath. They also appear to be smaller in scale and physically isolated from the male figures.[5] The masculine virility and discipline displayed by the men's rigid and confident stances is also severely contrasted to the slouching, swooning female softness created in the other half of the composition.[6] Here we see the clear division of male-female attributes that confined the sexes to specific roles under Rousseau's popularized doctrine of "separate spheres".

These revolutionary ideals are also apparent in the Distribution of Eagles. While Oath of the Horatii and The Tennis Court Oath stress the importance of masculine self-sacrifice for one's country and patriotism, the Distribution of Eagles would ask for self-sacrifice for one's Emperor (Napoleon) and the importance of battlefield glory.

 
The Death of Socrates (1787)

In 1787, David did not become the Director of the French Academy in Rome, which was a position he wanted dearly. The Count in charge of the appointments said David was too young, but said he would support him in 6 to 12 years. This situation would be one of many that would cause him to lash out at the Academy in years to come.

For the Salon of 1787, David exhibited his famous Death of Socrates. "Condemned to death, Socrates, strong, calm and at peace, discusses the immortality of the soul. Surrounded by Crito, his grieving friends and students, he is teaching, philosophizing, and in fact, thanking the God of Health, Asclepius, for the hemlock brew which will ensure a peaceful death... The wife of Socrates can be seen grieving alone outside the chamber, dismissed for her weakness. Plato is depicted as an old man seated at the end of the bed." Critics compared the Socrates with Michelangelo's Sistine Ceiling and Raphael's Stanze, and one, after ten visits to the Salon, described it as "in every sense perfect". Denis Diderot said it looked as if he copied it from some ancient bas-relief. The painting was very much in tune with the political climate at the time. For this painting, David was not honored by a royal "works of encouragement".

 
The Lictors Bring to Brutus the Bodies of His Sons (1789)

For his next painting, David created The Lictors Bring to Brutus the Bodies of His Sons. The work had tremendous appeal for the time. Before the opening of the Salon, the French Revolution had begun. The National Assembly had been established, and the Bastille had fallen. The royal court did not want propaganda agitating the people, so all paintings had to be checked before being hung. David's portrait of Lavoisier, who was a chemist and physicist as well as an active member of the Jacobin party, was banned by the authorities for such reasons.[7] When the newspapers reported that the government had not allowed the showing of The Lictors Bring to Brutus the Bodies of His Sons, the people were outraged, and the royals were forced to give in. The painting was hung in the exhibition, protected by art students. The painting depicts Lucius Junius Brutus, the Roman leader, grieving for his sons. Brutus's sons had attempted to overthrow the government and restore the monarchy, so the father ordered their death to maintain the republic. Brutus was the heroic defender of the republic, sacrificing his own family for the good of the republic. On the right, the mother holds her two daughters, and the nurse is seen on the far right, in anguish. Brutus sits on the left, alone, brooding, seemingly dismissing the dead bodies of his sons. Knowing what he did was best for his country, but the tense posture of his feet and toes reveals his inner turmoil. The whole painting was a Republican symbol, and obviously had immense meaning during these times in France. It exemplified civic virtue, a value highly regarded during the Revolution.

The French Revolution edit

In the beginning, David was a supporter of the Revolution, a friend of Robespierre, and a member of the Jacobin Club. While others were leaving the country for new and greater opportunities, David stayed behind to help destroy the old order; he was a regicide who voted in the National Convention for the Execution of Louis XVI. It is uncertain why he did this,[citation needed] as there were many more opportunities for him under the King than the new order; some people suggest David's love for the classical made him embrace everything about that period, including a republican government.

Others believed that they found the key to the artist's revolutionary career in his personality. Undoubtedly, David's artistic sensibility, mercurial temperament, volatile emotions, ardent enthusiasm, and fierce independence might have been expected to help turn him against the established order but they did not fully explain his devotion to the republican regime. Nor did the vague statements of those who insisted upon his "powerful ambition...and unusual energy of will" actually account for his revolutionary connections. Those who knew him maintained that "generous ardor", high-minded idealism and well-meaning though sometimes fanatical enthusiasm, rather than opportunism and jealousy, motivated his activities during this period.

Soon, David turned his critical sights on the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture. This attack was probably caused primarily by the hypocrisy of the organization and their personal opposition to his work, as seen in previous episodes in David's life. The Royal Academy was controlled by royalists, who opposed David's attempts at reform; so the National Assembly finally ordered it to make changes to conform to the new constitution.

David then began work on something that would later hound him: propaganda for the new republic. David's painting of Brutus was shown during the play Brutus by Voltaire.

In 1789, Jacques-Louis David attempted to leave his artistic mark on the historical beginnings of the French Revolution with his painting of The Oath of the Tennis Court. David undertook this task not out of personal political conviction but rather because he was commissioned to do so. The painting was meant to commemorate the event of the same name but was never completed. A meeting of the Estates General was convened in May to address reforms of the monarchy. Dissent arose over whether the three estates would meet separately, as had been tradition, or as one body. The King's acquiescence in the demands of the upper orders led to the deputies of the Third Estate renaming themselves as the National Assembly on 17 June. They were locked out of the meeting hall three days later when they attempted to meet, and forced to reconvene to the royal indoor tennis court. Presided over by Jean-Sylvain Bailly, they made a 'solemn oath never to separate' until a national constitution had been created. In 1789 this event was seen as a symbol of the national unity against the ancien regime. Rejecting the current conditions, the oath signified a new transition in human history and ideology.[8] David was enlisted by the Society of Friends of the Constitution, the body that would eventually form the Jacobins, to enshrine this symbolic event.[9]

This instance is notable in more ways than one because it eventually led David to finally become involved in politics as he joined the Jacobins. The picture was meant to be massive in scale; the figures in the foreground were to be life-sized portraits of the counterparts, including Jean-Sylvain Bailly, the President of the Constituent Assembly. Seeking additional funding, David turned to the Society of Friends of the Constitution. The funding for the project was to come from over three thousand subscribers hoping to receive a print of the image. However, when the funding was insufficient, the state ended up financing the project.[2]

David set out in 1790 to transform the contemporary event into a major historical picture which would appear at the Salon of 1791 as a large pen-and-ink drawing. As in the Oath of the Horatii, David represents the unity of men in the service of a patriotic ideal. The outstretched arms which are prominent in both works betray David's deeply held belief that acts of republican virtue akin to those of the Romans were being played out in France. In what was essentially an act of intellect and reason, David creates an air of drama in this work. The very power of the people appears to be "blowing" through the scene with the stormy weather, in a sense alluding to the storm that would be the revolution.

Symbolism in this work of art closely represents the revolutionary events taking place at the time. The figure in the middle is raising his right arm making the oath that they will never disband until they have reached their goal of creating a "constitution of the realm fixed upon solid foundations".[10] The importance of this symbol is highlighted by the fact that the crowd's arms are angled to his hand forming a triangular shape. Additionally, the open space in the top half contrasted to the commotion in the lower half serves to emphasize the magnitude of the Tennis Court Oath.

 
Drawing by Jacques-Louis David of the Tennis Court Oath. David later became a deputy in the National Convention in 1792

In his attempt to depict political events of the Revolution in "real time", David was venturing down a new and untrodden path in the art world. However, Thomas Crow argues that this path "proved to be less a way forward than a cul-de-sac for history painting".[9] Essentially, the history of the demise of David's The Tennis Court Oath illustrates the difficulty of creating works of art that portray current and controversial political occurrences. Political circumstances in France proved too volatile to allow the completion of the painting. The unity that was to be symbolized in The Tennis Court Oath no longer existed in radicalized 1792. The National Assembly had split between conservatives and radical Jacobins, both vying for political power. By 1792 there was no longer consensus that all the revolutionaries at the tennis court were "heroes". A sizeable number of the heroes of 1789 had become the villains of 1792. In this unstable political climate David's work remained unfinished. With only a few nude figures sketched onto the massive canvas, David abandoned The Oath of the Tennis Court. To have completed it would have been politically unsound. After this incident, when David attempted to make a political statement in his paintings, he returned to the less politically charged use of metaphor to convey his message.

When Voltaire died in 1778, the church denied him a church burial, and his body was interred near a monastery. A year later, Voltaire's old friends began a campaign to have his body buried in the Panthéon, as church property had been confiscated by the French Government. In 1791, David was appointed to head the organizing committee for the ceremony, a parade through the streets of Paris to the Panthéon. Despite rain and opposition from conservatives due to the amount of money spent, the procession went ahead. Up to 100,000 people watched the "Father of the Revolution" being carried to his resting place. This was the first of many large festivals organized by David for the republic. He went on to organize festivals for martyrs that died fighting royalists. These funerals echoed the religious festivals of the pagan Greeks and Romans and are seen by many as Saturnalian.

 
Republican costume designed by David. Engraving by Denon.

David incorporated many revolutionary symbols into these theatrical performances and orchestrated ceremonial rituals, in effect radicalizing the applied arts themselves. The most popular symbol for which David was responsible as propaganda minister was drawn from classical Greek images; changing and transforming them with contemporary politics. In an elaborate festival held on the anniversary of the revolt that brought the monarchy to its knees, David's Hercules figure was revealed in a procession following the Goddess of Liberty (Marianne). Liberty, the symbol of Enlightenment ideals was here being overturned by the Hercules symbol; that of strength and passion for the protection of the Republic against disunity and factionalism.[11] In his speech during the procession, David "explicitly emphasized the opposition between people and monarchy; Hercules was chosen, after all, to make this opposition more evident".[12] The ideals that David linked to his Hercules single-handedly transformed the figure from a sign of the old regime into a powerful new symbol of revolution. "David turned him into the representation of a collective, popular power. He took one of the favorite signs of monarchy and reproduced, elevated, and monumentalized it into the sign of its opposite."[13] Hercules, the image, became to the revolutionaries, something to rally around.

In June 1791, the King made an ill-fated attempt to flee the country, but was apprehended short of his goal on the Austrian Netherlands border and was forced to return under guard to Paris. Louis XVI had made secret requests to Emperor Leopold II of Austria, Marie-Antoinette's brother, to restore him to his throne. This was granted and Austria threatened France if the royal couple were hurt. In reaction, the people arrested the King. This led to an Invasion after the trials and execution of Louis and Marie-Antoinette. The Bourbon monarchy was destroyed by the French people in 1792—it would be restored after Napoleon, then destroyed again with the Restoration of the House of Bonaparte. When the new National Convention held its first meeting, David was sitting with his friends Jean-Paul Marat and Robespierre. In the convention, David soon earned the nickname "ferocious terrorist". Robespierre's agents discovered a secret vault containing the King's correspondence which proved he was trying to overthrow the government, and demanded his execution. The National Convention held the trial of Louis XVI; David voted for the death of the King, causing his wife, Marguerite Charlotte, a royalist, to divorce him.[citation needed]

When Louis XVI was executed on 21 January 1793, another man had already died as well—Louis Michel le Peletier de Saint-Fargeau. Le Peletier was killed on the preceding day by a royal bodyguard in revenge for having voted for the death of the King. David was called upon to organize a funeral, and he painted Le Peletier Assassinated. In it, the assassin's sword was seen hanging by a single strand of horsehair above Le Peletier's body, a concept inspired by the proverbial ancient tale of the sword of Damocles, which illustrated the insecurity of power and position. This underscored the courage displayed by Le Peletier and his companions in routing an oppressive king. The sword pierces a piece of paper on which is written "I vote the death of the tyrant", and as a tribute at the bottom right of the picture David placed the inscription "David to Le Peletier. 20 January 1793". The painting was later destroyed by Le Peletier's royalist daughter, and is known by only a drawing, an engraving, and contemporary accounts. Nevertheless, this work was important in David's career because it was the first completed painting of the French Revolution, made in less than three months, and a work through which he initiated the regeneration process that would continue with The Death of Marat, David's masterpiece.

 
The Death of Marat (1793)

On 13 July 1793, David's friend Marat was assassinated by Charlotte Corday with a knife she had hidden in her clothing. She gained entrance to Marat's house on the pretense of presenting him a list of people who should be executed as enemies of France. Marat thanked her and said that they would be guillotined next week upon which Corday immediately fatally stabbed him. She was guillotined shortly thereafter. Corday was of an opposing political party, whose name can be seen in the note Marat holds in David's subsequent painting, The Death of Marat. Marat, a member of the National Convention and a journalist, had a skin disease that caused him to itch horribly. The only relief he could get was in his bath over which he improvised a desk to write his list of suspect counter-revolutionaries who were to be quickly tried and, if convicted, guillotined. David once again organized a spectacular funeral, and Marat was buried in the Panthéon. Marat's body was to be placed upon a Roman bed, his wound displayed and his right arm extended holding the pen which he had used to defend the Republic and its people. This concept was to be complicated by the fact that the corpse had begun to putrefy. Marat's body had to be periodically sprinkled with water and vinegar as the public crowded to see his corpse prior to the funeral on 15 and 16 July. The stench became so bad however that the funeral had to be brought forward to the evening of 16 July.[14]

The Death of Marat, perhaps David's most famous painting, has been called the Pietà of the revolution. Upon presenting the painting to the convention, he said "Citizens, the people were again calling for their friend; their desolate voice was heard: David, take up your brushes..., avenge Marat... I heard the voice of the people. I obeyed." David had to work quickly, but the result was a simple and powerful image.

The Death of Marat, 1793, became the leading image of the Terror and immortalized both Marat and David in the world of the revolution. This piece stands today as "a moving testimony to what can be achieved when an artist's political convictions are directly manifested in his work".[15] A political martyr was instantly created as David portrayed Marat with all the marks of the real murder, in a fashion which greatly resembles that of Christ or his disciples.[16] The subject although realistically depicted remains lifeless in a rather supernatural composition. With the surrogate tombstone placed in front of him and the almost holy light cast upon the whole scene; alluding to an out of this world existence. "Atheists though they were, David and Marat, like so many other fervent social reformers of the modern world, seem to have created a new kind of religion."[17] At the very center of these beliefs, there stood the republic.

 
Marie Antoinette on the Way to the Guillotine, 16 October 1793. Sketched from a window in the rue Sainte-Honoré while the cart went past.

After the King's execution, war broke out between the new Republic and virtually every major power in Europe. David, as a member of the Committee of General Security, contributed directly to the Reign of Terror.[18] David organized his last festival: the festival of the Supreme Being. Robespierre had realized what a tremendous propaganda tool these festivals were, and he decided to create a new religion, mixing moral ideas with the Republic and based on the ideas of Rousseau. This process had already begun by confiscating church lands and requiring priests to take an oath to the state. The festivals, called fêtes, would be the method of indoctrination. On the appointed day, 20 Prairial by the revolutionary calendar, Robespierre spoke, descended steps, and with a torch presented to him by David, incinerated a cardboard image symbolizing atheism, revealing an image of wisdom underneath.

Soon, the war began to go well; French troops marched across the southern half of the Netherlands (which would later become Belgium), and the emergency that had placed the Committee of Public Safety in control was no more. Then plotters seized Robespierre at the National Convention and he was later guillotined, in effect ending the Reign of Terror. As Robespierre was arrested, David yelled to his friend "if you drink hemlock, I shall drink it with you."[19] After this, he supposedly fell ill, and did not attend the evening session because of "stomach pain", which saved him from being guillotined along with Robespierre. David was arrested and placed in prison twice, first from 2 August to 28 December 1794 and then from 29 May to 3 August 1795. Most of the time he served his sentence in the not uncomfortable Palais du Luxembourg in Paris.[2] There he painted his own portrait, showing him much younger than he actually was, as well as that of his jailer.

Post-revolution edit

 
The Intervention of the Sabine Women (1799)

After David's wife visited him in jail, he conceived the idea of telling the story of The rape of the Sabine women. The Sabine Women Enforcing Peace by Running between the Combatants, also called The Intervention of the Sabine Women is said to have been painted to honor his wife, with the theme being love prevailing over conflict. The painting was also seen as a plea for the people to reunite after the bloodshed of the revolution.[20]

David conceived a new style for this painting, one which he called the "Pure Greek Style", as opposed to the "Roman style" of his earlier historical paintings. The new style was influenced heavily by the work of art historian Johann Joachim Winckelmann. In David's words, "the most prominent general characteristics of the Greek masterpieces are a noble simplicity and silent greatness in pose as well as in expression."[21] Instead of the muscularity and angularity of the figures of his past works, these were smoother, more feminine, and painterly.

This work also brought him to the attention of Napoleon. The story for the painting is as follows: "The Romans have abducted the daughters of their neighbors, the Sabines. To avenge this abduction, the Sabines attacked Rome, although not immediately—since Hersilia, the daughter of Tatius, the leader of the Sabines, had been married to Romulus, the Roman leader, and then had two children by him in the interim. Here we see Hersilia between her father and husband as she adjures the warriors on both sides not to take wives away from their husbands or mothers away from their children. The other Sabine Women join in her exhortations."

During this time, the martyrs of the Revolution were taken from the Pantheon and buried in common ground, and revolutionary statues were destroyed. When David was finally released to the country, France had changed. His wife managed to get him released from prison, and he wrote letters to his former wife, and told her he never ceased loving her. He remarried her in 1796. Finally, wholly restored to his position, he retreated to his studio, took pupils and for the most part, retired from politics.

In August 1796, David and many other artists signed a petition orchestrated by Quatremère de Quincy which questioned the wisdom of the planned seizure of works of art from Rome. The Director Barras believed that David was "tricked" into signing, although one of David's students recalled that in 1798 his master lamented the fact that masterpieces had been imported from Italy.

Napoleon edit

 
Napoleon at the Saint-Bernard Pass (1801)

David's close association with the Committee of Public Safety during the Terror resulted in his signing of the death warrant for Alexandre de Beauharnais, a minor noble. Beauharnais's widow, Joséphine, went on to marry Napoleon Bonaparte and became his empress; David himself depicted their coronation in the Coronation of Napoleon and Josephine, 2 December 1804.

 
Historical painter encouraged by the government, 1814 caricature, Bodleian Library.

David had been an admirer of Napoleon from their first meeting, struck by Bonaparte's classical features. Requesting a sitting from the busy and impatient general, David was able to sketch Napoleon in 1797. David recorded the face of the conqueror of Italy, but the full composition of Napoleon holding the peace treaty with Austria remains unfinished. This was likely a decision by Napoleon himself after considering the current political situation. He may have considered the publicity the portrait would bring about to be ill-timed. Bonaparte had high esteem for David, and asked him to accompany him to Egypt in 1798, but David refused, seemingly unwilling to give up the material comfort, safety, and peace of mind he had obtained through the years. Draftsman and engraver Dominique Vivant Denon went to Egypt instead, providing mostly documentary and archaeological work.[22]

After Napoleon's successful coup d'état in 1799, as First Consul he commissioned David to commemorate his daring crossing of the Alps. The crossing of the St. Bernard Pass had allowed the French to surprise the Austrian army and win victory at the Battle of Marengo on 14 June 1800. Although Napoleon had crossed the Alps on a mule, he requested that he be portrayed "calm upon a fiery steed". David complied with Napoleon Crossing the Saint-Bernard. After the proclamation of the Empire in 1804, David became the official court painter of the regime. During this period he took students, one of whom was the Belgian painter Pieter van Hanselaere.

 
The Coronation of Napoleon (1806)

One of the works David was commissioned for was The Coronation of Napoleon (1805-1807). David was permitted to watch the event. He had plans of Notre Dame delivered and participants in the coronation came to his studio to pose individually, though never the Emperor. (The only time David obtained a sitting from Napoleon had been in 1797.) David did manage to get a private sitting with the Empress Joséphine and Napoleon's sister, Caroline Murat, through the intervention of erstwhile art patron Marshal Joachim Murat, the Emperor's brother-in-law. For his background, David had the choir of Notre Dame act as his fill-in characters. Pope Pius VII came to sit for the painting, and actually blessed David. Napoleon came to see the painter, stared at the canvas for an hour and said "David, I salute you." David had to redo several parts of the painting because of Napoleon's various whims, and for this painting, he received twenty-four thousand Francs.

David was made a Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur in 1803. He was promoted to an Officier in 1808. And, in 1815, he was promoted to a Commandant (now Commandeur) de la Légion d'honneur.

Exile and death edit

 
David during his exile, in 1817, painted by his pupil François-Joseph Navez
 
Comte Henri-Amédée-Mercure de Turenne-d'Aynac, 1816, oil on canvas. Clark Art Institute; painted while both the Comte and David were in exile

On the Bourbons returning to power, David figured in the list of proscribed former revolutionaries and Bonapartists for having voted execution for the deposed King Louis XVI; and for participating in the death of Louis XVII, the deposed king's son who was mistreated, starved and forced into a false confession of incest with his mother, Queen Marie-Antoinette, which contributed to her death sentence.

The newly restored Bourbon King, Louis XVIII, however, granted amnesty to David and even offered him the position of court painter. David refused, preferring self-exile in Brussels. There, he trained and influenced Brussels artists such as François-Joseph Navez and Ignace Brice, painted Cupid and Psyche and quietly lived the remainder of his life with his wife (whom he had remarried). In that time, he painted smaller-scale mythological scenes, and portraits of citizens of Brussels and Napoleonic émigrés, such as the Baron Gerard.

David created his last great work, Mars Being Disarmed by Venus and the Three Graces, from 1822 to 1824. In December 1823, he wrote: "This is the last picture I want to paint, but I want to surpass myself in it. I will put the date of my seventy-five years on it and afterwards I will never again pick up my brush." The finished painting—evoking painted porcelain because of its limpid coloration—was exhibited first in Brussels, then in Paris, where his former students flocked to view it.

 
Mars Being Disarmed by Venus and the Three Graces, David's last great work (1824)

The exhibition was profitable—13,000 francs, after deducting operating costs, thus, more than 10,000 people visited and viewed the painting. In his later years, David remained in full command of his artistic faculties, even after a stroke in the spring of 1825 disfigured his face and slurred his speech. In June 1825, he resolved to embark on an improved version of his The Anger of Achilles (also known as the Sacrifice of Iphigenie); the earlier version was completed in 1819 and is now in the collection of the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas. David remarked to his friends who visited his studio "this [painting] is what is killing me" such was his determination to complete the work, but by October it must have already been well advanced, as his former pupil Gros wrote to congratulate him, having heard reports of the painting's merits. By the time David died, the painting had been completed and the commissioner Ambroise Firmin-Didot brought it back to Paris to include it in the exhibition "Pour les grecs" that he had organised and which opened in Paris in April 1826.

 
David's Death mask (1825)

When David was leaving a theater, the driver of a carriage struck him, and he later died, on 29 December 1825. At his death, some portraits were auctioned in Paris, they sold for little; the famous Death of Marat was exhibited in a secluded room, to avoid outraging public sensibilities. Disallowed return to France for burial, for having been a regicide of King Louis XVI, the body of the painter Jacques-Louis David was buried in Brussels and moved in 1882 to Brussels Cemetery, while some say his heart was buried with his wife at Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris.

Freemasonry edit

The theme of the oath found in several works such as The Oath of the Tennis Court, The Distribution of the Eagles, and Leonidas at Thermopylae, was perhaps inspired by the rituals of Freemasonry. In 1989 during the "David against David" conference Albert Boime was able to prove, on the basis of a document dated in 1787, the painter's membership in the "La Moderation" Masonic Lodge.[23][24]

Medical analysis of David's face edit

Jacques-Louis David's facial abnormalities were traditionally reported to be a consequence of a deep facial sword wound after a fencing incident. These left him with a noticeable asymmetry during facial expression and resulted in his difficulty in eating or speaking. (He could not pronounce some consonants such as the letter 'r'.) A sword scar wound on the left side of his face is present in his self-portrait and sculptures and corresponds to some of the buccal branches of the facial nerve. An injury to this nerve and its branches are likely to have resulted in the difficulties with his left facial movement.

Furthermore, as a result of this injury, he suffered from a growth on his face that biographers and art historians have defined as a benign tumor. These, however, may have been a granuloma, or even a post-traumatic neuroma.[25] As historian Simon Schama has pointed out, witty banter and public speaking ability were key aspects of the social culture of 18th-century France. In light of these cultural keystones, David's tumor would have been a heavy obstacle in his social life.[26] David was sometimes referred to as "David of the Tumor".[27]

Portraiture edit

In addition to his history paintings, David completed a number of privately commissioned portraits. Warren Roberts, among others, has pointed out the contrast between David's "public style" of painting, as shown in his history paintings, and his "private style", as shown in his portraits.[28] His portraits were characterized by a sense of truth and realism. He focused on defining his subjects' features and characters without idealizing them.[29][page needed] This is different from the style seen in his historical paintings, in which he idealizes his figures' features and bodies to align with Greek and Roman ideals of beauty.[30] He puts a great deal of detail into his portraits, defining smaller features such as hands and fabric. The compositions of his portraits remain simple with blank backgrounds that allow the viewer to focus on the details of the subject.

The portrait he did of his wife (1813) is an example of his typical portrait style.[28] The background is dark and simple without any clues as to the setting, which forces the viewer to focus entirely on her. Her features are un-idealized and truthful to her appearance.[28] There is a great amount of detail that can be seen in his attention to portraying the satin material of the dress she wears, the drapery of the scarf around her, and her hands which rest in her lap.

 
Emmanuel Joseph Sieyès, 1817

In the painting of Brutus (1789), the man and his wife are separated, both morally and physically. Paintings such as these, depicting the great strength of patriotic sacrifice, made David a popular hero of the revolution.[28]

In the Portrait of Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier and his wife (1788), the man and his wife are tied together in an intimate pose. She leans on his shoulder while he pauses from his work to look up at her. David casts them in a soft light, not in the sharp contrast of Brutus or of the Horatii. Also of interest—Lavoisier was a tax collector, as well as a famous chemist. Though he spent some of his money trying to clean up swamps and eradicate malaria, he was nonetheless sent to the guillotine during the Reign of Terror as an enemy of the people. David, then a powerful member of the National Assembly, stood idly by and watched.[31]

Other portraits include paintings of his sister-in-law and her husband, Madame and Monsieur Seriziat. The picture of Monsieur Seriziat depicts a man of wealth, sitting comfortably with his horse-riding equipment. The picture of the Madame shows her wearing an unadorned white dress, holding her young child's hand as they lean against a bed. David painted these portraits of Madame and Monsieur Seriziat out of gratitude for letting him stay with them after he was in jail.[32]

Towards the end of David's life, he painted a portrait of his old friend Abbé Sieyès. Both had been involved in the Revolution, both had survived the purging of political radicals that followed the reign of terror.

Shift in attitude edit

The shift in David's perspective played an important role in the paintings of David's later life, including this one of Sieyès.[33] During the height of The Terror, David was an ardent supporter of radicals such as Robespierre and Marat, and twice offered up his life in their defense. He organized revolutionary festivals and painted portraits of martyrs of the revolution, such as Lepeletier, who was assassinated for voting for the death of the king. David was an impassioned speaker at times in the National Assembly. In speaking to the Assembly about the young boy named Bara, another martyr of the revolution, David said, "O Bara! O Viala! The blood that you have spread still smokes; it rises toward Heaven and cries for vengeance."[34]

After Robespierre was sent to the guillotine, however, David was imprisoned and changed the attitude of his rhetoric. During his imprisonment he wrote many letters, pleading his innocence. In one he wrote, "I am prevented from returning to my atelier, which, alas, I should never have left. I believed that in accepting the most honorable position, but very difficult to fill, that of legislator, that a righteous heart would suffice, but I lacked the second quality, understanding."[35]

Later, while explaining his developing "Grecian style" for paintings such as The Intervention of the Sabine Women, David further commented on a shift in attitude: "In all human activity the violent and transitory develops first; repose and profundity appear last. The recognition of these latter qualities requires time; only great masters have them, while their pupils have access only to violent passions."[36]

Legacy edit

 
Seventy-five years after his death, David is painted by the painter Emmanuel Van Den Büssche, (Musée de la Révolution française)

Jacques-Louis David was, in his time, regarded as the leading painter in France, and arguably all of Western Europe; many of the painters honored by the restored Bourbons following the French Revolution had been David's pupils.[37] David's student Antoine-Jean Gros for example, was made a Baron and honored by Napoleon Bonaparte's court.[37] Another pupil of David's, Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres became the most important artist of the restored Royal Academy and the figurehead of the Neoclassical school of art, engaging the increasingly popular Romantic school of art that was beginning to challenge Neoclassicism.[37] David invested in the formation of young artists for the Rome Prize, which was also a way to pursue his old rivalry with other contemporary painters such as Joseph-Benoît Suvée, who had also started teaching classes.[29][page needed] To be one of David's students was considered prestigious and earned his students a lifetime reputation.[38] He called on the more advanced students, such as Jérôme-Martin Langlois, to help him paint his large canvases. Musician and artist Therese Emilie Henriette Winkel; and painter Jean Baptiste Vermay also studied with David.[39][40]

Despite David's reputation, he was more fiercely criticized right after his death than at any point during his life. His style came under the most serious criticism for being static, rigid, and uniform throughout all his work. David's art was also attacked for being cold and lacking warmth.[41] David, however, made his career precisely by challenging what he saw as the earlier rigidity and conformity of the French Royal Academy's approach to art.[42] David's later works also reflect his growth in the development of the Empire style, notable for its dynamism and warm colors. It is likely that much of the criticism of David following his death came from David's opponents; during his lifetime David made a great many enemies with his competitive and arrogant personality as well as his role in the Terror.[38] David sent many people to the guillotine and personally signed the death warrants for King Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. One significant episode in David's political career that earned him a great deal of contempt was the execution of Emilie Chalgrin. A fellow painter Carle Vernet had approached David, who was on the Committee of Public Safety, requesting him to intervene on behalf of his sister, Chalgrin. She had been accused of crimes against the Republic, most notably possessing stolen items.[43] David refused to intervene in her favor, and she was executed. Vernet blamed David for her death, and the episode followed him for the rest of his life and after.

In the last 50 years David has enjoyed a revival in popular favor and in 1948 his two-hundredth birthday was celebrated with an exhibition at the Musée de l'Orangerie in Paris and at Versailles showing his life's works.[44] Following World War II, Jacques-Louis David was increasingly regarded as a symbol of French national pride and identity, as well as a vital force in the development of European and French art in the modern era.[45] The birth of Romanticism is traditionally credited to the paintings of eighteenth-century French artists such as Jacques-Louis David.[46]

There are streets named after David in the French cities of Carcassonne and Montpellier.

 
Jean-Nicolas Laugier after Jacques-Louis David, Leonidas at Thermoplyae, published 1826, engraving

Filmography edit

Danton (Andrzej Wajda, France, 1982) – Historical drama. Many scenes include David as a silent character watching and drawing. The film focuses on the period of the Terror.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Matthew Collings. "Feelings". This Is Civilisation. Season 1. Episode 2. 2007.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Lee, Simon. "David, Jacques-Louis." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. 14 November 2014.<http://www.oxfordartonline.com/subscriber/article/grove/art/T021541>.
  3. ^ Alex Potts, Flesh and the Ideal: Winckelmann and the Origins of Art History (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2000).
  4. ^ Boime 1987, p. 394.
  5. ^ Boime 1987, p. 399.
  6. ^ Boime 1987, p. 398.
  7. ^ Honour 1977, p. 72.
  8. ^ Roberts, Warren (2000). Jaques-Louis David and Jean-Louis Prieur revolutionary artists : the public, the populace, and images of the French revolution. New York: State university of New York press. p. 229. ISBN 0791442888.
  9. ^ a b Crow 2007.
  10. ^ Bordes 2005, p. ??.
  11. ^ Hunt 2004, p. 97.
  12. ^ Hunt 2004, p. 99.
  13. ^ Hunt 2004, p. 103.
  14. ^ Schama 1989, p. 83.
  15. ^ Boime 1987, p. 454.
  16. ^ Rosenblum 1969, p. 83.
  17. ^ Janson & Rosenblum 1984, p. 30.
  18. ^ Boime 1987, p. 442.
  19. ^ Carlyle, p. 384.
  20. ^ Roberts 1992, pp. 90–112.
  21. ^ Roberts 1992, pp. 90–115.
  22. ^ Bordes 2005, pp. 26-28.
  23. ^ Albert, Boime (1993). "Les thèmes du serment, David et la Franc-maçonnerie". In Michel, Régis (ed.). David contre David (in French). Paris: Documentation Française. p. 83. ISBN 9782110026132.
  24. ^ Pierrat, Emmanuel; Kupferman, Laurent (2013). Le Paris des francs-maçons (in French). Paris: Cherche midi. ISBN 978-2749129518.
  25. ^ Ashrafian, H. Jacques-Louis David and his post-traumatic facial pathology. J R Soc Med 2007;100:341-342.
  26. ^ Schama, Simon. The Power of Art: Jacques-Louis David. https://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/powerofart/david.shtml
  27. ^ Roberts 1992, pp. 1–30.
  28. ^ a b c d Roberts 1992, pp. 42–45.
  29. ^ a b Bordes 2005.
  30. ^ Wilson, Elizabeth Barkley. "Jacques-Louis David." Smithsonian 29, no. 5 (August 1998): 80. Academic Search Complete, EBSCOhost (accessed 18 November 2017).
  31. ^ Roberts 1992, pp. 43–45.
  32. ^ Lajer-Burcharth, Ewa. “Necklines: The Art of Jacques-Louis David After the Terror.” New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999.
  33. ^ Roberts 1992, pp. 90–150.
  34. ^ Roberts 1992, pp. 88–92.
  35. ^ Roberts 1992, pp. 90–94.
  36. ^ Roberts 1992, pp. 100–112.
  37. ^ a b c Lee, Simon. David. p. 321.
  38. ^ a b Lee, Simon. David. pp. 321–322.
  39. ^ "Winckel, Therese aus dem - Sophie Drinker Institut". www.sophie-drinker-institut.de. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
  40. ^ "Cultural Anthropology". Abstracts in Anthropology. 69 (3): 440–589. October 2014. doi:10.1177/000134551406900302. ISSN 0001-3455. S2CID 220318250.
  41. ^ Lee, Simon. David. p. 322.
  42. ^ Roberts 1992, p. 14.
  43. ^ Lee, Simon. David. p. 151.
  44. ^ Lee, Simon. David. p. 326.
  45. ^ Lee, Simon. David. p. 328.
  46. ^ Lee Palmer, Allison. Historical Dictionary of Romantic Art and Architecture. p. 304.
  47. ^ Sloane, J. C., Wisdom, J. M., & William Hayes Ackland Memorial Art Center. 1978. French Nineteenth Century Oil Sketches: David to Degas. Chapel Hill, N.C: The University. p. 50

Sources edit

  • Boime, Albert (1987), Social History of Modern Art: Art in the Age of Revolution, 1750–1800 volume 1, Chicago, Illinois: The University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0-226-06332-1
  • Bordes, Philippe (1988), David, Paris, FRA: Hazan, ISBN 2-85025-173-9
  • Bordes, Philippe (2005), Jacques-Louis David: From Empire to Exile, New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0300104479, retrieved 23 February 2020
  • Brookner, Anita, Jacques-Louis David, Chatto & Windus (1980)
  • Carlyle, Thomas (1860) [1837]. The French Revolution: A History. Vol. II. New York: Harper & Bros. OCLC 14208955.
  • Chodorow, Stanley, et al. The Mainstream of Civilization. New York: The Harcourt Press (1994) pg. 594
  • Crow, Thomas E. (1995), Emulation: Making Artists for Revolutionary France (1st ed.), New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press, ISBN 0-300-06093-9
  • Crow, Thomas E. (2007), "Patriotism and Virtue: David to the Young Ingres", in Eisenman, Stephen F. (ed.), Nineteenth Century Art: A Critical History (3rd ed.), New York City, New York: Thames & Hudson, pp. 18–54, ISBN 978-0-500-28683-8
  • Delécluze, E., Louis David, son école et son temps, Paris, (1855) re-edition Macula (1983)
  • Dowd, David, Pageant-Master of the Republic, Lincoln, University of Nebraska Press, (1948)
  • Honour, Hugh (1977), Neo-Classicism, New York City, New York: Penguin Books, ISBN 0-14-013760-2
  • Humbert, Agnès, Louis David, peintre et conventionnel: essai de critique marxiste, Paris, Editions sociales internationales (1936)
  • Humbert, Agnès, Louis David, collection des Maîtres, 60 illustrations, Paris, Braun (1940)
  • Hunt, Lynn (2004), Politics, Culture, and Class in the French Revolution, Los Angeles, California: University of California Press, ISBN 0-520-24156-8
  • Janson, Horst Waldemar; Rosenblum, Robert (1984), 19th-Century Art, New York City, New York: Harry Abrams, ISBN 0-13-622621-3
  • Johnson, Dorothy, Jacques-Louis David. New Perspectives, Newark (2006)
  • Lajer-Burcharth, Ewa, Necklines. The art of Jacques-Louis David after the Terror, ed. Yale University Press, New Haven London (1999)
  • Lee, Simon, David, Phaidon, London (1999). ISBN 0714838047
  • Lévêque, Jean-Jacques, Jacques-Louis David édition Acr Paris (1989)
  • Leymarie, Jean, French Painting, the 19th century, Cleveland (1962)
  • Lindsay, Jack, Death of the Hero, London, Studio Books (1960)
  • Malvone, Laura, L'Évènement politique en peinture. A propos du Marat de David in Mélanges de l'École française de Rome, Italie et Méditerranée 106, 1 (1994)
  • Michel, R. (ed), David contre David, actes du colloque au Louvre du 6-10 décembre 1989, Paris (1993)
  • Monneret, Sophie Monneret, David et le néoclassicisme, ed. Terrail, Paris (1998)
  • Noël, Bernard, David, éd. Flammarion, Paris (1989)
  • Rosenblum, Robert (1969), Transformations in Late Eighteenth Century Art (1st paperback ed.), Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, ISBN 0-691-00302-5
  • Roberts, Warren (1 February 1992), Jacques-Louis David, Revolutionary Artist: Art, Politics, and the French Revolution, The University of North Carolina Press, ISBN 0-8078-4350-4
  • Rosenberg, Pierre, Prat, Louis-Antoine, Jacques-Louis David 1748-1825. Catalogue raisonné des dessins, 2 volumes, éd. Leonardo Arte, Milan (2002)
  • Rosenberg, Pierre, Peronnet, Benjamin, Un album inédit de David in Revue de l'art, n°142 (2003–04), pp. 45–83 (complete the previous reference)
  • Sahut, Marie-Catherine & Michel, Régis, David, l'art et le politique, coll. "Découvertes Gallimard" (nº 46), série Peinture. Éditions Gallimard et RMN Paris (1988)
  • Sainte-Fare Garnot, N., Jacques-Louis David 1748-1825, Paris, Ed. Chaudun (2005)
  • Schama, Simon (1989). Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution. Penguin Books.
  • Schnapper, Antoine, David témoin de son temps, Office du Livre, Fribourg, (1980)
  • Thévoz, Michel, Le théâtre du crime. Essai sur la peinture de David, éd. de Minuit, Paris (1989)
  • Vanden Berghe, Marc, Plesca, Ioana, Nouvelles perspectives sur la Mort de Marat: entre modèle jésuite et références mythologiques, Bruxelles (2004) / New Perspectives on David's Death of Marat, Brussels (2004) - online on www.art-chitecture.net/publications.php
  • Vanden Berghe, Marc, Plesca, Ioana, Lepelletier de Saint-Fargeau sur son lit de mort par Jacques-Louis David: saint Sébastien révolutionnaire, miroir multiréférencé de Rome, Brussels (2005) - online on www.art-chitecture.net/publications.php
  • Vaughan, William and Weston, Helen (eds),Jacques-Louis David's Marat, Cambridge (2000)
  • The Death of Socrates. Retrieved 29 June 2005. New York Med.
  • Jacques-Louis David, on An Abridged History of Europe. Retrieved 29 June 2005
  • J.L. David 6 August 2002 at the Wayback Machine on CGFA. Retrieved 29 June 2005

Further reading edit

  • French painting 1774-1830: the Age of Revolution. New York; Detroit: The Metropolitan Museum of Art; The Detroit Institute of Arts. 1975. (see index)

External links edit

  • multimedia feature; Louvre museum official website
  • (Louvre museum)
  • Web Gallery of Art
  • www.jacqueslouisdavid.org 101 paintings by Jacques-Louis David
  • Jacques-Louis David at Olga's Gallery
  • Jacques-Louis David in the "History of Art" 5 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  • smARThistory: Death of Socrates 2 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  • Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute 2005 exhibition, Jacques-Louis David: Empire to Exile 16 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  • The equestrian portrait of Stanislaw Kostka Potocki at the Wilanow Palace Museum

jacques, louis, david, french, ʒaklwi, david, august, 1748, december, 1825, french, painter, neoclassical, style, considered, preeminent, painter, 1780s, cerebral, brand, history, painting, marked, change, taste, away, from, rococo, frivolity, toward, classica. Jacques Louis David French ʒaklwi david 30 August 1748 29 December 1825 was a French painter in the Neoclassical style considered to be the preeminent painter of the era In the 1780s his cerebral brand of history painting marked a change in taste away from Rococo frivolity toward classical austerity and severity and heightened feeling 1 harmonizing with the moral climate of the final years of the Ancien Regime Jacques Louis DavidSelf portrait 1794 Musee du Louvre 33rd President of the National ConventionIn office 5 January 1794 20 January 1794Preceded byGeorges Auguste CouthonSucceeded byMarc Guillaume Alexis VadierPersonal detailsBorn 1748 08 30 30 August 1748Paris Kingdom of FranceDied29 December 1825 1825 12 29 aged 77 Brussels United Kingdom of the NetherlandsPolitical partyThe MountainSpousesMarguerite Charlotte Pecoul m 1782 div 1793 wbr m 1796 wbr Alma materCollege des Quatre Nations University of ParisKnown forOath of the Horatii 1784 The Death of Marat 1793 AwardsPrix de RomeCommander of the Legion of HonourMovementNeoclassicismSignatureDavid later became an active supporter of the French Revolution and friend of Maximilien Robespierre 1758 1794 and was effectively a dictator of the arts under the French Republic Imprisoned after Robespierre s fall from power he aligned himself with yet another political regime upon his release that of Napoleon the First Consul of France At this time he developed his Empire style notable for its use of warm Venetian colours After Napoleon s fall from Imperial power and the Bourbon revival David exiled himself to Brussels then in the United Kingdom of the Netherlands where he remained until his death David had many pupils making him the strongest influence in French art of the early 19th century especially academic Salon painting Contents 1 Early life 2 Early work 3 The French Revolution 4 Post revolution 5 Napoleon 6 Exile and death 7 Freemasonry 8 Medical analysis of David s face 9 Portraiture 10 Shift in attitude 11 Legacy 12 Filmography 13 Gallery 14 See also 15 References 16 Sources 17 Further reading 18 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Portrait of David as a youth c 1765 by his tutor Joseph Marie VienJacques Louis David was born into a prosperous French family in Paris on 30 August 1748 When he was about nine his father was killed in a duel and his mother left him with his well off architect uncles They saw to it that he received an excellent education at the College des Quatre Nations University of Paris but he was never a good student he had a facial tumor that impeded his speech and he was always preoccupied with drawing He covered his notebooks with drawings and he once said I was always hiding behind the instructor s chair drawing for the duration of the class Soon he desired to be a painter but his uncles and mother wanted him to be an architect He overcame the opposition and went to learn from Francois Boucher 1703 1770 the leading painter of the time who was also a distant relative Boucher was a Rococo painter but tastes were changing and the fashion for Rococo was giving way to a more classical style Boucher decided that instead of taking over David s tutelage he would send David to his friend Joseph Marie Vien 1716 1809 a painter who embraced the classical reaction to Rococo There David attended the Royal Academy based in what is now the Louvre nbsp Mademoiselle Guimard as Terpsichore 1774 1775 an early workEach year the Academy awarded an outstanding student the prestigious Prix de Rome which funded a 3 to 5 year stay in Rome Since artists were now revisiting classical styles the trip provided its winners the opportunity to study the remains of classical antiquity and the works of the Italian Renaissance masters at first hand Called pensionnaire they were housed in the French Academy s Rome outpost which from the years 1737 to 1793 was the Palazzo Mancini in the Via del Corso David made three consecutive attempts to win the annual prize with Minerva Fighting Mars Diana and Apollo Killing Niobe s Children and The Death of Seneca with each failure allegedly contributing to his lifelong grudge against the institution After his second loss in 1772 David went on a hunger strike which lasted two and a half days before the faculty encouraged him to continue painting Confident he now had the support and backing needed to win the prize he resumed his studies with great zeal only to fail to win the Prix de Rome again the following year Finally in 1774 David was awarded the Prix de Rome on the strength of his painting of Erasistratus Discovering the Cause of Antiochus Disease a subject set by the judges In October 1775 he made the journey to Italy with his mentor Joseph Marie Vien who had just been appointed director of the French Academy at Rome 2 While in Italy David mostly studied the works of 17th century masters such as Poussin Caravaggio and the Carracci 2 Although he declared the Antique will not seduce me it lacks animation it does not move 2 David filled twelve sketchbooks with drawings that he and his studio used as model books for the rest of his life He was introduced to the painter Raphael Mengs 1728 1779 who opposed the Rococo tendency to sweeten and trivialize ancient subjects advocating instead the rigorous study of classical sources and close adherence to ancient models Mengs principled historicizing approach to the representation of classical subjects profoundly influenced David s pre revolutionary painting such as The Vestal Virgin probably from the 1780s Mengs also introduced David to the theoretical writings on ancient sculpture by Johann Joachim Winckelmann 1717 1768 the German scholar held to be the founder of modern art history 3 As part of the Prix de Rome David toured the newly excavated ruins of Pompeii in 1779 which deepened his belief that the persistence of classical culture was an index of its eternal conceptual and formal power During the trip David also assiduously studied the High Renaissance painters Raphael making a profound and lasting impression on the young French artist Early work edit nbsp Equestrian portrait of Stanislaw Kostka Potocki 1781 Although David s fellow students at the academy found him difficult to get along with they recognized his genius David s stay at the French Academy in Rome was extended by a year In July 1780 he returned to Paris 2 There he found people ready to use their influence for him and he was made an official member of the Royal Academy He sent the Academy two paintings and both were included in the Salon of 1781 a high honor He was praised by his famous contemporary painters but the administration of the Royal Academy was very hostile to this young upstart After the Salon the King granted David lodging in the Louvre an ancient and much desired privilege of great artists When the contractor of the King s buildings M Pecoul was arranging with David he asked the artist to marry his daughter Marguerite Charlotte This marriage brought him money and eventually four children David had about 50 of his own pupils and was commissioned by the government to paint Horace defended by his Father but he soon decided Only in Rome can I paint Romans His father in law provided the money he needed for the trip and David headed for Rome with his wife Charlotte and three of his students one of whom Jean Germain Drouais 1763 1788 was the Prix de Rome winner of that year nbsp Oath of the Horatii 1784 In Rome David painted his famous Oath of the Horatii 1784 In this piece the artist references Enlightenment values while alluding to Rousseau s social contract The republican ideal of the general became the central focus of the painting with all three sons positioned in compliance with the father The Oath between the characters can be read as an act of unification of men to the binding of the state 4 The issue of gender roles also becomes apparent in this piece as the women in Horatii greatly contrast the group of brothers David depicts the father with his back to the women shutting them out of the oath They also appear to be smaller in scale and physically isolated from the male figures 5 The masculine virility and discipline displayed by the men s rigid and confident stances is also severely contrasted to the slouching swooning female softness created in the other half of the composition 6 Here we see the clear division of male female attributes that confined the sexes to specific roles under Rousseau s popularized doctrine of separate spheres These revolutionary ideals are also apparent in the Distribution of Eagles While Oath of the Horatii and The Tennis Court Oath stress the importance of masculine self sacrifice for one s country and patriotism the Distribution of Eagles would ask for self sacrifice for one s Emperor Napoleon and the importance of battlefield glory nbsp The Death of Socrates 1787 In 1787 David did not become the Director of the French Academy in Rome which was a position he wanted dearly The Count in charge of the appointments said David was too young but said he would support him in 6 to 12 years This situation would be one of many that would cause him to lash out at the Academy in years to come For the Salon of 1787 David exhibited his famous Death of Socrates Condemned to death Socrates strong calm and at peace discusses the immortality of the soul Surrounded by Crito his grieving friends and students he is teaching philosophizing and in fact thanking the God of Health Asclepius for the hemlock brew which will ensure a peaceful death The wife of Socrates can be seen grieving alone outside the chamber dismissed for her weakness Plato is depicted as an old man seated at the end of the bed Critics compared the Socrates with Michelangelo s Sistine Ceiling and Raphael s Stanze and one after ten visits to the Salon described it as in every sense perfect Denis Diderot said it looked as if he copied it from some ancient bas relief The painting was very much in tune with the political climate at the time For this painting David was not honored by a royal works of encouragement nbsp The Lictors Bring to Brutus the Bodies of His Sons 1789 For his next painting David created The Lictors Bring to Brutus the Bodies of His Sons The work had tremendous appeal for the time Before the opening of the Salon the French Revolution had begun The National Assembly had been established and the Bastille had fallen The royal court did not want propaganda agitating the people so all paintings had to be checked before being hung David s portrait of Lavoisier who was a chemist and physicist as well as an active member of the Jacobin party was banned by the authorities for such reasons 7 When the newspapers reported that the government had not allowed the showing of The Lictors Bring to Brutus the Bodies of His Sons the people were outraged and the royals were forced to give in The painting was hung in the exhibition protected by art students The painting depicts Lucius Junius Brutus the Roman leader grieving for his sons Brutus s sons had attempted to overthrow the government and restore the monarchy so the father ordered their death to maintain the republic Brutus was the heroic defender of the republic sacrificing his own family for the good of the republic On the right the mother holds her two daughters and the nurse is seen on the far right in anguish Brutus sits on the left alone brooding seemingly dismissing the dead bodies of his sons Knowing what he did was best for his country but the tense posture of his feet and toes reveals his inner turmoil The whole painting was a Republican symbol and obviously had immense meaning during these times in France It exemplified civic virtue a value highly regarded during the Revolution The French Revolution editIn the beginning David was a supporter of the Revolution a friend of Robespierre and a member of the Jacobin Club While others were leaving the country for new and greater opportunities David stayed behind to help destroy the old order he was a regicide who voted in the National Convention for the Execution of Louis XVI It is uncertain why he did this citation needed as there were many more opportunities for him under the King than the new order some people suggest David s love for the classical made him embrace everything about that period including a republican government Others believed that they found the key to the artist s revolutionary career in his personality Undoubtedly David s artistic sensibility mercurial temperament volatile emotions ardent enthusiasm and fierce independence might have been expected to help turn him against the established order but they did not fully explain his devotion to the republican regime Nor did the vague statements of those who insisted upon his powerful ambition and unusual energy of will actually account for his revolutionary connections Those who knew him maintained that generous ardor high minded idealism and well meaning though sometimes fanatical enthusiasm rather than opportunism and jealousy motivated his activities during this period Soon David turned his critical sights on the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture This attack was probably caused primarily by the hypocrisy of the organization and their personal opposition to his work as seen in previous episodes in David s life The Royal Academy was controlled by royalists who opposed David s attempts at reform so the National Assembly finally ordered it to make changes to conform to the new constitution David then began work on something that would later hound him propaganda for the new republic David s painting of Brutus was shown during the play Brutus by Voltaire In 1789 Jacques Louis David attempted to leave his artistic mark on the historical beginnings of the French Revolution with his painting of The Oath of the Tennis Court David undertook this task not out of personal political conviction but rather because he was commissioned to do so The painting was meant to commemorate the event of the same name but was never completed A meeting of the Estates General was convened in May to address reforms of the monarchy Dissent arose over whether the three estates would meet separately as had been tradition or as one body The King s acquiescence in the demands of the upper orders led to the deputies of the Third Estate renaming themselves as the National Assembly on 17 June They were locked out of the meeting hall three days later when they attempted to meet and forced to reconvene to the royal indoor tennis court Presided over by Jean Sylvain Bailly they made a solemn oath never to separate until a national constitution had been created In 1789 this event was seen as a symbol of the national unity against the ancien regime Rejecting the current conditions the oath signified a new transition in human history and ideology 8 David was enlisted by the Society of Friends of the Constitution the body that would eventually form the Jacobins to enshrine this symbolic event 9 This instance is notable in more ways than one because it eventually led David to finally become involved in politics as he joined the Jacobins The picture was meant to be massive in scale the figures in the foreground were to be life sized portraits of the counterparts including Jean Sylvain Bailly the President of the Constituent Assembly Seeking additional funding David turned to the Society of Friends of the Constitution The funding for the project was to come from over three thousand subscribers hoping to receive a print of the image However when the funding was insufficient the state ended up financing the project 2 David set out in 1790 to transform the contemporary event into a major historical picture which would appear at the Salon of 1791 as a large pen and ink drawing As in the Oath of the Horatii David represents the unity of men in the service of a patriotic ideal The outstretched arms which are prominent in both works betray David s deeply held belief that acts of republican virtue akin to those of the Romans were being played out in France In what was essentially an act of intellect and reason David creates an air of drama in this work The very power of the people appears to be blowing through the scene with the stormy weather in a sense alluding to the storm that would be the revolution Symbolism in this work of art closely represents the revolutionary events taking place at the time The figure in the middle is raising his right arm making the oath that they will never disband until they have reached their goal of creating a constitution of the realm fixed upon solid foundations 10 The importance of this symbol is highlighted by the fact that the crowd s arms are angled to his hand forming a triangular shape Additionally the open space in the top half contrasted to the commotion in the lower half serves to emphasize the magnitude of the Tennis Court Oath nbsp Drawing by Jacques Louis David of the Tennis Court Oath David later became a deputy in the National Convention in 1792In his attempt to depict political events of the Revolution in real time David was venturing down a new and untrodden path in the art world However Thomas Crow argues that this path proved to be less a way forward than a cul de sac for history painting 9 Essentially the history of the demise of David s The Tennis Court Oath illustrates the difficulty of creating works of art that portray current and controversial political occurrences Political circumstances in France proved too volatile to allow the completion of the painting The unity that was to be symbolized in The Tennis Court Oath no longer existed in radicalized 1792 The National Assembly had split between conservatives and radical Jacobins both vying for political power By 1792 there was no longer consensus that all the revolutionaries at the tennis court were heroes A sizeable number of the heroes of 1789 had become the villains of 1792 In this unstable political climate David s work remained unfinished With only a few nude figures sketched onto the massive canvas David abandoned The Oath of the Tennis Court To have completed it would have been politically unsound After this incident when David attempted to make a political statement in his paintings he returned to the less politically charged use of metaphor to convey his message When Voltaire died in 1778 the church denied him a church burial and his body was interred near a monastery A year later Voltaire s old friends began a campaign to have his body buried in the Pantheon as church property had been confiscated by the French Government In 1791 David was appointed to head the organizing committee for the ceremony a parade through the streets of Paris to the Pantheon Despite rain and opposition from conservatives due to the amount of money spent the procession went ahead Up to 100 000 people watched the Father of the Revolution being carried to his resting place This was the first of many large festivals organized by David for the republic He went on to organize festivals for martyrs that died fighting royalists These funerals echoed the religious festivals of the pagan Greeks and Romans and are seen by many as Saturnalian nbsp Republican costume designed by David Engraving by Denon David incorporated many revolutionary symbols into these theatrical performances and orchestrated ceremonial rituals in effect radicalizing the applied arts themselves The most popular symbol for which David was responsible as propaganda minister was drawn from classical Greek images changing and transforming them with contemporary politics In an elaborate festival held on the anniversary of the revolt that brought the monarchy to its knees David s Hercules figure was revealed in a procession following the Goddess of Liberty Marianne Liberty the symbol of Enlightenment ideals was here being overturned by the Hercules symbol that of strength and passion for the protection of the Republic against disunity and factionalism 11 In his speech during the procession David explicitly emphasized the opposition between people and monarchy Hercules was chosen after all to make this opposition more evident 12 The ideals that David linked to his Hercules single handedly transformed the figure from a sign of the old regime into a powerful new symbol of revolution David turned him into the representation of a collective popular power He took one of the favorite signs of monarchy and reproduced elevated and monumentalized it into the sign of its opposite 13 Hercules the image became to the revolutionaries something to rally around In June 1791 the King made an ill fated attempt to flee the country but was apprehended short of his goal on the Austrian Netherlands border and was forced to return under guard to Paris Louis XVI had made secret requests to Emperor Leopold II of Austria Marie Antoinette s brother to restore him to his throne This was granted and Austria threatened France if the royal couple were hurt In reaction the people arrested the King This led to an Invasion after the trials and execution of Louis and Marie Antoinette The Bourbon monarchy was destroyed by the French people in 1792 it would be restored after Napoleon then destroyed again with the Restoration of the House of Bonaparte When the new National Convention held its first meeting David was sitting with his friends Jean Paul Marat and Robespierre In the convention David soon earned the nickname ferocious terrorist Robespierre s agents discovered a secret vault containing the King s correspondence which proved he was trying to overthrow the government and demanded his execution The National Convention held the trial of Louis XVI David voted for the death of the King causing his wife Marguerite Charlotte a royalist to divorce him citation needed When Louis XVI was executed on 21 January 1793 another man had already died as well Louis Michel le Peletier de Saint Fargeau Le Peletier was killed on the preceding day by a royal bodyguard in revenge for having voted for the death of the King David was called upon to organize a funeral and he painted Le Peletier Assassinated In it the assassin s sword was seen hanging by a single strand of horsehair above Le Peletier s body a concept inspired by the proverbial ancient tale of the sword of Damocles which illustrated the insecurity of power and position This underscored the courage displayed by Le Peletier and his companions in routing an oppressive king The sword pierces a piece of paper on which is written I vote the death of the tyrant and as a tribute at the bottom right of the picture David placed the inscription David to Le Peletier 20 January 1793 The painting was later destroyed by Le Peletier s royalist daughter and is known by only a drawing an engraving and contemporary accounts Nevertheless this work was important in David s career because it was the first completed painting of the French Revolution made in less than three months and a work through which he initiated the regeneration process that would continue with The Death of Marat David s masterpiece nbsp The Death of Marat 1793 On 13 July 1793 David s friend Marat was assassinated by Charlotte Corday with a knife she had hidden in her clothing She gained entrance to Marat s house on the pretense of presenting him a list of people who should be executed as enemies of France Marat thanked her and said that they would be guillotined next week upon which Corday immediately fatally stabbed him She was guillotined shortly thereafter Corday was of an opposing political party whose name can be seen in the note Marat holds in David s subsequent painting The Death of Marat Marat a member of the National Convention and a journalist had a skin disease that caused him to itch horribly The only relief he could get was in his bath over which he improvised a desk to write his list of suspect counter revolutionaries who were to be quickly tried and if convicted guillotined David once again organized a spectacular funeral and Marat was buried in the Pantheon Marat s body was to be placed upon a Roman bed his wound displayed and his right arm extended holding the pen which he had used to defend the Republic and its people This concept was to be complicated by the fact that the corpse had begun to putrefy Marat s body had to be periodically sprinkled with water and vinegar as the public crowded to see his corpse prior to the funeral on 15 and 16 July The stench became so bad however that the funeral had to be brought forward to the evening of 16 July 14 The Death of Marat perhaps David s most famous painting has been called the Pieta of the revolution Upon presenting the painting to the convention he said Citizens the people were again calling for their friend their desolate voice was heard David take up your brushes avenge Marat I heard the voice of the people I obeyed David had to work quickly but the result was a simple and powerful image The Death of Marat 1793 became the leading image of the Terror and immortalized both Marat and David in the world of the revolution This piece stands today as a moving testimony to what can be achieved when an artist s political convictions are directly manifested in his work 15 A political martyr was instantly created as David portrayed Marat with all the marks of the real murder in a fashion which greatly resembles that of Christ or his disciples 16 The subject although realistically depicted remains lifeless in a rather supernatural composition With the surrogate tombstone placed in front of him and the almost holy light cast upon the whole scene alluding to an out of this world existence Atheists though they were David and Marat like so many other fervent social reformers of the modern world seem to have created a new kind of religion 17 At the very center of these beliefs there stood the republic nbsp Marie Antoinette on the Way to the Guillotine 16 October 1793 Sketched from a window in the rue Sainte Honore while the cart went past After the King s execution war broke out between the new Republic and virtually every major power in Europe David as a member of the Committee of General Security contributed directly to the Reign of Terror 18 David organized his last festival the festival of the Supreme Being Robespierre had realized what a tremendous propaganda tool these festivals were and he decided to create a new religion mixing moral ideas with the Republic and based on the ideas of Rousseau This process had already begun by confiscating church lands and requiring priests to take an oath to the state The festivals called fetes would be the method of indoctrination On the appointed day 20 Prairial by the revolutionary calendar Robespierre spoke descended steps and with a torch presented to him by David incinerated a cardboard image symbolizing atheism revealing an image of wisdom underneath Soon the war began to go well French troops marched across the southern half of the Netherlands which would later become Belgium and the emergency that had placed the Committee of Public Safety in control was no more Then plotters seized Robespierre at the National Convention and he was later guillotined in effect ending the Reign of Terror As Robespierre was arrested David yelled to his friend if you drink hemlock I shall drink it with you 19 After this he supposedly fell ill and did not attend the evening session because of stomach pain which saved him from being guillotined along with Robespierre David was arrested and placed in prison twice first from 2 August to 28 December 1794 and then from 29 May to 3 August 1795 Most of the time he served his sentence in the not uncomfortable Palais du Luxembourg in Paris 2 There he painted his own portrait showing him much younger than he actually was as well as that of his jailer Post revolution edit nbsp The Intervention of the Sabine Women 1799 After David s wife visited him in jail he conceived the idea of telling the story of The rape of the Sabine women The Sabine Women Enforcing Peace by Running between the Combatants also called The Intervention of the Sabine Women is said to have been painted to honor his wife with the theme being love prevailing over conflict The painting was also seen as a plea for the people to reunite after the bloodshed of the revolution 20 David conceived a new style for this painting one which he called the Pure Greek Style as opposed to the Roman style of his earlier historical paintings The new style was influenced heavily by the work of art historian Johann Joachim Winckelmann In David s words the most prominent general characteristics of the Greek masterpieces are a noble simplicity and silent greatness in pose as well as in expression 21 Instead of the muscularity and angularity of the figures of his past works these were smoother more feminine and painterly This work also brought him to the attention of Napoleon The story for the painting is as follows The Romans have abducted the daughters of their neighbors the Sabines To avenge this abduction the Sabines attacked Rome although not immediately since Hersilia the daughter of Tatius the leader of the Sabines had been married to Romulus the Roman leader and then had two children by him in the interim Here we see Hersilia between her father and husband as she adjures the warriors on both sides not to take wives away from their husbands or mothers away from their children The other Sabine Women join in her exhortations During this time the martyrs of the Revolution were taken from the Pantheon and buried in common ground and revolutionary statues were destroyed When David was finally released to the country France had changed His wife managed to get him released from prison and he wrote letters to his former wife and told her he never ceased loving her He remarried her in 1796 Finally wholly restored to his position he retreated to his studio took pupils and for the most part retired from politics In August 1796 David and many other artists signed a petition orchestrated by Quatremere de Quincy which questioned the wisdom of the planned seizure of works of art from Rome The Director Barras believed that David was tricked into signing although one of David s students recalled that in 1798 his master lamented the fact that masterpieces had been imported from Italy Napoleon edit nbsp Napoleon at the Saint Bernard Pass 1801 David s close association with the Committee of Public Safety during the Terror resulted in his signing of the death warrant for Alexandre de Beauharnais a minor noble Beauharnais s widow Josephine went on to marry Napoleon Bonaparte and became his empress David himself depicted their coronation in the Coronation of Napoleon and Josephine 2 December 1804 nbsp Historical painter encouraged by the government 1814 caricature Bodleian Library David had been an admirer of Napoleon from their first meeting struck by Bonaparte s classical features Requesting a sitting from the busy and impatient general David was able to sketch Napoleon in 1797 David recorded the face of the conqueror of Italy but the full composition of Napoleon holding the peace treaty with Austria remains unfinished This was likely a decision by Napoleon himself after considering the current political situation He may have considered the publicity the portrait would bring about to be ill timed Bonaparte had high esteem for David and asked him to accompany him to Egypt in 1798 but David refused seemingly unwilling to give up the material comfort safety and peace of mind he had obtained through the years Draftsman and engraver Dominique Vivant Denon went to Egypt instead providing mostly documentary and archaeological work 22 After Napoleon s successful coup d etat in 1799 as First Consul he commissioned David to commemorate his daring crossing of the Alps The crossing of the St Bernard Pass had allowed the French to surprise the Austrian army and win victory at the Battle of Marengo on 14 June 1800 Although Napoleon had crossed the Alps on a mule he requested that he be portrayed calm upon a fiery steed David complied with Napoleon Crossing the Saint Bernard After the proclamation of the Empire in 1804 David became the official court painter of the regime During this period he took students one of whom was the Belgian painter Pieter van Hanselaere nbsp The Coronation of Napoleon 1806 One of the works David was commissioned for was The Coronation of Napoleon 1805 1807 David was permitted to watch the event He had plans of Notre Dame delivered and participants in the coronation came to his studio to pose individually though never the Emperor The only time David obtained a sitting from Napoleon had been in 1797 David did manage to get a private sitting with the Empress Josephine and Napoleon s sister Caroline Murat through the intervention of erstwhile art patron Marshal Joachim Murat the Emperor s brother in law For his background David had the choir of Notre Dame act as his fill in characters Pope Pius VII came to sit for the painting and actually blessed David Napoleon came to see the painter stared at the canvas for an hour and said David I salute you David had to redo several parts of the painting because of Napoleon s various whims and for this painting he received twenty four thousand Francs David was made a Chevalier de la Legion d honneur in 1803 He was promoted to an Officier in 1808 And in 1815 he was promoted to a Commandant now Commandeur de la Legion d honneur Exile and death editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp David during his exile in 1817 painted by his pupil Francois Joseph Navez nbsp Comte Henri Amedee Mercure de Turenne d Aynac 1816 oil on canvas Clark Art Institute painted while both the Comte and David were in exileOn the Bourbons returning to power David figured in the list of proscribed former revolutionaries and Bonapartists for having voted execution for the deposed King Louis XVI and for participating in the death of Louis XVII the deposed king s son who was mistreated starved and forced into a false confession of incest with his mother Queen Marie Antoinette which contributed to her death sentence The newly restored Bourbon King Louis XVIII however granted amnesty to David and even offered him the position of court painter David refused preferring self exile in Brussels There he trained and influenced Brussels artists such as Francois Joseph Navez and Ignace Brice painted Cupid and Psyche and quietly lived the remainder of his life with his wife whom he had remarried In that time he painted smaller scale mythological scenes and portraits of citizens of Brussels and Napoleonic emigres such as the Baron Gerard David created his last great work Mars Being Disarmed by Venus and the Three Graces from 1822 to 1824 In December 1823 he wrote This is the last picture I want to paint but I want to surpass myself in it I will put the date of my seventy five years on it and afterwards I will never again pick up my brush The finished painting evoking painted porcelain because of its limpid coloration was exhibited first in Brussels then in Paris where his former students flocked to view it nbsp Mars Being Disarmed by Venus and the Three Graces David s last great work 1824 The exhibition was profitable 13 000 francs after deducting operating costs thus more than 10 000 people visited and viewed the painting In his later years David remained in full command of his artistic faculties even after a stroke in the spring of 1825 disfigured his face and slurred his speech In June 1825 he resolved to embark on an improved version of his The Anger of Achilles also known as the Sacrifice of Iphigenie the earlier version was completed in 1819 and is now in the collection of the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth Texas David remarked to his friends who visited his studio this painting is what is killing me such was his determination to complete the work but by October it must have already been well advanced as his former pupil Gros wrote to congratulate him having heard reports of the painting s merits By the time David died the painting had been completed and the commissioner Ambroise Firmin Didot brought it back to Paris to include it in the exhibition Pour les grecs that he had organised and which opened in Paris in April 1826 nbsp David s Death mask 1825 When David was leaving a theater the driver of a carriage struck him and he later died on 29 December 1825 At his death some portraits were auctioned in Paris they sold for little the famous Death of Marat was exhibited in a secluded room to avoid outraging public sensibilities Disallowed return to France for burial for having been a regicide of King Louis XVI the body of the painter Jacques Louis David was buried in Brussels and moved in 1882 to Brussels Cemetery while some say his heart was buried with his wife at Pere Lachaise Cemetery Paris Freemasonry editThe theme of the oath found in several works such as The Oath of the Tennis Court The Distribution of the Eagles and Leonidas at Thermopylae was perhaps inspired by the rituals of Freemasonry In 1989 during the David against David conference Albert Boime was able to prove on the basis of a document dated in 1787 the painter s membership in the La Moderation Masonic Lodge 23 24 Medical analysis of David s face editJacques Louis David s facial abnormalities were traditionally reported to be a consequence of a deep facial sword wound after a fencing incident These left him with a noticeable asymmetry during facial expression and resulted in his difficulty in eating or speaking He could not pronounce some consonants such as the letter r A sword scar wound on the left side of his face is present in his self portrait and sculptures and corresponds to some of the buccal branches of the facial nerve An injury to this nerve and its branches are likely to have resulted in the difficulties with his left facial movement Furthermore as a result of this injury he suffered from a growth on his face that biographers and art historians have defined as a benign tumor These however may have been a granuloma or even a post traumatic neuroma 25 As historian Simon Schama has pointed out witty banter and public speaking ability were key aspects of the social culture of 18th century France In light of these cultural keystones David s tumor would have been a heavy obstacle in his social life 26 David was sometimes referred to as David of the Tumor 27 Portraiture editIn addition to his history paintings David completed a number of privately commissioned portraits Warren Roberts among others has pointed out the contrast between David s public style of painting as shown in his history paintings and his private style as shown in his portraits 28 His portraits were characterized by a sense of truth and realism He focused on defining his subjects features and characters without idealizing them 29 page needed This is different from the style seen in his historical paintings in which he idealizes his figures features and bodies to align with Greek and Roman ideals of beauty 30 He puts a great deal of detail into his portraits defining smaller features such as hands and fabric The compositions of his portraits remain simple with blank backgrounds that allow the viewer to focus on the details of the subject The portrait he did of his wife 1813 is an example of his typical portrait style 28 The background is dark and simple without any clues as to the setting which forces the viewer to focus entirely on her Her features are un idealized and truthful to her appearance 28 There is a great amount of detail that can be seen in his attention to portraying the satin material of the dress she wears the drapery of the scarf around her and her hands which rest in her lap nbsp Emmanuel Joseph Sieyes 1817In the painting of Brutus 1789 the man and his wife are separated both morally and physically Paintings such as these depicting the great strength of patriotic sacrifice made David a popular hero of the revolution 28 In the Portrait of Antoine Laurent Lavoisier and his wife 1788 the man and his wife are tied together in an intimate pose She leans on his shoulder while he pauses from his work to look up at her David casts them in a soft light not in the sharp contrast of Brutus or of the Horatii Also of interest Lavoisier was a tax collector as well as a famous chemist Though he spent some of his money trying to clean up swamps and eradicate malaria he was nonetheless sent to the guillotine during the Reign of Terror as an enemy of the people David then a powerful member of the National Assembly stood idly by and watched 31 Other portraits include paintings of his sister in law and her husband Madame and Monsieur Seriziat The picture of Monsieur Seriziat depicts a man of wealth sitting comfortably with his horse riding equipment The picture of the Madame shows her wearing an unadorned white dress holding her young child s hand as they lean against a bed David painted these portraits of Madame and Monsieur Seriziat out of gratitude for letting him stay with them after he was in jail 32 Towards the end of David s life he painted a portrait of his old friend Abbe Sieyes Both had been involved in the Revolution both had survived the purging of political radicals that followed the reign of terror Shift in attitude editThe shift in David s perspective played an important role in the paintings of David s later life including this one of Sieyes 33 During the height of The Terror David was an ardent supporter of radicals such as Robespierre and Marat and twice offered up his life in their defense He organized revolutionary festivals and painted portraits of martyrs of the revolution such as Lepeletier who was assassinated for voting for the death of the king David was an impassioned speaker at times in the National Assembly In speaking to the Assembly about the young boy named Bara another martyr of the revolution David said O Bara O Viala The blood that you have spread still smokes it rises toward Heaven and cries for vengeance 34 After Robespierre was sent to the guillotine however David was imprisoned and changed the attitude of his rhetoric During his imprisonment he wrote many letters pleading his innocence In one he wrote I am prevented from returning to my atelier which alas I should never have left I believed that in accepting the most honorable position but very difficult to fill that of legislator that a righteous heart would suffice but I lacked the second quality understanding 35 Later while explaining his developing Grecian style for paintings such as The Intervention of the Sabine Women David further commented on a shift in attitude In all human activity the violent and transitory develops first repose and profundity appear last The recognition of these latter qualities requires time only great masters have them while their pupils have access only to violent passions 36 Legacy edit nbsp Seventy five years after his death David is painted by the painter Emmanuel Van Den Bussche Musee de la Revolution francaise Jacques Louis David was in his time regarded as the leading painter in France and arguably all of Western Europe many of the painters honored by the restored Bourbons following the French Revolution had been David s pupils 37 David s student Antoine Jean Gros for example was made a Baron and honored by Napoleon Bonaparte s court 37 Another pupil of David s Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres became the most important artist of the restored Royal Academy and the figurehead of the Neoclassical school of art engaging the increasingly popular Romantic school of art that was beginning to challenge Neoclassicism 37 David invested in the formation of young artists for the Rome Prize which was also a way to pursue his old rivalry with other contemporary painters such as Joseph Benoit Suvee who had also started teaching classes 29 page needed To be one of David s students was considered prestigious and earned his students a lifetime reputation 38 He called on the more advanced students such as Jerome Martin Langlois to help him paint his large canvases Musician and artist Therese Emilie Henriette Winkel and painter Jean Baptiste Vermay also studied with David 39 40 Despite David s reputation he was more fiercely criticized right after his death than at any point during his life His style came under the most serious criticism for being static rigid and uniform throughout all his work David s art was also attacked for being cold and lacking warmth 41 David however made his career precisely by challenging what he saw as the earlier rigidity and conformity of the French Royal Academy s approach to art 42 David s later works also reflect his growth in the development of the Empire style notable for its dynamism and warm colors It is likely that much of the criticism of David following his death came from David s opponents during his lifetime David made a great many enemies with his competitive and arrogant personality as well as his role in the Terror 38 David sent many people to the guillotine and personally signed the death warrants for King Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette One significant episode in David s political career that earned him a great deal of contempt was the execution of Emilie Chalgrin A fellow painter Carle Vernet had approached David who was on the Committee of Public Safety requesting him to intervene on behalf of his sister Chalgrin She had been accused of crimes against the Republic most notably possessing stolen items 43 David refused to intervene in her favor and she was executed Vernet blamed David for her death and the episode followed him for the rest of his life and after In the last 50 years David has enjoyed a revival in popular favor and in 1948 his two hundredth birthday was celebrated with an exhibition at the Musee de l Orangerie in Paris and at Versailles showing his life s works 44 Following World War II Jacques Louis David was increasingly regarded as a symbol of French national pride and identity as well as a vital force in the development of European and French art in the modern era 45 The birth of Romanticism is traditionally credited to the paintings of eighteenth century French artists such as Jacques Louis David 46 There are streets named after David in the French cities of Carcassonne and Montpellier nbsp Jean Nicolas Laugier after Jacques Louis David Leonidas at Thermoplyae published 1826 engravingFilmography editDanton Andrzej Wajda France 1982 Historical drama Many scenes include David as a silent character watching and drawing The film focuses on the period of the Terror Gallery editMain article List of paintings by Jacques Louis David nbsp Jupiter et Antiope 1768 an early work showing the influence of Greuze 47 nbsp Diana and Apollo Piercing Niobe s Children with their Arrows 1772 Dallas Museum of Art nbsp Antiochus and Stratonica 1774 Ecole nationale superieure des Beaux Arts nbsp Patroclus study 1780 Musee Thomas Henry nbsp Hector s body 1778 nbsp Portrait of Antoine Laurent Lavoisier and his wife 1788 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York nbsp Paris and Helen 1788 Musee du Louvre Paris detail nbsp Portrait of Anne Marie Louise Thelusson Comtesse de Sorcy 1790 Neue Pinakothek Munich nbsp Portrait of Pierre Seriziat 1795 Louvre Museum nbsp Portrait of Madame de Verninac 1798 1799 born Henriette Delacroix elder sister of Eugene Delacroix Musee du Louvre Paris nbsp Madame Recamier 1800 Musee du Louvre Paris nbsp Suzanne Le Peletier de Saint Fargeau 1804 The J Paul Getty Museum nbsp Portrait of Pope Pius VII 1805 Musee du Louvre Paris nbsp Marguerite Charlotte David 1813 National Gallery of Art Washington D C nbsp Etienne Maurice Gerard 1816 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York nbsp The Comtesse Vilain XIIII and Her Daughter 1816 National Gallery London nbsp Portrait of the Comte de Turenne 1816 Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek Copenhagen nbsp Cupid and Psyche 1817 Cleveland Museum of Art nbsp The Farewell of Telemachus and Eucharis 1818 J Paul Getty Museum nbsp The Anger of Achilles 1819 Kimbell Art MuseumSee also editLegacy and memory of Napoleon Neoclassicism in FranceReferences edit Matthew Collings Feelings This Is Civilisation Season 1 Episode 2 2007 a b c d e f Lee Simon David Jacques Louis Grove Art Online Oxford Art Online 14 November 2014 lt http www oxfordartonline com subscriber article grove art T021541 gt Alex Potts Flesh and the Ideal Winckelmann and the Origins of Art History New Haven Yale University Press 2000 Boime 1987 p 394 Boime 1987 p 399 Boime 1987 p 398 Honour 1977 p 72 Roberts Warren 2000 Jaques Louis David and Jean Louis Prieur revolutionary artists the public the populace and images of the French revolution New York State university of New York press p 229 ISBN 0791442888 a b Crow 2007 Bordes 2005 p Hunt 2004 p 97 Hunt 2004 p 99 Hunt 2004 p 103 Schama 1989 p 83 Boime 1987 p 454 Rosenblum 1969 p 83 Janson amp Rosenblum 1984 p 30 Boime 1987 p 442 Carlyle p 384 Roberts 1992 pp 90 112 Roberts 1992 pp 90 115 Bordes 2005 pp 26 28 Albert Boime 1993 Les themes du serment David et la Franc maconnerie In Michel Regis ed David contre David in French Paris Documentation Francaise p 83 ISBN 9782110026132 Pierrat Emmanuel Kupferman Laurent 2013 Le Paris des francs macons in French Paris Cherche midi ISBN 978 2749129518 Ashrafian H Jacques Louis David and his post traumatic facial pathology J R Soc Med 2007 100 341 342 Schama Simon The Power of Art Jacques Louis David https www bbc co uk arts powerofart david shtml Roberts 1992 pp 1 30 a b c d Roberts 1992 pp 42 45 a b Bordes 2005 Wilson Elizabeth Barkley Jacques Louis David Smithsonian 29 no 5 August 1998 80 Academic Search Complete EBSCOhost accessed 18 November 2017 Roberts 1992 pp 43 45 Lajer Burcharth Ewa Necklines The Art of Jacques Louis David After the Terror New Haven Yale University Press 1999 Roberts 1992 pp 90 150 Roberts 1992 pp 88 92 Roberts 1992 pp 90 94 Roberts 1992 pp 100 112 a b c Lee Simon David p 321 a b Lee Simon David pp 321 322 Winckel Therese aus dem Sophie Drinker Institut www sophie drinker institut de Retrieved 14 February 2022 Cultural Anthropology Abstracts in Anthropology 69 3 440 589 October 2014 doi 10 1177 000134551406900302 ISSN 0001 3455 S2CID 220318250 Lee Simon David p 322 Roberts 1992 p 14 Lee Simon David p 151 Lee Simon David p 326 Lee Simon David p 328 Lee Palmer Allison Historical Dictionary of Romantic Art and Architecture p 304 Sloane J C Wisdom J M amp William Hayes Ackland Memorial Art Center 1978 French Nineteenth Century Oil Sketches David to Degas Chapel Hill N C The University p 50Sources editBoime Albert 1987 Social History of Modern Art Art in the Age of Revolution 1750 1800 volume 1 Chicago Illinois The University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 06332 1 Bordes Philippe 1988 David Paris FRA Hazan ISBN 2 85025 173 9 Bordes Philippe 2005 Jacques Louis David From Empire to Exile New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300104479 retrieved 23 February 2020 Brookner Anita Jacques Louis David Chatto amp Windus 1980 Carlyle Thomas 1860 1837 The French Revolution A History Vol II New York Harper amp Bros OCLC 14208955 Chodorow Stanley et al The Mainstream of Civilization New York The Harcourt Press 1994 pg 594 Crow Thomas E 1995 Emulation Making Artists for Revolutionary France 1st ed New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 06093 9 Crow Thomas E 2007 Patriotism and Virtue David to the Young Ingres in Eisenman Stephen F ed Nineteenth Century Art A Critical History 3rd ed New York City New York Thames amp Hudson pp 18 54 ISBN 978 0 500 28683 8 Delecluze E Louis David son ecole et son temps Paris 1855 re edition Macula 1983 Dowd David Pageant Master of the Republic Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 1948 Honour Hugh 1977 Neo Classicism New York City New York Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 013760 2 Humbert Agnes Louis David peintre et conventionnel essai de critique marxiste Paris Editions sociales internationales 1936 Humbert Agnes Louis David collection des Maitres 60 illustrations Paris Braun 1940 Hunt Lynn 2004 Politics Culture and Class in the French Revolution Los Angeles California University of California Press ISBN 0 520 24156 8 Janson Horst Waldemar Rosenblum Robert 1984 19th Century Art New York City New York Harry Abrams ISBN 0 13 622621 3 Johnson Dorothy Jacques Louis David New Perspectives Newark 2006 Lajer Burcharth Ewa Necklines The art of Jacques Louis David after the Terror ed Yale University Press New Haven London 1999 Lee Simon David Phaidon London 1999 ISBN 0714838047 Leveque Jean Jacques Jacques Louis David edition Acr Paris 1989 Leymarie Jean French Painting the 19th century Cleveland 1962 Lindsay Jack Death of the Hero London Studio Books 1960 Malvone Laura L Evenement politique en peinture A propos du Marat de David in Melanges de l Ecole francaise de Rome Italie et Mediterranee 106 1 1994 Michel R ed David contre David actes du colloque au Louvre du 6 10 decembre 1989 Paris 1993 Monneret Sophie Monneret David et le neoclassicisme ed Terrail Paris 1998 Noel Bernard David ed Flammarion Paris 1989 Rosenblum Robert 1969 Transformations in Late Eighteenth Century Art 1st paperback ed Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 00302 5 Roberts Warren 1 February 1992 Jacques Louis David Revolutionary Artist Art Politics and the French Revolution The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 4350 4 Rosenberg Pierre Prat Louis Antoine Jacques Louis David 1748 1825 Catalogue raisonne des dessins 2 volumes ed Leonardo Arte Milan 2002 Rosenberg Pierre Peronnet Benjamin Un album inedit de David in Revue de l art n 142 2003 04 pp 45 83 complete the previous reference Sahut Marie Catherine amp Michel Regis David l art et le politique coll Decouvertes Gallimard nº 46 serie Peinture Editions Gallimard et RMN Paris 1988 Sainte Fare Garnot N Jacques Louis David 1748 1825 Paris Ed Chaudun 2005 Schama Simon 1989 Citizens A Chronicle of the French Revolution Penguin Books Schnapper Antoine David temoin de son temps Office du Livre Fribourg 1980 Thevoz Michel Le theatre du crime Essai sur la peinture de David ed de Minuit Paris 1989 Vanden Berghe Marc Plesca Ioana Nouvelles perspectives sur la Mort de Marat entre modele jesuite et references mythologiques Bruxelles 2004 New Perspectives on David s Death of Marat Brussels 2004 online on www art chitecture net publications php 1 Vanden Berghe Marc Plesca Ioana Lepelletier de Saint Fargeau sur son lit de mort par Jacques Louis David saint Sebastien revolutionnaire miroir multireference de Rome Brussels 2005 online on www art chitecture net publications php 2 Vaughan William and Weston Helen eds Jacques Louis David s Marat Cambridge 2000 The Death of Socrates Retrieved 29 June 2005 New York Med Jacques Louis David on An Abridged History of Europe Retrieved 29 June 2005 J L David Archived 6 August 2002 at the Wayback Machine on CGFA Retrieved 29 June 2005Further reading editFrench painting 1774 1830 the Age of Revolution New York Detroit The Metropolitan Museum of Art The Detroit Institute of Arts 1975 see index External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jacques Louis David A Closer Look at David s Consecration of Napoleon multimedia feature Louvre museum official website The Intervention of the Sabines Louvre museum Web Gallery of Art www jacqueslouisdavid org 101 paintings by Jacques Louis David Jacques Louis David at Olga s Gallery Jacques Louis David in the History of Art Archived 5 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine smARThistory Death of Socrates Archived 2 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute 2005 exhibition Jacques Louis David Empire to Exile Archived 16 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine The equestrian portrait of Stanislaw Kostka Potocki at the Wilanow Palace Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jacques Louis David amp oldid 1185722141, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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