11-23-2004, 04:22 PM | #1 (permalink) | |
Junkie
|
Artwork of the Day - 24 November 2004
Jacques-Louis David
Death of Marat Oil on canvas. 1793 Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts de Belgique, Brussels, Belgium. David is one of my favourite artists and a perfect example of the neo-classicist painter. David's painting of his friend Marat is one of the most famous to come out of the French Revolution. He had visited Marat the day before his assassination and remembered the room vividly. Quote:
Marat was a firebrand and editor of L'Ami du Peuple (The Friend of the People). A colleague and friend of Robespierre, he encouraged violence and was instrumental in the Great Terror. His assassin, Charlotte Corday, was a Royalist and a supporter of a rival faction. Gaining access to Marat by the use of a false letter of introduction (shown in Marat's hand) she stabbed him in the heart as he lay in his bath; treatment and a salve for a terrible skin disease from which Marat suffered. Corday was immediately apprehended and later executed. He composure and beauty during the trial were renowned. Before her death, she wrote to her father apologizing for "having disposed of my existence without your permission." During her trial she lamented "there are so few patriots who know how to die for their country; everything is egoism; what a sorry people to found a Republic." I love this painting. For those of you interested in the French Revolution (and how could you be otherwise?!), then I highly recommend Simon Schama's majesterial, if slightly revisionist, history Citizens. Mr Mephisto |
|
Tags |
2004, artwork, day, november |
|
|