1787, Jacques Louis David, The Death of Socrates -- Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York)
From the museum label: In this landmark of neoclassical painting from just before the French Revolution, David took up a classical story of resisting unjust authority in a sparse, friezelike composition. The Greek philosopher Socrates (469- 399 BCE) was convicted of impiety by the Athenian courts; rather than renounce his beliefs, he died willingly, expounding on the immortality of the soul before drinking poisonous hemlock. Through a network of gestures and expressions, David's figures act out the last moments of Socrates's life. He is about to grasp the cup of hemlock, offered by a disciple who cannot bear to witness the event. David consulted antiquarian scholars to create an archeologically exacting image, including details of furniture and clothing. His inclusion of Plato at the foot of the bed, however, deliberately references not someone present at Socrates's death but rather the author whose text, Phaedo, preserved this ancient story.
Link to a high-resolution close-up photo of details from this painting.
1787, Jacques Louis David, The Death of Socrates -- Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York)
From the museum label: In this landmark of neoclassical painting from just before the French Revolution, David took up a classical story of resisting unjust authority in a sparse, friezelike composition. The Greek philosopher Socrates (469- 399 BCE) was convicted of impiety by the Athenian courts; rather than renounce his beliefs, he died willingly, expounding on the immortality of the soul before drinking poisonous hemlock. Through a network of gestures and expressions, David's figures act out the last moments of Socrates's life. He is about to grasp the cup of hemlock, offered by a disciple who cannot bear to witness the event. David consulted antiquarian scholars to create an archeologically exacting image, including details of furniture and clothing. His inclusion of Plato at the foot of the bed, however, deliberately references not someone present at Socrates's death but rather the author whose text, Phaedo, preserved this ancient story.
Link to a high-resolution close-up photo of details from this painting.