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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75887 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber’s Note: Italics are enclosed in _underscores_. Additional
+notes will be found near the end of this ebook.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: MLLE. CHARLOTTE DU VAL D’OGNES
+
+_The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York_]
+
+
+
+
+ JACQUES LOUIS DAVID
+ AND THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
+
+ BY
+ W. R. VALENTINER
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ NEW YORK
+ FREDERIC FAIRCHILD SHERMAN
+ MCMXXIX
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1929, by
+ Frederic F. Sherman
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+ ELEANOR AND EDSEL B. FORD
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ MLLE. CHARLOTTE DU VAL D’OGNES Frontispiece
+
+ FIG. 1 MADAME DE SERVAN (1799) 3
+
+ FIG. 2 H. RIGAUD: GENTLEMAN PLAYING A BAGPIPE 3
+
+ FIG. 3 F. BOUCHER: MADAME DE POMPADOUR 3
+
+ FIG. 4 MINERVA’S CONQUEST OF MARS (1771) 4
+
+ FIG. 5 THE BLIND BELISARIUS (1781) 8
+
+ FIG. 6 THE OATH OF THE HORATII (1784) 8
+
+ FIG. 7 VILLAGE OUTSIDE ROME (1788) 8
+
+ FIG. 8 VIEW IN ROME (1788) 8
+
+ FIG. 9 PEN SKETCH OF MARIE ANTOINETTE (1793)
+ _Made from the artist’s window as the tumbril
+ halted on the way to the scaffold_ 14
+
+ FIG. 10 STUDY FROM THE ITALIAN SKETCHBOOK (1788) 14
+
+ FIG. 11 MICHEL GÉRARD AND HIS FAMILY (1789) 18
+
+ FIG. 12 PORTRAIT OF BARÊRE (1793) 22
+
+ FIG. 13 LAVOISIER AND HIS WIFE (1787) 26
+
+ FIG. 14 MME. DE RICHMOND AND HER SON (_c._ 1800) 26
+
+ FIG. 15 LE PELLETIER (1793) _From engraving in the Louvre_ 26
+
+ FIG. 16 MARAT (1793) 26
+
+ FIG. 17 DANTON (1799) _From drawing in the Museum, Lille_ 26
+
+ FIG. 18 MADAME SERIZIAT AND SON (1795) 32
+
+ FIG. 19 MONSIEUR SERIZIAT (1795) 32
+
+ FIG. 20 MARAT (1793) 38
+
+ FIG. 21 ST. JUST (1792) 44
+
+ FIG. 22 SELF PORTRAIT 44
+
+ FIG. 23 WOMAN OF THE REVOLUTION (1795) 51
+
+ FIG. 24 NAPOLEON AS FIRST CONSUL (1797) 51
+
+ FIG. 25 PORTRAIT OF VIGÉE LEBRUN (1793) 54
+
+ FIG. 26 MADAME RECAMIER (1800) 54
+
+ FIG. 27 INGRES AS A BOY (1795) 54
+
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 2. H. RIGAUD: GENTLEMAN PLAYING A BAGPIPE
+
+_Museum, Aix_]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 1. L. DAVID: MADAME DE SERVAN (1799)
+
+_Private Possession, New York_]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 3. F. BOUCHER: MADAME DE POMPADOUR
+
+_Collection of Maurice de Rothschild, Paris_]
+
+
+
+
+ JACQUES LOUIS DAVID
+
+ AND THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
+
+ ❦
+
+
+Is it possible that a period like the French Revolution and the era
+of Napoleon’s tyrannous rule should witness the development of a
+great art? It would seem that in the domain of art fresh creative
+impulses are born more often in times of unrest and disturbance than
+in periods of political security. Those epochs in the history of art
+which we regard today as “golden ages”--the age of Pericles; the
+Renaissance at about 1500; the Holland of the day of Frans Hals and
+Rembrandt--were by no means peaceful years, but periods of national
+strife and revolutionary ideas. No happy alliance is possible between
+political discipline and art which springs from the free, untrammeled
+impulse of the individual. We need only walk through those galleries
+at Fontainebleau arranged by Napoleon during the days of his Empire to
+recognize the deadening influence exerted by an established autocracy,
+and feel blow coldly over us the chilly breath of an academic and
+court-inspired art.
+
+On the contrary, the period of the French Revolution, and the days
+of Napoleon’s struggle to power, which coincided with the period of
+David’s finest achievement, witnessed so powerful an onrush of new
+ideas that their influence persists till the present day. Modern art
+had its inception in this period, and today, after a lapse of over
+a hundred years, is again tending in the direction first indicated
+by David. It is herein that the significance of his contribution
+lies. Helped by the influences of the revolution, he destroyed the
+artificial, hyper-refined art ideals of the eighteenth century, and
+substituted for them a sterner, simpler, more healthy and democratic
+art. That is not to affirm that his art was greater than the one it
+superseded. David was not a genius of the highest order as was Watteau,
+but to those of us sensitive to the forces underlying our own times, it
+says--or should say--more than pre-revolutionary art.
+
+We need only to compare a portrait of David’s style like the one of
+Madame de Servan (Fig. 1) with portraits of his predecessors (Figs.
+2 and 3) in order to recognize the difference between the Rococo
+period and the new era, introduced by David. This portrait of Madame
+de Servan, painted about 1800,[1] impresses one as a composition of
+statuesque simplicity expressing the salient spirit of a period which
+was seeking fundamentally new doctrines by which to govern life. The
+portrait by Rigaud, the famous court painter of the reign of Louis XIV,
+painted in the beginning of the century, and of Boucher’s portrait
+of Madame de Pompadour, painted in 1758, do not differ too much from
+another in style. In these portraits of the Rococo period the surface
+is filled with a restless play of short-curving lines; light and
+shadow are alternated perpetually at close intervals; the colors form
+a pleasing pattern of small variegated patches, and the costume and
+accessories almost eclipse the real motif--that of portraiture. In
+David’s canvas the figure emerges clearly from a wide and empty space,
+and a clear, flowing line with definite horizontals and verticals
+has replaced the tortuous curves. It seems an extraordinary piece of
+daring for the artist to have composed in these broad planes with a
+completely empty background, when we consider the century-old tradition
+embodied in the older paintings. It was the French Revolution, with its
+rejection of old formulas which inspired this daring.
+
+But just as the revolution, from prelude to aftermath, covered a span
+of some twenty years, so the artist required a similar period of time
+to gradually attain the classic style which we see here stamped with
+the authority of his fifty years.
+
+Jacques Louis David was born in 1748 in the middle of the Louis
+XV period, and the school which fathered him was that of Boucher,
+the frank exponent of the playful and elegant school of painting
+fostered by the artificial social life of Paris. David’s earliest
+known composition, “Minerva’s Conquest of Mars,” painted in 1771 in
+the artist’s twenty-third year, and now in the Louvre (Fig. 4), shows
+Boucher’s influence clearly. Here we still have the unquiet baroque
+line of pre-revolutionary painting--the picture is full of detail,
+the draperies worn by the figures flutter in the breeze like those of
+Boucher and the cherubs beloved of this master float in the clouds. The
+subject, too, is of the mythologic-allegorical character affected by
+the painters of the court and the aristocracy. The Goddess of Wisdom
+conquers the God of War! What irony when we remember that twenty years
+later during the revolution the painter of this picture was among those
+who helped let loose on France a war of twenty years’ duration.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 4. MINERVA’S CONQUEST OF MARS (1771)
+
+_Louvre, Paris_]
+
+If we look more closely we can discern an alien spirit behind the
+apparently suave portrayal. Despite his subject the young artist’s
+combative vein emerges. True, Mars is overthrown, but with what ill
+grace he accepts his fate. It might be Danton himself, the great
+revolutionary, overthrown by his enemies. A face expressing such fury
+of despair, so spasmodically clenched a hand was never portrayed by any
+of the playful Rococo painters, and can we not discern something of the
+energetic Napoleonic spirit in Minerva’s conquering pose?
+
+David must have been of a naturally passionate and excitable
+temperament--possibly inherited from his father who was killed in a
+duel when the boy was eleven years old. As a young artist he applied
+for the Prix de Rome, and when he did not at once receive it from
+the Academy, was about to take his life in despair and was only
+persuaded by a friend to abandon the idea of starving himself to death
+after three days of fasting with that purpose in view. Later on, in
+extenuation of this episode, he said: “This postponement of my journey
+to Italy was prejudicial to my development, as I was four years too
+late in abandoning the bad style of the French painters.” Like all
+reformers he believed that everything produced by the generation
+preceding him was bad, although today all that we can say is that it
+was different!
+
+When, in 1775, he did actually set out for Rome, and his friends at
+parting advised him to beware the influence of the antique, he replied
+proudly, “Antique art cannot seduce me--it lacks fire and passion.”
+Before long, however, he was in thrall to the classic art of Italy, and
+within a few years his art had undergone a complete transformation, not
+only in form but in subject. One of the first pictures that he sent
+from Italy in 1781 to be exhibited in Paris was “The Blind Belisarius,”
+now in the Museum at Lille (a later version, painted in 1784, in the
+Louvre) (Fig. 5). Belisarius, once an all-powerful general of the Roman
+Emperor Justinian, crouches, old, blind and poor by the side of the
+road. The saviour of Rome and conqueror of Carthage has fallen into
+disgrace with a master jealous of his fame, and is reduced to beggary.
+A rich Roman lady, with tears in her eyes, is placing alms in the old
+man’s helmet held out by a youth, while a passing soldier recognizes
+his old commander with surprise and pain. Our artist has turned his
+back on the cheerful Olympian themes of the allegoric-mythological
+school, and with this tragic subject descends to that world of sorrow
+and misery in which, but a few years later, he was to see his own
+nation engulfed. He is still preoccupied, however, with classic themes
+seen through the eyes of that antiquity in which he had submerged
+himself. He has not yet completely achieved his individual style, and
+Boucher’s influence is superseded by that of another French painter who
+represented the classic style one hundred years earlier--Poussin.
+
+This influence lasted throughout his Italian period. Even as late as
+1788 we are constantly reminded in his landscape studies of Nicolas
+Poussin and Claude Lorrain, as may be exemplified by the two pages from
+an hitherto unpublished Italian sketchbook dated 1788, reproducing
+views from the surroundings of Rome (Figs. 7 and 8).[2]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 5. THE BLIND BELISARIUS (1781)
+
+_Museum, Lille_]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 6. THE OATH OF THE HORATII (1784)
+
+_Louvre, Paris_]
+
+Just as the poets and orators of the revolution harked back to the
+classic trend of the seventeenth century--as Voltaire and even
+Robespierre evoked Racine and Corneille--David, too, now followed a
+trend of French art which has persisted from medieval times to the
+present day, that line of classic, simple, antiquely conceived, clearly
+constructed creations from which the highly developed church sculptures
+of the middle ages, the Renaissance paintings of the period of Francis
+I, and the art of Claude Lorrain and Poussin derive. Simplicity
+and straight lines replaced the restless, complicated curve in the
+composition of the Belisarius. It is not alone in the architecture,
+strongly influenced by the antique, that the horizontal and vertical
+line multiplied itself, the painter, too, sought to lend strength and
+rhythm to his composition by a parallelism in the gestures of his
+figures. The arms of Belisarius and the boy follow the same line, as do
+their feet, and the soldier’s hands repeat the parallel gesture.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 7. VILLAGE OUTSIDE ROME
+
+From the Italian sketchbook (1788)
+
+_Private possession, Detroit_]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 8. VIEW IN ROME
+
+From the Italian sketchbook (1788)
+
+_Private possession, Detroit_]
+
+David achieved this linear coördination between figures and
+architecture with even greater success in his next important work, “The
+Oath of the Horatii,” painted in 1783 and now in the Louvre (Fig. 6).
+The figures, divided into three groups, are posed in masterly fashion
+against the three arches of the architectural background--three men on
+the left, three female figures on the right, and the old man, holding
+out the three swords in the centre. The movement swings from group
+to group with the same rhythm that governs the curves of the arches,
+and is strongly emphasized by the parallel lines of limbs and
+draperies. We are told that the outstretched foot of the foremost
+youth was drawn and redrawn by David many times. It is now in exactly
+the right stance to determine the general linear movement and is at
+the same time a masterpiece of naturalistic drawing. The pose of this
+youth’s spear has been criticised as practically impossible, but it
+requires precisely this continuous line to strengthen the rhythm of the
+outstretched legs.
+
+The motif is again drawn from Roman history, this time via a drama by
+Corneille with which David was familiar. The three sons of the old
+Horace, who occupies the centre of the canvas, were chosen by the
+Romans to meet the Albans in single combat, the latter being also
+represented by three brothers, the Curiatii. It had been agreed that
+this combat should decide which race would have dominion over the
+other. The victory fell to the Horatii, the representatives of Rome.
+Two of the brothers fell in combat with the Curiatii, but the third
+triumphed through a ruse--turning apparently in flight and killing his
+three opponents one after another as they pursued him.
+
+The trumpet call to freedom implicit in this composition must have
+rung in the ears of the youthful French patriots who crowded to see
+it, for it appeared at a moment when the soul of young France had
+been stirred by the American war of independence. It was painted in
+the year 1783 when Benjamin Franklin signed in Paris that treaty
+with England in which, for the first time, the independence of the
+American Union was recognized. Beyond the Atlantic there had come
+into existence a republic comparable to the Roman republic, an
+anti-monarchical conception whose ideals were sympathetic to the
+progressive thinkers of France, though France was, at the same time,
+the seat of Europe’s oldest and most absolute monarchy. How did this
+message of freedom from across the ocean affect the youth of France?
+Our artist’s ear was sensitively attuned to the ferment of radical
+thought. While the painters of the older school, Boucher and Fragonard,
+still painted their playful compositions and tried to dissemble the
+tragic reality, the dull rumble of the coming earthquake sounded its
+note in David’s paintings. His themes became ever more gruesome and
+inflammatory. A painting in Marseilles depicts St. Roche pleading with
+the Madonna to succor the sick, and the foreground is filled with
+dead, plague-stricken bodies. Another in Valence represents the Death
+of Ugolino with his Sons--that horrible scene from Dante’s _Divina
+Commedia_ in which the Italian general and his five sons die of hunger
+in a dungeon into which they have been thrown by his political enemies.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 9. PEN SKETCH OF MARIE ANTOINETTE
+
+Made from the artist’s window as the tumbril halted on the way to the
+scaffold (1793)
+
+_Collection of Edmond de Rothschild, Paris_]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 10. STUDY FROM THE ITALIAN SKETCHBOOK (1788)]
+
+“The Death of Socrates,”[3] painted in 1787, now in private possession
+in Paris, enhanced David’s rapidly growing celebrity not only in
+France, but abroad. No less a personage than Sir Joshua Reynolds, who
+was then in Paris, said that he had studied the picture daily for a
+week, and with every inspection found it more perfect. It was, he said,
+“the greatest achievement since Raffael’s frescoes in the Vatican, and
+would have done honor to the Athenians of the Periclean age.” Today,
+of course, this estimate seems an exaggeration to us. The composition
+is assuredly well planned, and admirable in many of its aspects: the
+youth, who with averted face hands the poisoned cup to Socrates, and
+the other youth in the background beating his hands against the arch
+of the doorway. Some of the gestures seem theatrical, however, and
+individual figures, such as the athletic and uninspired Socrates, look
+as though they had been derived from a relief. The composition is too
+studied; it lacks feeling. Why is it that David’s great historical
+compositions are apt to leave us cold, especially those produced during
+a period of great spiritual and political turmoil in which his own
+sympathies were greatly involved? His part in the revolution amply
+proves the strength of the passions which might have found an outlet
+in his art. Why was he not the realist to dramatize those struggles
+like Delacroix who lived fifty years later, when revolution and
+world-war were over, yet who painted battles of all kinds with the
+most terrific naturalism. The answer lies in this very fact: Delacroix
+never witnessed the battle scenes he reproduced; they are the fruit of
+his imagination. It is impossible for a significant realistic art to
+develop during war and revolution. What one experiences at such times
+is so horrible that the imagination is stifled rather than stimulated.
+Only insensitive and coarse natures are capable of painting scenes of
+horror through which they have lived. When, and as now in our days,
+reality weighs all too heavily upon us, art, in self defense, becomes
+abstract and withdraws itself from reality. It is for this reason that
+the art of the revolution, David’s art, was stylized and cool: the
+artist perforce took refuge from the horrors of reality in the kingdom
+of his imagination. His art, like the poetry and oratory of the day,
+was idealistic in trend. When Robespierre delivered those terrible
+speeches that sent so many human beings to the guillotine, he spoke
+slowly, rhythmically, in artfully rounded phrases, as though he were
+holding an academic discussion. That the great revolutionaries,
+among whom we must number David, thought idealistically rather than
+realistically, is proved conclusively by their manner of expressing
+themselves. Like all fanatics they lived in a world of dreams and
+believed their ideas--which seemed to them so splendid--to be either
+already realized or on the verge of realization. They believed only one
+last great effort to be necessary, to achieve--though at the cost of
+human lives--the freedom of humanity as a whole. This alone can explain
+why revolutionaries who pursued their ends through rivers of blood,
+seem at times inspired with a noble and unexpected humanitarianism; why
+they were nearly all tender and devoted men in their private family
+life. Danton idolized his wife and children, the letters of Camille
+Desmoulins to his bride are beautiful and touching, and Robespierre,
+the solitary, the incorruptible, whose private life was beyond
+criticism, was a great lover of nature, who brought, we are told,
+bunches of wild flowers home with him from his long walks.
+
+With the portrayal of Brutus (now in the Louvre), who, because of his
+profound respect for justice permitted the execution of his sons, we
+find ourselves on the threshold of the revolution. Brutus, with stern,
+dark countenance, is seated before the Goddess of Justice, while behind
+him the bodies of his sons are borne across the scene and the grieving
+mother and sisters cling together in the pillared hall of their
+dwelling.
+
+While today we feel the construction of this picture to be far too
+studied, and are inclined to dub it academic, David’s intention was
+directed precisely against the then accepted traditional formulas.
+Whoever dreamed, said contemporary criticism, of placing the principal
+figure in the shadow or planning a composition without regard to
+the triangular construction? David left the centre of the canvas
+purposely free. Our eyes fall first on a column, a chair, a still life
+arrangement on a table, frankly at the expense of the composition’s
+unity. The incidentals were drawn with extraordinary care. In order to
+assure the accuracy of the classic furnishings, David had the cabinet
+maker, Jacob, make the pieces for him after his own designs. The
+painting created such an extraordinary sensation that not only did it
+give the first impetus to the Parisian vogue for classic furniture,
+but women’s fashions were definitely influenced by the loosely coifed
+hair and long flowing garments of the feminine figures. Not the least
+significant part of David’s contribution to art is the influence he
+exerted on the decorative arts and on fashion. It is very rare that
+the influence of a single artist’s work on a bygone style can be so
+clearly measured as in the case of David, from whose art the decorative
+art of the Empire period derived.
+
+Only an artist who is much in the public eye can sway styles, and David
+became one of the heroes of the day when this composition was exhibited
+in the Salon of 1789--the year whose autumn was to see the outbreak
+of the revolution. Perhaps no other picture has ever played so great
+a rôle in the political and social life of a nation as this work,
+which is by no means its author’s finest production, much less among
+the finest of art history. All of which goes to prove how unreliable
+popular taste is when it comes to a question of contemporary art.
+
+It was of course the subject which evoked such enormous acclaim, for
+the very name of Brutus was one to conjure with where the radical
+youth of Paris was concerned. Wherever speeches on the new political
+conceptions were made there was mention of the name of Rome’s deliverer
+from the yoke of Caesar, and from Mirabeau to Danton the people loved
+to connect the name of Brutus with their heroes. Even the opponents
+of the revolution believed themselves to be inspired by him. When
+Charlotte Corday murdered David’s friend Marat, she declared in
+prison that she hoped to meet Brutus in Elysium. This veneration for
+antiquity, which was characteristic of the revolutionary period, was
+greatly fostered by David’s classical compositions.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 11. MICHEL GÉRARD AND HIS FAMILY (1789)
+
+_Museum, Le Mans_]
+
+The narrative of the German writer Halem,[4] who visited Paris
+the first year of the revolution, and attended some theatrical
+presentations, tells us vividly how familiar the populace was with
+David’s painting. He attended a performance of the “Brutus” of
+Voltaire, at the National Theater, and relates that although he
+got to the Box Office at five o’clock in the afternoon, he had the
+utmost difficulty in obtaining a seat. He writes, “Mirabeau stood
+near me at the ticket office and because of his celebrity was given
+a place in the fourth balcony. I followed him through the crowd as
+best I could and managed to get a chair in a rented loge. Mirabeau’s
+entrance was received with thunderous applause and cries of ‘To the
+gallery, Mirabeau.’ As he did not respond a deputation waited on him,
+the spokesman saying, ‘The French nation demands its Brutus.’ He had
+to give in, and was borne away to be received in the gallery with
+rapturous applause. What a triumph when later Valerius’ words to Brutus,
+
+ ‘On you alone all eyes here are turned,
+ ‘You who broke our chains and gave us the gift of freedom,’
+
+were addressed pointedly to him. At the end of the play I was amazed
+to see David’s painting of Brutus reproduced on the stage. In speaking
+Brutus’ last words with which the play closes:
+
+ ‘Rome now is free. That is enough.
+ The gods be thanked,’
+
+Vanhove, the leading actor, assumed the pose of David’s Brutus, and
+the bodies of his sons were borne across the back of the stage. Every
+Parisian knows David’s picture. Everyone instantly recognized the
+intention of publicly honoring the artist through this presentation,
+and general applause heightened the celebration.” So reads the
+narrative.
+
+What had happened? Why this enthusiasm of crowd and intellectuals for
+a new day? Why these celebrations within celebrations? Even today,
+almost one hundred and fifty years later, the words “French Revolution”
+rouse our blood, literature is divided into opposing camps by which
+either the revolution or the monarchy is condemned, and there are many
+who hold in abhorrence the events of those days and the theories that
+brought them into being and believe that the awful bath of blood might
+have been avoided--as though revolutions were the work of men and not
+natural occurrences like tidal waves that the individual can neither
+bring into being nor arrest in their course. In the history of the
+human race we see again and again how one social stratum after another
+climbs up, pushing aside the one that preceded it. When, as in France,
+a monarchy and aristocracy has been in power long enough to weaken in
+its rule because security and luxury have undermined its morale and its
+strength, another stratum, scenting this weakness, seeks to wrest to
+itself this power which its fresh and undrained life force fits it more
+ably to use. In France this social stratum was the Bourgeoisie, the
+Third Estate, which from the beginning of the new era--the sixteenth
+century--had grown strong commercially and illustrious in art and
+literature, but had not yet achieved any political rights.
+
+The nobility, however, preferred to die rather than allow the
+power which they had held for hundreds of years to pass from their
+hands--quite naturally, for the function of government is their only
+element. So came the unequal battle in which from the beginning the
+victory was to the young and powerful stratum. To the ruling class
+form alone was left, while the class which aspired to rule possessed
+passion. Like all young, unpractised and fanatical fighters, their
+representatives shot far beyond their goal, and because, though
+victors, they were still unpractised in the use of power, they abused
+it, destroyed senselessly whatever still lived of the old régime,
+and then turned upon each other until the strongest pushed the others
+aside and became supreme. These strongest among the strong were
+successively the leaders of the Constituent and Legislative Assemblies:
+first Mirabeau, later the so-called Terrorists, among them Danton,
+Robespierre and Marat, and finally Napoleon.
+
+The democratic idea was victorious in the French Revolution despite
+Napoleon, who, at first, embodied this idea in himself, and whose
+Empire was only the short reaction which follows all new experiments.
+Its consequences have persisted to our own day, when as the
+revolution’s final result one monarchy after another in the European
+scene has gone into eclipse.
+
+If we would be just we must admit that during the revolution there
+were heroes on both sides, among the monarchists as well as the
+revolutionaries. Among the monarchists--to name a few of the more
+notable--were the King, the Queen and Charlotte Corday. On the
+revolutionary side we can muster practically all of the leaders,
+who sooner or later almost all perished on the scaffold for their
+principles, and we can familiarize ourselves with these men through
+David’s portraits.
+
+The outward events of the beginning of the revolution are well known.
+The financial difficulties of the Government compelled the King and
+his Advisors to convene the States General, which had not met for
+generations. The elections of the deputies had already roused popular
+passion, and when the Government, after the Assembly had convened,
+endeavored to establish the old order in which all the power was vested
+in the upper classes and the Third Estate had none, revolt broke loose.
+Under Mirabeau’s leadership the representatives of the Third Estate
+left the Assembly, and met, for lack of other quarters, in the Jeu de
+Paume (the Tennis Court), where they took oath not to dissolve until
+they had established a new constitution. This “Oath of the Tennis
+Court” was immortalized by David in a famous composition of which only
+sketches by David and paintings after his cartoon by other artists have
+been preserved.[5]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 12. PORTRAIT OF BARÈRE (1793)
+
+_Palais, Versailles_]
+
+It was a year later, when the Revolutionary Assembly had established
+its power, that it recalled that great day of the beginning of the
+revolution and commissioned David to paint the picture. It is again the
+German poet Halem, who describes the circumstances for us, in a letter
+written by him after a visit to the Jacobin Club. He writes: “After
+continued speechifying, Dubois de Crancé, a member of the National
+Assembly, rose and recalled to the memory of those present that day
+on June 20th of the preceding year, when six hundred harried and
+unarmed Deputies, surrounded, as he put it, ‘by the Oriental pomp and
+the bayonets of despotism,’ laid the cornerstone of French freedom by
+the well-known oath of the tennis court at Versailles. Never could he
+recall this event, said he, without his heart beating faster, without
+a glow of patriotic feeling. He proposed the formulation of an address
+to the assembly in which they should be asked to sanction (1.) That the
+tennis court, grave of despotism and cradle of freedom, be declared a
+national monument, closed, and dedicated to stillness.... (2.) That
+the wonderful moment of this first oath be perpetuated by a painting
+120′ high and 30′ wide, painted by the greatest of the French masters,
+and hung in the National Convention. ‘I say,’ he continued, ‘by the
+greatest of the masters, and to whom else could I refer than to him who
+so nobly depicted Brutus and the Oath of the Horatii?’ The vaulted hall
+rang with loud cries of assent. David the painter was present. Everyone
+turned toward him, and pale with enthusiasm the young man stepped to
+the orator’s platform and thanked the Assembly in trembling tones for
+its trust, which he hoped from his heart to adequately repay, adding
+touchingly, ‘Sleep will not visit me for many a night.’
+
+“Then ensued a noble rivalry. Abbé Dillon arose first to vindicate his
+right to appear in the picture among those taking the oath. He was one
+of the few clerics who had belonged to the National Assembly before
+the day of the Oath. At that moment he had been obliged to take charge
+of the unimportant clerical archives, and consequently had not been
+present. He called the members present to witness and his claim was
+admitted. Then arose the Comte de Noailles to voice his approval of
+commemorating the Oath of those brave citizens. ‘But, alas,’ said he,
+‘the former aristocracy sees itself excluded and how many of us echoed
+that oath in our hearts. If only the painter could depict us standing
+in the distance with yearning hearts and the burning wish that we might
+be among the celebrants of the Oath.’ A third stood up and expressed
+the wish that the suppliants might be included in the picture. A fourth
+demanded that those wretches who had been present at the Oath, but who
+had later fallen for the good cause be not included. A fifth got up and
+related a story of Bailly who after fruitless efforts to calm the mob
+around the tennis court, stepped out and commanded silence _in the name
+of the National Assembly_. This decision, this command, the name of
+the National Assembly then spoken openly to the people for the first
+time, had a great effect, had quieted the mob and perhaps determined
+its future mood. The orator asked the painter if he could make use of
+this incident in his composition. The painter stepped once more to
+the platform and thanked them all for their remarks, begging them to
+remember, however, that the picture must have both unity and historical
+accuracy. He was generally applauded. Mirabeau then took the floor and
+with marvellous adroitness conceded full despotic power to genius such
+as that of the artist David, and proposed that Dubois de Crancé prepare
+a written petition for the National Assembly. Dubois made the excuse
+that he was about to leave for the country and cries of ‘Mirabeau!
+Mirabeau!’ resounded. Mirabeau understood the call and accepted the
+formulation of the address. He read it at one of the next sittings
+and the master’s hand was recognized.” So much for the account of the
+eyewitness.
+
+David exhibited the cartoon for “The Oath of the Tennis Court” in the
+Salon of 1791 and on Barère’s proposal the National Assembly voted
+that the painting be carried out at the cost of the State and be hung
+in the National Convention as an incentive to zeal. In the Catalogue
+of the Exhibition David had stated that it was not his intention to
+make likenesses of the members of the National Assembly. How easily,
+nevertheless, the Parisian public recognized the various personalities
+and what a sensation the composition made is proved by the fact that
+Barère practically became a personage through the fact that David
+portrayed him writing, in the left foreground, near the principal
+group--placing on paper for posterity the tale of the great event.
+Barère’s not too inspired journal, _Point du Jour_, became from that
+moment a much sought-after sheet.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 13. LAVOISIER AND HIS WIFE (1787)
+
+_Private Collection, New York_]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 14. MME. DE RICHMOND AND HER SON (_c._ 1800)
+
+_Collection of Mr. Edward J. Berwind, New York_]
+
+Despite the many characteristic types, David’s composition “The Oath
+of the Tennis Court” is essentially in the monumental style in which
+quite justly details are subordinated to the spirit of the whole.
+The thronging crowd stands out against the bare walls of the Tennis
+Court, in a clearly defined linear pattern, built up by the myriad
+outstretched hands. The figures are all filled with a mighty dramatic
+force. Bailly, the president, in the centre, stands like a statue of
+bronze. For the first time David shook himself free of historical
+subjects, depicted a contemporary event and proved himself well able to
+adapt his idealistic style to such a theme. In this simplified idiom he
+attained the expression of a dignified, rhetorical passion which he was
+unable to encompass to a like degree in his historical subjects,
+and the lofty idealism of the composition speaks well for the sincerity
+and intensity of his convictions.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 16. MARAT
+
+(Drawing)
+
+Study for the painting in Brussels]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 17. DANTON
+
+(From drawing in the Museum, Lille)]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 15. LE PELLETIER
+
+(From the engraving in the Louvre)]
+
+The radical Jacobin Club, whose members had pledged themselves so
+enthusiastically to the promotion of his art, became thereafter
+one of his favorite haunts. Because, as an artist, he was not
+particularly judicious politically he allowed himself to be influenced
+by the extremists whose biting logic is often more compelling to
+temperamental laymen than are more moderate councils. David had,
+as his whole career clearly proves, a rarely fine instinct for the
+elementary forces in political and social life, and those to whom he
+now turned, the representatives of the “Mountain”--to whom Marat,
+Danton and Robespierre belonged--were as a matter of fact the strongest
+personalities on whom leadership was soon to devolve. Thanks to them
+he was elected to the National Assembly in 1792. He never assumed any
+leading part, for a defect in his speech interfered with his public
+speaking, but he often gave vent to his enthusiasm only by loud cries
+of assent.
+
+For the rest his contribution lay in the field of art. He busied
+himself with cartoons for monumental paintings, with monuments, with
+arranging national festivals, sketching classical costumes for all the
+functionaries, and in organizing the artist world, always, we must
+admit, from an idealistic standpoint. He has been much criticised
+for the fact that he concurred in the King’s execution, and later in
+Danton’s. In the condemnation of the King, however, he followed his
+party; in Danton’s case his reasons were personal.
+
+The principal oration against the King at his trial in 1793 was made by
+Barère, the lawyer, who advocated David’s composition to the National
+Assembly, and whom David later immortalized as historiographer in
+his work. David painted a masterly portrait of him delivering the
+Impeachment of Louis XVI (Fig. 12). In the composition which lies
+before him on the parapet is written the beginning of the famous speech
+which ends with the words, “The Tree of Liberty could not grow were it
+not watered with the blood of Kings.” Barère, good-looking and a clever
+orator, was not among the nobler of the revolutionaries. He belongs to
+that very small group of revolutionary leaders who did not themselves
+become sacrifices, but outlived the revolution in all its phases and
+held public office even in the times of reaction under Napoleon and
+the Bourbons. The Abbe Sieyès was another of this group. He was from
+the very first a representative of the Third Estate and achieved some
+reputation under Napoleon. David, too, whose art safeguarded him among
+the dangers of the revolution, belongs to them. Both Sieyès, whose
+clerical frock was his protection, and David were helped by the fact
+that they knew how to stand aloof. Barère, however, was the type of
+politician who trims his sails to meet the wind and uses his sagacity
+to judge not where right but where might is and then diplomatically
+allies himself to it in order to always be in the vanguard of events.
+His accusations against the King only expressed the general feeling of
+the people whom he strove to please.
+
+True, this general sentiment would not have been possible had not
+the monarchy for years been its own worst enemy and made of itself a
+laughing stock. There is, indeed, no excuse for political murder. The
+King merited the guillotine as little as did thousands of others on
+both sides who were sacrificed to it on account of their political
+opinions. That Louis XVI was arraigned before a tribunal of his people,
+however, was in part at least the fault of the monarchy itself. This
+particular King possessed very few of those qualities which a nation
+expects from its sovereign. It is one of Fate’s most remarkable ironies
+that Louis XVI had every desire to be democratic--but his manner of so
+being was unfortunate to a degree. The story runs that as nineteen year
+old Dauphin he used to pursue the servants laden with soiled laundry
+in order to tickle them under the arms, and as King the blacksmith’s
+hammer and anvil were his favorite diversions. The young and charming
+Marie Antoinette found it hard to accustom herself to a clumsy husband
+with soiled hands who emerged red-faced from his smithy and approached
+her affectionately. It happened that did the King espy from a window
+masons working in the courtyard below he would run down with rolled-up
+sleeves to assist them. There is a certain kind of good nature that
+is inappropriate to Princes. His portraits show him as having a
+clumsy, phlegmatic figure and plain, not too intelligent features. A
+typical representative of a doomed caste, he lacked any energy to stem
+misfortune, any originality or appreciation of the new conceptions of
+the day. It seems as though a curse rests on people of this type, that
+everything they do tends only to make their situation worse, as though
+they help to bring about their own destruction. What weakness when
+in the hour of the greatest danger Louis writes to his brother, the
+Comte d’Artois: “I have revoked the orders that I gave. My troops will
+abandon Paris, and I will use more gentle means. Don’t speak to me of
+a Coup d’État, a display of force. I feel it is wiser to wait for the
+storm to abate, and to expect everything from time, from the awakening
+of right-thinking people and the love of the French nation for their
+King.” Ideas of this kind never arrested a revolution! It was fortunate
+for him that his phlegmatic temperament could find refuge in prayer.
+This quality helped him to meet death with resolution but was of small
+service to the caste he represented. The times were too violent for
+Christian temperaments such as the King’s. Once when David received
+a commission for a portrayal of Christ, and his patron remarked
+subsequently that the figure looked more like Cato, David’s reply was:
+“The times are not favorable for Christendom.”
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 18. MADAME SERIZIAT AND SON (1795)
+
+_Louvre, Paris_]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 19. MONSIEUR SERIZIAT (1795)
+
+_Louvre, Paris_]
+
+The King, however, continued to rely on the love of the French for
+their monarch. As a matter of fact this sentiment was centuries old and
+had persisted until the early years of his reign, but the aristocracy
+had helped by derision and calumny to destroy all veneration for the
+monarchy, poets and writers sowed doubts as to the efficacy of this
+form of government, and the nation began to lose its age-old respect
+as the King’s weaknesses became apparent. It is common prejudice that
+Princes on account of their eminent position should be different and
+more distinguished than the common run of mortals, although history
+proves that notable personalities are as rare on the throne as in other
+walks of life. If a ruler is gifted, he can allow himself to come into
+contact with his people; if, as in most cases, he is not, he is better
+advised to allow himself to be admired from afar. Louis XVI, however,
+did just the opposite. We know what undignified scenes took place
+when the mob on several occasions penetrated the palace. An innkeeper
+stepped up to the King and spoke to him saying, after the King’s reply,
+“You did well to give me a civil answer, otherwise I’d have made you
+headwaiter in my inn tomorrow.” If the King had given this rascal
+the blow in the face he deserved, he might have been spared his long
+martyrdom with the scaffold at the end. Instead, however, he went up to
+another ruffian who had thrust a red cap on his head, and who seemed to
+be stumbling drunkenly against a door and helped him to open it. Even
+on the scaffold he wanted to help the executioner cut off his hair.
+The cool fashion in which he went to meet his doom, at least, merits
+our admiration. An American historian has fittingly remarked: “The
+unruffled dignity with which he met death was the finest act of his
+reign.”
+
+Posterity has devoted much sympathy to Marie Antoinette whose portraits
+by Vigée LeBrun (Fig. 25) and other court painters are familiar to
+all art lovers. Although she, too, was by no means an outstanding
+ruler her life is particularly rich in human and touching incidents.
+Her very weaknesses are those which arouse one’s sympathy. Who could
+blame the young Princess, brought to Paris from Vienna at the age of
+fifteen, that she remained in tutelage to her mother and sought her
+advice? But this very relationship which resulted when misfortune
+overtook her, in an appeal for help to the foreign courts, brought
+about her downfall. Who can fail to understand that the lovely
+and vivacious Marie Antoinette, surrounded by the pleasure-loving
+society of Paris, and tied to a dull husband to whom, nevertheless,
+she remained faithful, should have looked about her for congenial
+friends. It was this, however, that gave rise in court circles to
+those calumnies which so injured her reputation among her subjects and
+finally ruined her--calumnies founded only on gossip, not on facts.
+Who could blame her for finding burdensome the exaggerated etiquette
+of the French court, the public dinner of the King and Queen once a
+week, the ridiculous ceremonies of the lever, the crowd which attended
+even the birth of her children. And why should this inexperienced
+Queen have been held answerable for extravagant expenditures for
+gowns and festivities when her predecessors had spent just as much
+and the money was always given with the King’s approval? Her only
+faults were inexperience and lack of caution. Unfortunately, when her
+husband proved himself unfit, she essayed, to her undoing, to take the
+political reins in her own hands. In her endeavour to save herself
+and her family she allowed her feminine sympathies and antipathies to
+influence her politically and so made matters worse. The price she paid
+for her mistakes was terrific. In all the history of royalty there is
+hardly a more terrible plunge from the pinnacle of power and wealth to
+the depths of misery.
+
+Art and culture never bloomed more luxuriantly in France than in the
+early years of Marie Antoinette’s reign.[6] The most exquisite taste
+pervaded the mode and was displayed at court functions; the furniture,
+ornaments, bronzes and porcelains designed for Marie Antoinette are
+among the most delightful productions of French decorative art; the
+great French painters of the Rococo period--Boucher, Fragonard and
+Hubert Robert--were still alive, as well as the sculptors Houdon,
+Falconet and Clodion. It was natural that the young Queen should have
+preferred this art to David’s with its cold, stern quality and sombre,
+tragic motifs; that she ignored revolutionary literature, preferring to
+amuse herself with charming Italian operas or the music of Gluck which
+she introduced to France.
+
+That all this splendour collapsed suddenly with the revolution was
+not the most serious thing that faced the Queen--misfortune pursued
+her into her most intimate family life. She, who loved her children
+above all else and who, when the gathering disasters grew closer and
+closer to her husband, saw the collapse of one pillar after another
+of her very existence. Her youngest child died in his eleventh month.
+The Dauphin, a gifted and charming lad of seven, sickened. How could
+the mother who lay sobbing across the death-bed of her son at Meudon
+worry over the gathering storms in Paris through which pealed the knell
+announcing the Dauphin’s death? Then came the days when the mob hung
+threateningly around the palace and forced her to leave Versailles for
+Paris in its triumphant train. When the populace stormed the Tuilleries
+and she feared for the fate of her other children how deeply offended
+was the dignity which she possessed in the same measure that the King
+lacked it. When the Royal family were brought back from their unlucky
+flight to Varennes amid the abuse and insults of the mob, the King
+accepted it all with his usual calm and even tried to converse with
+his followers. The Queen, on the contrary, suffered so horribly under
+the humiliation that her hair turned white over night. This, however,
+was but the beginning. Then came the parting with the King who was led
+to the scaffold (January 21, 1793); there was the even more painful
+parting with her children, and the torture of almost a year in prison
+without news of them, within sight of the bloody heads which, like that
+of her friend the Princesse de Lamballe, were carried past her window
+on pikes. When she was haled before the Tribunal, where she made answer
+calmly to all accusations, she was but a shadow of herself.
+
+David made a drawing of her on her way to the scaffold (October 16,
+1793)--a horrifying sketch (Fig. 9). Does there perhaps speak from it
+the injured vanity of an artist whose work had once been ignored by
+this former Queen? What a study in contrasts! This was she who only a
+few years previously had been the lovely model for the most charming
+portrait of the court painters.
+
+Marie Antoinette was executed during the “reign of terror,” so-called,
+the sanguinary and precarious years 1793–94. Following the results of
+the revolution and its excesses all Europe had combined against France,
+and only the utmost concentration of internal forces made victory
+against such a coalition possible. The National Convention placed the
+direction of affairs in the hands of a committee of nine, among whom
+were Danton, Robespierre, Marat and St. Just, and this Committee
+saved France. They formed and sent into the field the volunteer armies
+which, at first unorganized, gradually obtained ascendancy over the
+experienced coalition troops and finally drove them from the field.
+Everything that might work injury to the troops at the front was
+ruthlessly put aside. Hundreds of aristocrats followed the King and
+Queen to the scaffold. Murder was the order of the day and thinned
+out not only the friends of the old régime, but also the ranks of the
+revolutionaries themselves. The earliest of these to fall in connection
+with the King’s execution was Le Pelletier, formerly the Comte de St.
+Fargeau, a member of the Convention, who was murdered by a member of
+the King’s body-guard on the eve of the execution of the King, on
+January 20, 1793, because he had voted for the King’s death. Busts of
+Le Pelletier and Brutus were placed in the Palace of Justice, and David
+quickly completed a fine painting of the victim which he offered to the
+Convention in the following terms: “Fellow Citizens, each one of us is
+responsible to the Fatherland for those gifts which nature has bestowed
+on us; diverse though their expression may be, the goal is the same
+for us all. Every true patriot should use every means to inspire his
+fellow citizens and bring before them at all times the great examples
+of heroism and virtue. I am moved by these thoughts in offering to
+the National Convention the painting of Michel Le Pelletier who was
+murdered in cowardly fashion because he voted for a tyrant’s death.”
+
+Unfortunately this painting has been lost. Le Pelletier’s descendants,
+into whose possession it passed, were Royalists, and hid the painting,
+destroying the plates and all the engravings which had been made
+from it. The reproduction (Fig. 15) was made from the only existing
+impression in the Cabinet of Engravings in the Louvre. The composition
+is conceived in the grand and austere manner which characterized
+David’s work in these days of terror and fanatically exaggerated
+idealism.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 20. MARAT (1793)
+
+_Museum, Brussels_]
+
+Before six months were up another assassination, this time of one
+of the leaders of the revolution--Marat--roused the members of the
+Convention and the populace to the utmost. Hardly had the news
+spread abroad before one of the members of the Convention arose
+crying: “Where art thou, David? You made a portrait of Le Pelletier
+for posterity when he died for his country, now the occasion has
+arisen for another work.” “This too I will do,” David answered, and
+produced one of his most moving compositions (Figs. 16 and 20). It
+is planned with great power and simplicity, and filled with deep and
+tragic feeling, for Marat was his friend. Nothing has aroused more
+astonishment than this friendship of David’s for Marat who has been
+regarded as the bloodthirsty instigator of the horrors and deviltries
+of the revolution. If we look into the matter more closely, however,
+we must recognize in Marat qualities which explain the esteem of
+men like David. He had remarkable philosophic and scientific gifts.
+While his enemies described him as a quack doctor, or, as Carlisle
+erroneously states, a veterinary, as a matter of fact his professional
+contributions as an oculist were so remarkable that some of his
+writings have been reprinted even of late years. Before the revolution
+he was the most celebrated oculist of the aristocracy, and the Comte
+d’Artois, later Charles X, had appointed him as his personal physician
+at a salary of two thousand pounds. His philosophical writings, such
+as the three volume _Essays on Man_ which appeared in English and
+French, achieved a reputation for him abroad. Although he did not
+become a member of the French Academy, on account of his disagreement
+with Voltaire and his attack on Newton, no less a person than Goethe
+expressed himself concerning this injustice. Benjamin Franklin,
+too, was among those who visited Marat and were interested in his
+experiments in physics.
+
+On the outbreak of the revolution he abandoned his career as doctor and
+scholar to develop an astonishing public zeal founded on his passion
+for the new ideas. He influenced the development of the new forms of
+government in no small measure, advised against copying the English
+constitution with which he had familiarized himself during a stay in
+England, and opposed all who attempted to assume Dictatorship, even
+Mirabeau, then Lafayette and later General Dumouriez, whose treason he
+foresaw before Dumouriez went over to the Austrians and the Girondists.
+He voted for the condemnation of the King, whom he accused of treason
+to his country, but advised against his condemnation for events which
+happened prior to the revolution. That he was not so bloodthirsty as
+his opponents would have us believe is proved by his insistence that
+Malesherbes, the king’s advisor, should not be condemned with him as he
+was “a wise and venerable old man.”
+
+How many of the wild imprecations which were published against his
+enemies, and particularly against the nobility in his journal _L’Ami
+du Peuple_ may be laid at his door, is a question. This paper was
+suppressed at various times, and while Marat was in hiding it appeared
+with distorted versions of his opinions given out by his enemies or
+supposed friends, in the endeavour to bring discredit on him. The
+really established facts concerning him place him in no unfavorable
+light. He opposed the Girondists because he opposed a foreign war,
+from which he felt not only the Monarchists but those Radicals who
+worked in the dark like the Girondists hoped to draw advantage,
+and which he felt might result in the establishment of a military
+dictatorship. He foresaw the September murders, and demanded the
+establishment of a tribunal for the prisoners. This was not done, and
+the murders consequently took place.
+
+True his impassioned pen evoked death and destruction upon his
+opponents, but he was persecuted all his life and his enemies
+retaliated in kind. More than once he fled from death, hiding for
+weeks at a time in cellars and in sewers and contracting from lack of
+nourishment all sorts of bodily ills which his iron energy enabled him
+to disregard. Ill, unable to attend the Convention, although working
+all day long, he sought relief in hot baths where he wrote by placing
+a board across the bath for his books and papers. With, in any case,
+but a short time to live, he fell victim to the murderer’s knife in
+the hands of an eccentric and talented young noblewoman, Charlotte
+Corday, who hoped to end the revolution by murdering Marat, whereas her
+deed had exactly the opposite effect. She belonged to the Girondist
+circles whose persecution followed the outbreak of the war and whose
+suppression Marat demanded when at first victory seemed doubtful.
+
+Marat was unquestionably a true friend of the people and his published
+and spoken convictions were utterly sincere. In spite of his powerful
+and completely independent position, for he was affiliated with no
+particular party, he rejected every salaried position, every political
+distinction and lived in the poorest circumstances, the very bathtub
+which he used and which later attained a sort of celebrity as a
+curiosity being borrowed from a neighbor. He received petitioners
+without number, and endeavoured in the “Letterbox” of his paper, which
+he was the first to introduce, to answer the countless questions put
+by the people. Charlotte Corday only obtained an interview with him
+after several unsuccessful attempts, by pretending that she was seeking
+help for a widow with five children. The paper which Marat holds in his
+hand in David’s picture was sent in by her to obtain admission, and not
+without reason or effect has the artist made these words legible: “13
+July, 1793, Charlotte Corday to Citizen Marat.” “To be unfortunate is
+to be sure of your assistance.” An order for 25 francs which Marat had
+made out for the widow in whose name Charlotte Corday sought his aid
+lies on the stool in the foreground. Her dagger seems to have found him
+while he affixed his signature to it.
+
+This composition is among David’s finest achievements in its
+combination of very simple forms and great expressiveness. We almost
+feel the corpse still lives, still breathes. The most touching
+naturalness is combined with a truly heroic style comparable to that
+of France’s great tragic poets, such as Racine and Corneille. If we
+remember that at the time this picture was painted, the elegant Rococo
+painters were still producing their piquant compositions, we recognize
+that in art as in life a new era had dawned, an art founded on entirely
+new conceptions, which built its compositions with large and massive
+forms and sought again those depths of inspiration which had entirely
+disappeared from the art of the court painters.
+
+David painted still another composition as propaganda for his political
+ideals. A thirteen-year-old drummer boy, Joseph Bara, fell in the
+battles in the Vendee in December, 1793, and David was commissioned
+by the Convention to immortalize the death of this young hero of
+the Republic. This painting, now in the Museum at Avignon, although
+unfinished, and very simple in conception, has many charming qualities.
+French writers have particularly praised the purity and elegance of the
+drawing and the beauty of the youthful form; and in fact the swelling
+rhythmic line and vivacity of the bodily forms are very pleasing. If,
+however, we analyse the essentially novel quality in this art, it lies
+in the reduction of the composition to its bare essentials, combined
+with a deepened expressiveness. The scene of the battle in which the
+boy fell is only lightly indicated. In the background are clouds
+which might be cannon smoke, and far to one side the disappearing
+form of a standard bearer. The boy presses the republican cockade to
+his breast with one hand--there is no other indication of the day’s
+realities--everything else is universal, idealistic. The nakedness, the
+boy’s idealized features, the wide empty spaces of the background with
+its suggestion of a hill--everything is concentrated on the suffering
+and inspiration which speak from the lines of the body. The moment of
+transition from life to death--which to be sure the friends of the
+revolution had ample chance of observing--is wonderfully depicted. We
+feel the trembling of the body, the lift of the breast, the stiffening
+of the mouth and of the half-closed eyes. The curious color scheme of
+the painting, the thin sulphur yellow background, the pale blue shadows
+in the figure, the luxuriant dark brown hair and the brightly colored
+cockade--contrive a curious effect.
+
+Close bonds of friendship united David to Danton and Robespierre,
+the two other leaders of the Reign of Terror, as well as to
+Marat--although this applies only to the early days where Danton is
+concerned. The break with him is one of the episodes in the painter’s
+life which is most difficult to explain although David can hardly
+have been alone to blame, for Danton’s violent nature was prone in
+moments of passion to transform friends into foes. It is unfortunate,
+however, that David did not exhibit more independence in his political
+opinions, and that even though he allowed himself to be dragged in
+Robespierre’s train, he helped in the downfall of this most stirring of
+the revolutionary heroes.
+
+The varying attitudes of revolutionary critics make it even harder to
+evaluate Danton’s personality and contribution than that of Marat.
+Unlike Marat he was no knight of the pen, but a man of words and deeds,
+living fiercely in the passions of the moment, and always at his best
+in the times of greatest difficulty.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 21. ST. JUST (1792)
+
+_Private Possession, Paris_]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 22. SELF PORTRAIT (1794)
+
+_Louvre, Paris_]
+
+The personal documents which give us intimate glimpses of the
+personalities of the other revolutionary leaders are entirely lacking
+in Danton’s case. He was too impulsive for this form of expression, or,
+in his leisure moments, too lazy. His portraits give one an impression
+of the strength and softness, obstinacy and good nature, energy and
+procrastination, which characterized this hero of the revolution whose
+dramatic fate has been the inspiration of many a poet. His career
+was short but glorious. He rose like a meteor from the obscurity of
+a provincial law practice to a dominating position, and during the
+years 1792 to 1794 his powerful figure was in the foreground and
+associated with every important event. His opponents accused him of
+cruelty and dishonesty. It is undeniable that he occasionally indulged
+his wild impulse to destroy those that opposed him, as witness his
+speech, “Revolutions cannot be carried out on tea.” Although the
+September murders occurred during his day, his guilt lies rather in not
+preventing them, than in any instigation of them. He was occupied at
+that time with the formation of the volunteer army, and the monument
+erected to his memory by the City of Paris in the eighties, which
+depicts him inspiring the citizens with flaming words to departure
+for the tottering front, was well deserved. Whatever the faults of
+his stormy and excitable nature, he did more than any other to save
+his country in a moment of grave danger. So far as his dishonesty is
+concerned, he seems now and then to have dealt not all too accurately
+with State and private property, but his patriotism was none the
+less sincere. We must remember that not all active natures can live
+on nothing, like Marat and Robespierre, and that a powerful physical
+constitution demands other recreations. Danton had far more love
+of life than the dry Robespierre, and liked to be surrounded by his
+men and women friends. He finally, to the horror of some historians,
+acquired a small country property where he hoped, his labours over,
+to retire with wife and children, an ambition destined never to be
+fulfilled.
+
+There is in the Museum at Troyes a portrait by David of Danton’s first
+wife,[7] the brave Gabrielle, a healthy, capable and intelligent
+housewife with black eyes and rosy cheeks--a true type of the new
+Bourgeoisie. She seems to have been as cheerful as she was kind, and
+gave Danton several children to whom he was tenderly attached. She was
+destined not to see his downfall. When in February, 1793, he returned
+from the Belgian front, he found that his wife had died and been buried
+several days previously. It is characteristic both of his love for her
+and his untamed nature that seven days after her death he had both
+grave and coffin opened up, embraced the corpse and commissioned a
+sculptor friend to make a death mask and a bust of her. His friends had
+great difficulty in saving him from an emotional breakdown. Even the
+cool Robespierre sought to comfort him in the most feeling manner in a
+letter in which he pledges him his devotion and friendship unto death.
+How quickly and how passionately they lived, these revolutionaries! A
+couple of months later Danton married a sixteen-year-old girl, and a
+year after that, Robespierre, who had promised--and undoubtedly with
+sincere conviction--to be true to him till death, brought him to the
+guillotine.
+
+The dual rule of two temperaments so opposed as Danton’s and
+Robespierre’s could not endure for long. One cannot conceive a greater
+contrast than that between the robust Danton, who loudly proclaimed
+his every thought and the elegant frail Robespierre who was all
+self-control and deliberation.
+
+How clever and calculating an actor Robespierre was is shown by the
+account of his attempted murder by a young girl after the manner of
+Marat’s. The attempt failed. The crowd surged up the stairs to his room
+to congratulate him. Robespierre was seated in a corner calmly peeling
+an orange. Without a word he looked sternly at the intruding crowd,
+till in embarrassment they crept away. In his place Danton undoubtedly
+would have launched into an impassioned speech of thanks.
+
+Robespierre and his friend St. Just (Fig. 21) are both men of pleasing
+appearance--almost good-looking as compared to Danton’s ugly bull-dog
+countenance. They were, especially Robespierre, who wore a wig and
+sword to the last, neat and even elegant in their dress, which differed
+sharply from Danton’s almost gypsy-like effect.
+
+Unfortunately the “Titan”--so accustomed was he to towering above his
+opponents in the Convention and pelting them with his Shakespearian
+witticisms--underestimated his puny but quick-witted and accurate
+opponent, Robespierre, and before he realized it, he had met his doom.
+Just as Danton was about to mitigate the rigours of the Convention’s
+procedure, just as he hoped to take things a bit more easily
+personally, came his impeachment--plotted so subtly by Robespierre and
+his helper St. Just that there was no escape. So desperate a fight did
+the giant put up, however, for himself and his friends that it hung by
+a thread that his accusers might find themselves ruined in his stead.
+After a number of most dubious witnesses had testified against Danton,
+St. Just felt it wiser to deny him all defence by having the Court
+decide that anyone who conducted himself so offensively toward his
+judges as Danton, could be condemned without further hearing. Danton’s
+mere presence was enough to dismay the jury, who, moreover, were not
+really convinced of his guilt. When they retired, a rumor went about
+that he had been acquitted. His accusers, thereupon, rushed to the
+jury room and forced the rebellious members to submission. It is here
+that our artist, who was a devoted admirer of Robespierre, appears
+in no favorable light. He pressed about the jury with other members
+of the Convention, and the report runs, called out to those who were
+still hesitating, “Do you still believe Danton innocent? Has he not
+already been judged by public opinion? Only cowards could so conduct
+themselves!” What a fine argument!! One member of the jury burst
+into sobs, and, as he could not bring himself to vote for Danton’s
+impeachment, he was asked: “Who is more useful to the Republic,
+Robespierre or Danton?” “Robespierre,” replied the juryman sobbing.
+“Then Danton must go to the guillotine,” was the response.
+
+Then came the day of the execution with its procession of three wagons,
+each bearing five or six condemned prisoners, and towering above
+them all, Danton looking proudly over the heads of the throng. The
+procession passed the little Café de Parnasse where, once upon a time,
+he had met his Gabrielle; then the Café de la Regence, and whom did
+he see there? It is hard to believe. There sat his former friend, the
+traitorous David, busily making a drawing of him (perhaps the drawing
+in the museum at Lille, Fig. 17). “Lackey!” Danton called to him in
+scorn. Next, as the procession passed Robespierre’s house, Danton
+called out, “You will soon follow me! Your house will be torn down, and
+men will cast salt upon the earth where it stood.”
+
+Danton tried to the last to cheer the friends around him--the
+ordinarily merry Camille Desmoulins who was grieving over his bride,
+Lucille; the poet Fabre, who affirmed that one of his accusers, who
+was also a poet, would doubtless steal his unprinted manuscripts and
+publish them under his own name. “Soon that will no longer worry you,”
+said Danton to him. The executions were quickly under way. The sun
+was setting, and Danton’s giant figure was silhouetted darkly against
+the evening sky. One of his friends wanted to embrace him but the
+executioner would not permit it. He wanted to finish his task before
+sundown. “Idiot,” said Danton to him, “Will you be able to prevent
+our heads from kissing each other in the basket?” For one moment he
+flinched when he thought of his young wife, “My beloved, shall I never
+see you again?” Then, with an effort, he exclaimed, “Come Danton, let
+there be no weakness,” and to the executioner, “Show my head to the
+people. It is worth it.” These were his last words.
+
+The curse uttered by Danton as he passed Robespierre’s house was
+fulfilled all too quickly. Before five months were up, Robespierre trod
+the same path, and the wagon was halted before his house to let the
+deposed Dictator see the mob in its fury sprinkling his door with the
+blood of a slaughtered ox.
+
+And now the earth began to tremble under David’s feet. He was to the
+last a devoted adherent of Robespierre. When the latter on the eve of
+his fall read to the Jacobins his defence which ended with the words,
+“I am ready to drink the poisoned cup,” David cried out “We will drink
+it with you.” He must have been thinking of his portrayal of the death
+of Socrates, but he probably hardly realized how imminent was the fall
+of the last great leader of the revolution and how very nearly he
+himself was involved in that fall.
+
+David, as we know, did not complete his painting of Bara. This was
+because he was planning for the Convention a festival in honor of the
+fallen drummer boy. He was a great master in the arrangement of such
+celebrations. With their carefully designed costumes, massed choirs,
+improvised statues and profusion of flowers and patriotic orations,
+they must have been astonishingly impressive, comparable only to the
+national festivals of the Roman Empire. Unfortunately these artistic
+manifestations of the revolution, which constituted an appreciable
+part of David’s life work, were in their nature transitory. David
+had set the date of the Bara festival for the 10th Thermidor (July
+26, 1794). This was the very day of Robespierre’s downfall, and his
+execution took place two days later. Through this coincidence of
+date--or had David been warned?--he did not attend the sitting of the
+Convention on the 10th Thermidor. Had he done so, he would undoubtedly
+have been arrested and guillotined with Robespierre’s other adherents.
+
+When he came into the Convention hall three days later he was denounced
+by André Dumont and obliged to defend himself. He probably believed the
+end had come. He was no orator, and his defect of speech made things
+still harder for him. He stood there, pale and fearful, and it is said
+a nervous perspiration so dewed his forehead that it dripped down his
+coat to the floor. Where now was the courage with which he had offered
+to die with Robespierre; with which when Marat was attacked in the
+Convention he had once exclaimed: “Kill me in his place!” Yes, it was
+undoubtedly easier to make drawings of one’s enemies and former friends
+on their road to the guillotine than to defend one’s life before a
+tribunal of the people. He made so pitiful an impression that they let
+him go. Two days later, however, it was thought wiser to arrest him.
+At first his sentence was light and he was allowed to work, but soon,
+after another stormy session of the Convention, he was transferred to
+the Luxembourg. His imprisonment lasted five months. Toward the end,
+conditions were again made easier and he was allowed to work. Then he
+was set free, and again, this time at the instigation of his fellow
+artists, imprisoned for months. Finally during the general amnesty at
+the end of the year 1795 he again obtained his freedom. This was the
+end of his political activities. The terrible months of uncertainty
+during his imprisonment, when death so often stared him in the face,
+must have been a time of spiritual growth for him, for they resulted in
+his painting a marvellous series of portraits. His achievement at this
+time, and during the following years when the revolution slowly ebbed,
+is the greatest of his artistic career.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 23. WOMAN OF THE REVOLUTION (1795)
+
+_Museum, Lyon_]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 24. NAPOLEON AS FIRST CONSUL (1797)
+
+_Private Possession, Paris_]
+
+There is first of all a portrait depicting the artist at the period of
+his imprisonment (Fig. 22). It is seldom that a self portrait expresses
+so vividly the perplexities of a period of terror as do the haunted
+eyes of this young fanatic. These eyes have been called evil, and
+David himself described as a good artist but an evil man. The moral
+equipment of the revolutionaries cannot be summarized in such simple
+fashion, however. David’s political opponents hit nearer the mark when
+they called him to the defence of Marat, “What does that prove so
+far as Marat is concerned? Only the devotion of an honorable man who
+is allowing himself to be carried away by excitement.” That David’s
+political life was so passionate, may be due in part to the youthful
+violence of his friends. Nearly all the revolutionary leaders were in
+their early thirties, an age which is apt to be the stormy period of
+a man’s life. Old people do not bring about revolutions. David, to be
+sure, was forty at the time of its outbreak, but see how youthful he
+still looked; and the unspent store of his strength is proved by the
+great age to which he lived.
+
+He painted another important work during his imprisonment--a little
+landscape of the Luxembourg Gardens as seen from his window (now in
+the Louvre), one of the first modern realistic landscapes which seem
+to foreshadow Courbet’s efforts. The eighteenth-century conception
+of landscape was very different. The landscapes were like theatrical
+scenery, built up with carefully divided “wings.” Here, for the first
+time, a French artist dared to paint an unpromising bit of earth
+exactly as he saw it, with all nature’s accidental qualities. A garden
+fence in the middle runs diagonally across the picture, while over in
+one corner is an avenue of trees which should conventionally have been
+in the center of the canvas--no planned symmetrical construction, no
+coulisses in the foreground. Here, too, was a break with tradition--a
+new beginning.
+
+The two portraits of Monsieur and Madame Seriziat (Figs. 18 and 19),
+painted by David while he was still under arrest, are particularly
+illuminating as regards his personality. How could an artist, above
+whose head the sword of Damocles still hung, paint such sunny and
+optimistic portraits? We would, in fact, appreciate only one side
+of David if we think of him always as the stern Roman, never as the
+light-hearted Frenchman. From the beginning to the end of his artistic
+career, side by side with his classic compositions and his moving
+revolutionary portrayals (Fig. 23), he painted a series of charming
+portraits which prove that through all the horrors of the revolution
+he never lost his Gallic light-heartedness or his feeling for grace.
+At the beginning of the series stands the pleasing portrait of Vigée
+LeBrun, painted in 1793, and at the end, the famous portrait of Madame
+Recamier painted in 1800. In these works there is still an echo of
+eighteenth century elegance, a trace of that esprit and glamour which
+always distinguishes the best of French art. Yet the forms, the simple
+outlines, the wide empty spaces of the background and the flatness of
+the treatment is wholly new. And besides in these portraits we find
+for the first time representations of the Bourgeoisie which replace
+those of the aristocracy of the eighteenth century and whose best types
+became henceforth the patrons of art which in former days the courts
+had been.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 25. PORTRAIT OF VIGÉE LEBRUN (1793)
+
+_Museum, Rouen_]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 26. MADAME RECAMIER (1800)
+
+_Louvre, Paris_]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 27. INGRES AS A BOY (_c._ 1795)
+
+_Private Collection, Paris_]
+
+Scarcely a year had passed since David’s escape from prison when
+his freedom was again endangered by the royalist youth who believed
+that the moment of reaction had arrived. But now there appeared in
+his studio one day--this was at the end of 1796--an officer sent
+by General Bonaparte who asked in his name whether he would accept
+an offer of safety with his army in Italy. It is evidence of the
+extraordinary farsightedness of Napoleon that his feelers extended
+everywhere--wherever there might be future support for his power.
+But David did not accept the offer: not that he had not at once
+recognized in Bonaparte his coming greatness--in fact he already
+called him his “hero”--for David’s instinct was in this respect just
+as unerring as was Bonaparte’s--but that he had most likely promised
+himself, as a result of the terrible experience of the last years,
+to no longer become embroiled in political affairs. Napoleon’s
+political position was at this time not yet assured, he did not give
+up the idea of tempting our artist. When he returned from Italy he
+called at his studio for the first time and wished to be painted.
+His restless spirit, however, could endure only one sitting. The
+wonderful sketch which resulted (Fig. 24) is still in existence and
+proves that Bonaparte knew what he was about when he desired David to
+become the blazoner of his coming power. No artist has given us from
+the very beginning so idealized a conception of his personality. The
+breadth of the design in this unfinished composition; the noble verve
+of the position; the dauntlessness of expression: everything was in
+keeping with the great historical style that Napoleon himself might
+have dreamed of. A few weeks later David received an invitation from
+Napoleon to accompany him on his Egyptian campaign. Again the artist
+refused although he had already entirely succumbed to the personality
+of the great general. When Napoleon returned from Egypt he visited
+David frequently and flattered him by taking him around Paris and
+talking over with him his plans for beautifying the city. At the end
+David fell completely under the influence of the stronger personality,
+as had happened before in the case of Marat and Robespierre. And in
+the same degree that Napoleon’s personality was more powerful than
+that of the revolutionaries, his influence was the more crushing.
+Only in this way can we account for the fact that the one-time
+revolutionary-champion of democratic ideals became at the end
+the court painter of the emperor. But this was not to the advantage
+of David’s art. So long as Napoleon had not yet reached the height of
+his power--that is until about 1800--our artist succeeded in producing
+several imposing compositions in honor of the First Consul, especially
+the famous portrait on horseback, where he is shown ascending the
+Alps, symbolically representing his rise to the highest heights of
+glory--certainly an extraordinary translation of a still living and
+even young personage into the realm of the ideal and of history. But
+when Napoleon had become emperor and David his none too carefully
+treated servant, his art became weaker and weaker from year to year,
+the while his compositions grew larger in size. When after the downfall
+of the emperor and the return of the Bourbons he left France in exile
+and settled in Brussels, where he lived until the year 1824, he still
+attracted the attention of the world through his many pupils and
+admirers, though his art now belonged to the past.
+
+David belongs with the few artists who are mentioned not only in the
+history of art but also in political history--perhaps a doubtful
+advantage, for preoccupation with two so conflicting fields as art and
+politics, was only possible through the sacrifice of one or the other.
+Indeed David as politician lived only in the shadow of the greater
+ones. In the field of art he was at his best when his political ideas
+did not tempt him too much toward abstract themes--that is to say,
+in portraiture, when he had the model before him. As a human being
+his forte lay in a highly sensitive response to the most intense
+intellectual and emotional currents of his time. Since, during the
+greater part of his lifetime, these currents were not primarily of an
+artistic nature, his art could not always take advantage of them.
+
+This too intense interest in the great events of the day was perhaps
+his weak point: the fact that he submitted too easily to the ephemeral
+demands of his contemporaries, preferring the fortune of a successful
+present to the glory which the future reserves only for the highest
+aims and the complete renunciation of the demands of the day. From his
+earliest years David had the critics on his side, and the steady stream
+of admirers that had gathered about him showed no decrease, remaining
+with him even in the most dangerous periods of his life. How different
+did it fare with one of his really great contemporaries--Beethoven--who
+throughout his life had to contend with uncomprehending critics, but
+who is quoted as having said in this connection, “Damn me as much as
+you like; you are not able to damn me into eternity.” Just as to the
+great ones is given as a recompense for the misunderstanding of their
+day the consciousness of their own value to the future, so the artist
+who is glorified in his own time knows his own limitations. David
+said himself that many of his own works such as the Brutus no longer
+had a living value. It was his bad fortune that he was in too close
+contact with the affairs of the revolution, for the greatest art (we
+return here to our introductory remarks) cannot arise in the midst of
+bloodshed. There can be no doubt of where the unattached and eternal
+art lay during David’s period, when we call to mind the poetry of
+Goethe or the music of Beethoven. The centers where the greatest poet
+and the greatest musician of the days of the revolution lived--Weimar
+and Vienna--were far removed from the theater of the struggle, just as
+Rembrandt’s art flowered outside the scene of the Thirty Years War.
+From a distance the deafening war clangor permeated into the quiet
+worlds of these rulers in the realm of art; from a distance through
+transfiguring light appeared to them the new ideas for which the
+struggle was waged. Such should be the milieu where the greatest art
+is born--impregnated with the shower of the newly created ideas, but
+quietly and not to such a degree that its own existence is imperilled.
+
+This chance for perspective also makes it possible for the really great
+artist to judge worldly matters more clearly than the one who lives
+in the midst of the fray. How much more impartially, for instance,
+did Beethoven, who otherwise did not care for politics, judge the
+events of the times than David, who worried about them half his
+lifetime! Beethoven, also, like the best of his contemporaries, was
+democratically inclined and applauded the new revolutionary ideas. When
+Napoleon became First Consul he recognized his greatness and desired
+to celebrate in his music the hero who had brought the revolution to
+completion. He began his great symphony, the “Eroica,” and wrote upon
+the title page the name of Bonaparte next to his own. When the news was
+brought to him that Napoleon had crowned himself emperor, indignant
+that his illusions had been dispelled and that Bonaparte had become as
+tyrannical as the crowned heads which the revolution had deposed, he
+tore up the dedication and began the symphony anew, ending it with the
+funeral march.
+
+The fascination of the art and the personality of David lies in the
+fact that they reflect the period of the greatest intellectual and
+social upheaval of his nation--an upheaval such as comes to every
+nation once in its history, with such a force that through it the
+whole world is shaken. In such moments of history creations of
+centuries collapse at one blow. The foundations of faith and of morals
+waver; the ties of family and friendship are torn apart and even the
+customary tasks of the day, under other circumstances serving as an
+anchor alike to the weak and the strong, appear useless and cease:
+like the flood of the terrific storm which engulfs us, rudely tearing
+away from the strongest the guiding of their own fate, and forcing
+the slothful into the maelstrom of the higher general will. What
+remains for the individual who, hesitating, stands at the edge of the
+precipice, viewing the tragic drama? Can he do better than to plunge
+into the stream, keeping afloat as best he may?
+
+Happy the one who in such periods succeeds like our artist in
+preserving so much of his own identity that from out the history of
+this chaos his name still rings with vibrant life.
+
+
+
+
+ ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY COPIES PRIVATELY
+ PRINTED FOR FREDERIC FAIRCHILD SHERMAN
+ MCMXXIX
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES
+
+
+[1] The picture is not dated, but since the portrait of Madame de
+Verninac which is almost identical in composition is dated 1799, it is
+most likely executed shortly thereafter.
+
+[2] The figure studies in this sketchbook are interesting from another
+point of view (compare Fig. 10, a study of a beggar closely related
+to the composition of the Belisarius, although later in date). They
+prove clearly the endeavour of David to replace by his own the
+eighteenth-century style of drawing as he had learned it in the Boucher
+school. Instead of modelling the figures through diagonal parallel
+lines, indicating the shadows and neglecting the outlines, he tries to
+produce the effect of plasticity through clearly connected outlines
+alone, leaving out the modelling entirely. In this respect also David
+is the predecessor of artists of the most modern school. He developed
+his style of drawing in connection with his studies after Roman
+sculptures and was strongly influenced in his method of designing by
+a young French sculptor, Lamarie, whom he met in Rome. (See Charles
+Saunier: _Louis David_, p. 16.)
+
+[3] Illustrated in the excellent biography of David by Léon Rosenthal
+in the series: _Les Maitres de l’Art_, p. 30.
+
+[4] _Briefe aus der französischen Revolution_, edited by G. Landauer,
+1922.
+
+[5] Reproduced in Charles Saunier, _David_, p. 44 and 48.
+
+[6] The best book on the subject is by Pierre de Nolhac, _La Reine
+Marie Antoinette_, Paris.
+
+[7] Reproduced in the book on Danton by Louis Madelin (Paris, 1914).
+The following pages are based upon this excellent biography.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber’s Notes
+
+
+Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a
+predominant preference was found in the original book; otherwise they
+were not changed.
+
+Simple typographical errors were corrected; unbalanced quotation
+marks were remedied when the change was obvious, and otherwise left
+unbalanced.
+
+Illustrations in this eBook have been positioned between paragraphs
+and outside quotations. In versions of this eBook that support
+hyperlinks, the page references in the List of Illustrations lead to
+the corresponding illustrations.
+
+In the original book, two groups of illustrations were printed
+side-by-side on the same page and not in numeric sequence. In this
+eBook, they may be displayed side-by-side or one below the other, in
+the same sequence as in the original book.
+
+
+Footnotes, originally at the bottoms of the pages that referenced them,
+have been collected, sequentially renumbered, and placed at the end of
+the book.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75887 ***
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+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75887 ***</div>
+
+<div class="transnote section">
+<p class="center larger">Transcriber’s Note</p>
+
+<p>Larger versions of most illustrations may be seen by right-clicking them
+and selecting an option to view them separately, or by double-tapping and/or
+stretching them.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#Transcribers_Notes">Additional notes</a> will be found near the end of this ebook.</p>
+<div> </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="section p4">
+<figure id="i_fig0" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 31em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig00.jpg" width="1961" height="2502" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Mlle. Charlotte du Val d’Ognes</span></p>
+
+<p><i>The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div> </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter center">
+<h1>
+JACQUES LOUIS DAVID<br>
+<span class="small">AND THE FRENCH REVOLUTION</span></h1>
+
+<p class="p2 vspace"><span class="smcap">By</span><br>
+W. R. VALENTINER</p>
+
+<figure id="i_fig00a" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 5em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig00a.jpg" width="329" height="381" alt="">
+</figure>
+
+<p class="p2 vspace"><span class="smcap">New York</span><br>
+<span class="larger">FREDERIC FAIRCHILD SHERMAN</span><br>
+<span class="smaller">MCMXXIX</span>
+</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+</div>
+
+<div class="section p4 center">
+<p class="smaller">
+Copyright, 1929, by<br>
+Frederic F. Sherman
+</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div> </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="section p4 center vspace">
+<p class="larger">
+TO<br>
+<span class="smaller">ELEANOR AND EDSEL B. FORD</span>
+</p>
+<div> </div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="ILLUSTRATIONS">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+</div>
+
+<table id="loi">
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl norpad" colspan="3"><span class="smcap">Mlle. Charlotte du Val d’Ognes</span>
+<span class="fright"><a href="#i_fig0">Frontispiece</a></span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 1</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Madame de Servan (1799)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig1">3</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 2</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">H. Rigaud: Gentleman Playing a Bagpipe</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig2">3</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 3</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">F. Boucher: Madame de Pompadour</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig3">3</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 4</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Minerva’s Conquest of Mars (1771)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig4">4</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 5</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Blind Belisarius (1781)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig5">8</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 6</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Oath of the Horatii (1784)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig6">8</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 7</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Village Outside Rome (1788)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig7">8</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 8</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">View in Rome (1788)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig8">8</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 9</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Pen Sketch of Marie Antoinette (1793)</span><br>
+ <i>Made from the artist’s window as the tumbril halted on the way to the scaffold</i></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig9">14</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 10</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Study from the Italian Sketchbook (1788)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig10">14</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 11</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Michel Gérard and his Family (1789)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig11">18</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 12</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Portrait of Barêre (1793)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig12">22</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 13</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Lavoisier and his Wife (1787)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig13">26</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 14</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Mme. de Richmond and her Son</span> (<i>c.</i> 1800)</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig14">26</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 15</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Le Pelletier (1793)</span> <i>From engraving in the Louvre</i></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig15">26</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 16</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Marat (1793)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig16">26</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 17</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Danton (1799)</span> <i>From drawing in the Museum, Lille</i></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig17">26</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 18</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Madame Seriziat and Son (1795)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig18">32</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 19</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Monsieur Seriziat (1795)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig19">32</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 20</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Marat (1793)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig20">38</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 21</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">St. Just (1792)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig21">44</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 22</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Self Portrait</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig22">44</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 23</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Woman of the Revolution (1795)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig23">51</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 24</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Napoleon as First Consul (1797)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig24">51</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 25</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Portrait of Vigée LeBrun (1793)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig25">54</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 26</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Madame Recamier (1800)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig26">54</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fig. 27</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Ingres as a Boy (1795)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_fig27">54</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="section ilb">
+<figure id="i_fig2" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 15em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig02.jpg" width="911" height="1245" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 2. H. Rigaud: Gentleman Playing
+ a Bagpipe</span></p>
+ <p><i>Museum, Aix</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<figure id="i_fig1" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 16.75em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig01.jpg" width="1016" height="1245" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 1. L. David: Madame de Servan (1799)</span></p>
+ <p><i>Private Possession, New York</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<figure id="i_fig3" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 16em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig03.jpg" width="967" height="1245" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 3. F. Boucher: Madame de Pompadour</span></p>
+ <p><i>Collection of Maurice de Rothschild, Paris</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="JACQUES_LOUIS_DAVID">JACQUES LOUIS DAVID<br>
+
+<span class="subhead notbold">AND THE FRENCH REVOLUTION</span></h2>
+
+<p class="p0 center large b2">❦</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="idc"><img src="images/i_fig03a.jpg" width="389" height="392" alt="I">
+<span class="firstword">Is</span> it possible that a period like the French Revolution
+and the era of Napoleon’s tyrannous rule should witness
+the development of a great art? It would seem that
+in the domain of art fresh creative impulses are born
+more often in times of unrest and disturbance than in
+periods of political security. Those epochs in the history
+of art which we regard today as “golden ages”—the age of Pericles;
+the Renaissance at about 1500; the Holland of the day of Frans Hals
+and Rembrandt—were by no means peaceful years, but periods of
+national strife and revolutionary ideas. No happy alliance is possible
+between political discipline and art which springs from the free, untrammeled
+impulse of the individual. We need only walk through those galleries
+at Fontainebleau arranged by Napoleon during the days of his
+Empire to recognize the deadening influence exerted by an established
+autocracy, and feel blow coldly over us the chilly breath of an academic
+and court-inspired art.</p>
+
+<p>On the contrary, the period of the French Revolution, and the days
+of Napoleon’s struggle to power, which coincided with the period of
+David’s finest achievement, witnessed so powerful an onrush of new
+ideas that their influence persists till the present day. Modern art had
+its inception in this period, and today, after a lapse of over a hundred
+years, is again tending in the direction first indicated by David. It is
+herein that the significance of his contribution lies. Helped by the influences
+of the revolution, he destroyed the artificial, hyper-refined art
+ideals of the eighteenth century, and substituted for them a sterner, simpler,
+more healthy and democratic art. That is not to affirm that his art
+was greater than the one it superseded. David was not a genius of the
+highest order as was Watteau, but to those of us sensitive to the forces
+underlying our own times, it says—or should say—more than pre-revolutionary
+art.</p>
+
+<p>We need only to compare a portrait of David’s style like the one of
+Madame de Servan (<a href="#i_fig1">Fig. 1</a>) with portraits of his predecessors (<a href="#i_fig2">Figs. 2</a>
+and <a href="#i_fig3">3</a>) in order to recognize the difference between the Rococo period
+and the new era, introduced by David. This portrait of Madame de<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span>
+Servan, painted about 1800,<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">1</a> impresses one as a composition of statuesque
+simplicity expressing the salient spirit of a period which was seeking
+fundamentally new doctrines by which to govern life. The portrait
+by Rigaud, the famous court painter of the reign of Louis XIV, painted
+in the beginning of the century, and of Boucher’s portrait of Madame de
+Pompadour, painted in 1758, do not differ too much from another in
+style. In these portraits of the Rococo period the surface is filled with a
+restless play of short-curving lines; light and shadow are alternated
+perpetually at close intervals; the colors form a pleasing pattern of
+small variegated patches, and the costume and accessories almost
+eclipse the real motif—that of portraiture. In David’s canvas the figure
+emerges clearly from a wide and empty space, and a clear, flowing
+line with definite horizontals and verticals has replaced the tortuous
+curves. It seems an extraordinary piece of daring for the artist to have
+composed in these broad planes with a completely empty background,
+when we consider the century-old tradition embodied in the older paintings.
+It was the French Revolution, with its rejection of old formulas
+which inspired this daring.</p>
+
+<p>But just as the revolution, from prelude to aftermath, covered a span
+of some twenty years, so the artist required a similar period of time to
+gradually attain the classic style which we see here stamped with the authority
+of his fifty years.</p>
+
+<p>Jacques Louis David was born in 1748 in the middle of the Louis XV
+period, and the school which fathered him was that of Boucher, the frank
+exponent of the playful and elegant school of painting fostered by the
+artificial social life of Paris. David’s earliest known composition, “Minerva’s
+Conquest of Mars,” painted in 1771 in the artist’s twenty-third
+year, and now in the Louvre (<a href="#i_fig4">Fig. 4</a>), shows Boucher’s influence clearly.
+Here we still have the unquiet baroque line of pre-revolutionary painting—the
+picture is full of detail, the draperies worn by the figures flutter
+in the breeze like those of Boucher and the cherubs beloved of this
+master float in the clouds. The subject, too, is of the mythologic-allegorical
+character affected by the painters of the court and the aristocracy.
+The Goddess of Wisdom conquers the God of War! What irony
+when we remember that twenty years later during the revolution the
+painter of this picture was among those who helped let loose on France
+a war of twenty years’ duration.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span></p>
+
+<figure id="i_fig4" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 36em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig04.jpg" width="2259" height="1867" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 4. Minerva’s Conquest of Mars (1771)</span></p>
+ <p><i>Louvre, Paris</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span></p>
+
+<p>If we look more closely we can discern an alien spirit behind the apparently
+suave portrayal. Despite his subject the young artist’s combative
+vein emerges. True, Mars is overthrown, but with what ill grace he
+accepts his fate. It might be Danton himself, the great revolutionary,
+overthrown by his enemies. A face expressing such fury of despair, so
+spasmodically clenched a hand was never portrayed by any of the playful
+Rococo painters, and can we not discern something of the energetic
+Napoleonic spirit in Minerva’s conquering pose?</p>
+
+<p>David must have been of a naturally passionate and excitable temperament—possibly
+inherited from his father who was killed in a duel
+when the boy was eleven years old. As a young artist he applied for the
+Prix de Rome, and when he did not at once receive it from the Academy,
+was about to take his life in despair and was only persuaded by a friend
+to abandon the idea of starving himself to death after three days of fasting
+with that purpose in view. Later on, in extenuation of this episode,
+he said: “This postponement of my journey to Italy was prejudicial to
+my development, as I was four years too late in abandoning the bad
+style of the French painters.” Like all reformers he believed that everything
+produced by the generation preceding him was bad, although today
+all that we can say is that it was different!</p>
+
+<p>When, in 1775, he did actually set out for Rome, and his friends at
+parting advised him to beware the influence of the antique, he replied
+proudly, “Antique art cannot seduce me—it lacks fire and passion.”
+Before long, however, he was in thrall to the classic art of Italy, and
+within a few years his art had undergone a complete transformation,
+not only in form but in subject. One of the first pictures that he sent
+from Italy in 1781 to be exhibited in Paris was “The Blind Belisarius,”
+now in the Museum at Lille (a later version, painted in 1784, in the
+Louvre) (<a href="#i_fig5">Fig. 5</a>). Belisarius, once an all-powerful general of the Roman
+Emperor Justinian, crouches, old, blind and poor by the side of the
+road. The saviour of Rome and conqueror of Carthage has fallen into
+disgrace with a master jealous of his fame, and is reduced to beggary.
+A rich Roman lady, with tears in her eyes, is placing alms in the old
+man’s helmet held out by a youth, while a passing soldier recognizes his
+old commander with surprise and pain. Our artist has turned his back
+on the cheerful Olympian themes of the allegoric-mythological school,
+and with this tragic subject descends to that world of sorrow and misery
+in which, but a few years later, he was to see his own nation engulfed. He
+is still preoccupied, however, with classic themes seen through the eyes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
+of that antiquity in which he had submerged himself. He has not yet
+completely achieved his individual style, and Boucher’s influence is superseded
+by that of another French painter who represented the classic
+style one hundred years earlier—Poussin.</p>
+
+<p>This influence lasted throughout his Italian period. Even as late as
+1788 we are constantly reminded in his landscape studies of Nicolas
+Poussin and Claude Lorrain, as may be exemplified by the two pages
+from an hitherto unpublished Italian sketchbook dated 1788, reproducing
+views from the surroundings of Rome (<a href="#i_fig7">Figs. 7</a> and <a href="#i_fig8">8</a>).<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">2</a></p>
+
+<figure id="i_fig5" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig05.jpg" width="1639" height="1454" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 5. The Blind Belisarius (1781)</span></p>
+ <p><i>Museum, Lille</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<figure id="i_fig6" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig06.jpg" width="1629" height="1257" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 6. The Oath of the Horatii (1784)</span></p>
+ <p><i>Louvre, Paris</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>Just as the poets and orators of the revolution harked back to the
+classic trend of the seventeenth century—as Voltaire and even Robespierre
+evoked Racine and Corneille—David, too, now followed a trend
+of French art which has persisted from medieval times to the present
+day, that line of classic, simple, antiquely conceived, clearly constructed
+creations from which the highly developed church sculptures of
+the middle ages, the Renaissance paintings of the period of Francis I,
+and the art of Claude Lorrain and Poussin derive. Simplicity and
+straight lines replaced the restless, complicated curve in the composition
+of the Belisarius. It is not alone in the architecture, strongly influenced
+by the antique, that the horizontal and vertical line multiplied itself, the
+painter, too, sought to lend strength and rhythm to his composition by
+a parallelism in the gestures of his figures. The arms of Belisarius and
+the boy follow the same line, as do their feet, and the soldier’s hands repeat
+the parallel gesture.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_fig7" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 31em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig07.jpg" width="1982" height="1316" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 7. Village Outside Rome</span></p>
+ <p>From the Italian sketchbook (1788)</p>
+ <p><i>Private possession, Detroit</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<figure id="i_fig8" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 31em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig08.jpg" width="1984" height="1314" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 8. View in Rome</span></p>
+ <p>From the Italian sketchbook (1788)</p>
+ <p><i>Private possession, Detroit</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>David achieved this linear coördination between figures and architecture
+with even greater success in his next important work, “The Oath of
+the Horatii,” painted in 1783 and now in the Louvre (<a href="#i_fig6">Fig. 6</a>). The figures,
+divided into three groups, are posed in masterly fashion against the
+three arches of the architectural background—three men on the left,
+three female figures on the right, and the old man, holding out the three
+swords in the centre. The movement swings from group to group with
+the same rhythm that governs the curves of the arches, and is strongly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
+emphasized by the parallel lines of limbs and draperies. We are told
+that the outstretched foot of the foremost youth was drawn and redrawn
+by David many times. It is now in exactly the right stance to determine
+the general linear movement and is at the same time a masterpiece of
+naturalistic drawing. The pose of this youth’s spear has been criticised
+as practically impossible, but it requires precisely this continuous line to
+strengthen the rhythm of the outstretched legs.</p>
+
+<p>The motif is again drawn from Roman history, this time via a drama
+by Corneille with which David was familiar. The three sons of the old
+Horace, who occupies the centre of the canvas, were chosen by the
+Romans to meet the Albans in single combat, the latter being also represented
+by three brothers, the Curiatii. It had been agreed that this
+combat should decide which race would have dominion over the other.
+The victory fell to the Horatii, the representatives of Rome. Two of the
+brothers fell in combat with the Curiatii, but the third triumphed
+through a ruse—turning apparently in flight and killing his three opponents
+one after another as they pursued him.</p>
+
+<p>The trumpet call to freedom implicit in this composition must have
+rung in the ears of the youthful French patriots who crowded to see it,
+for it appeared at a moment when the soul of young France had been
+stirred by the American war of independence. It was painted in the year
+1783 when Benjamin Franklin signed in Paris that treaty with England
+in which, for the first time, the independence of the American Union was
+recognized. Beyond the Atlantic there had come into existence a republic
+comparable to the Roman republic, an anti-monarchical conception
+whose ideals were sympathetic to the progressive thinkers of France,
+though France was, at the same time, the seat of Europe’s oldest and
+most absolute monarchy. How did this message of freedom from across
+the ocean affect the youth of France? Our artist’s ear was sensitively
+attuned to the ferment of radical thought. While the painters of the
+older school, Boucher and Fragonard, still painted their playful compositions
+and tried to dissemble the tragic reality, the dull rumble of the
+coming earthquake sounded its note in David’s paintings. His themes
+became ever more gruesome and inflammatory. A painting in Marseilles
+depicts St. Roche pleading with the Madonna to succor the sick,
+and the foreground is filled with dead, plague-stricken bodies. Another
+in Valence represents the Death of Ugolino with his Sons—that horrible
+scene from Dante’s <i lang="it">Divina Commedia</i> in which the Italian general<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span>
+and his five sons die of hunger in a dungeon into which they have been
+thrown by his political enemies.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_fig9" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 16em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig09.jpg" width="997" height="1423" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 9. Pen Sketch of Marie Antoinette</span></p>
+ <p>Made from the artist’s window as the tumbril halted
+ on the way to the scaffold (1793)</p>
+ <p><i>Collection of Edmond de Rothschild, Paris</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<figure id="i_fig10" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig10.jpg" width="1632" height="960" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 10. Study from the Italian Sketchbook (1788)</span></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>“The Death of Socrates,”<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">3</a> painted in 1787, now in private possession
+in Paris, enhanced David’s rapidly growing celebrity not only in France,
+but abroad. No less a personage than Sir Joshua Reynolds, who was then
+in Paris, said that he had studied the picture daily for a week, and with
+every inspection found it more perfect. It was, he said, “the greatest
+achievement since Raffael’s frescoes in the Vatican, and would have done
+honor to the Athenians of the Periclean age.” Today, of course, this estimate
+seems an exaggeration to us. The composition is assuredly well
+planned, and admirable in many of its aspects: the youth, who with
+averted face hands the poisoned cup to Socrates, and the other youth in
+the background beating his hands against the arch of the doorway. Some
+of the gestures seem theatrical, however, and individual figures, such
+as the athletic and uninspired Socrates, look as though they had been
+derived from a relief. The composition is too studied; it lacks feeling.
+Why is it that David’s great historical compositions are apt to leave us
+cold, especially those produced during a period of great spiritual and
+political turmoil in which his own sympathies were greatly involved?
+His part in the revolution amply proves the strength of the passions
+which might have found an outlet in his art. Why was he not the realist
+to dramatize those struggles like Delacroix who lived fifty years later,
+when revolution and world-war were over, yet who painted battles of all
+kinds with the most terrific naturalism. The answer lies in this very
+fact: Delacroix never witnessed the battle scenes he reproduced; they
+are the fruit of his imagination. It is impossible for a significant realistic
+art to develop during war and revolution. What one experiences at such
+times is so horrible that the imagination is stifled rather than stimulated.
+Only insensitive and coarse natures are capable of painting
+scenes of horror through which they have lived. When, and as now in
+our days, reality weighs all too heavily upon us, art, in self defense, becomes
+abstract and withdraws itself from reality. It is for this reason
+that the art of the revolution, David’s art, was stylized and cool: the
+artist perforce took refuge from the horrors of reality in the kingdom of
+his imagination. His art, like the poetry and oratory of the day, was
+idealistic in trend. When Robespierre delivered those terrible speeches
+that sent so many human beings to the guillotine, he spoke slowly,
+rhythmically, in artfully rounded phrases, as though he were holding an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
+academic discussion. That the great revolutionaries, among whom we
+must number David, thought idealistically rather than realistically, is
+proved conclusively by their manner of expressing themselves. Like all
+fanatics they lived in a world of dreams and believed their ideas—which
+seemed to them so splendid—to be either already realized or on the
+verge of realization. They believed only one last great effort to be necessary,
+to achieve—though at the cost of human lives—the freedom
+of humanity as a whole. This alone can explain why revolutionaries
+who pursued their ends through rivers of blood, seem at times inspired
+with a noble and unexpected humanitarianism; why they were nearly
+all tender and devoted men in their private family life. Danton idolized
+his wife and children, the letters of Camille Desmoulins to his bride are
+beautiful and touching, and Robespierre, the solitary, the incorruptible,
+whose private life was beyond criticism, was a great lover of nature, who
+brought, we are told, bunches of wild flowers home with him from his
+long walks.</p>
+
+<p>With the portrayal of Brutus (now in the Louvre), who, because of
+his profound respect for justice permitted the execution of his sons, we
+find ourselves on the threshold of the revolution. Brutus, with stern,
+dark countenance, is seated before the Goddess of Justice, while behind
+him the bodies of his sons are borne across the scene and the grieving
+mother and sisters cling together in the pillared hall of their dwelling.</p>
+
+<p>While today we feel the construction of this picture to be far too
+studied, and are inclined to dub it academic, David’s intention was
+directed precisely against the then accepted traditional formulas. Whoever
+dreamed, said contemporary criticism, of placing the principal
+figure in the shadow or planning a composition without regard to the
+triangular construction? David left the centre of the canvas purposely
+free. Our eyes fall first on a column, a chair, a still life arrangement
+on a table, frankly at the expense of the composition’s unity. The incidentals
+were drawn with extraordinary care. In order to assure the
+accuracy of the classic furnishings, David had the cabinet maker, Jacob,
+make the pieces for him after his own designs. The painting created
+such an extraordinary sensation that not only did it give the first impetus
+to the Parisian vogue for classic furniture, but women’s fashions
+were definitely influenced by the loosely coifed hair and long flowing
+garments of the feminine figures. Not the least significant part of
+David’s contribution to art is the influence he exerted on the decorative
+arts and on fashion. It is very rare that the influence of a single artist’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>
+work on a bygone style can be so clearly measured as in the case of
+David, from whose art the decorative art of the Empire period derived.</p>
+
+<p>Only an artist who is much in the public eye can sway styles, and
+David became one of the heroes of the day when this composition was exhibited
+in the Salon of 1789—the year whose autumn was to see the
+outbreak of the revolution. Perhaps no other picture has ever played so
+great a rôle in the political and social life of a nation as this work, which
+is by no means its author’s finest production, much less among the
+finest of art history. All of which goes to prove how unreliable popular
+taste is when it comes to a question of contemporary art.</p>
+
+<p>It was of course the subject which evoked such enormous acclaim, for
+the very name of Brutus was one to conjure with where the radical
+youth of Paris was concerned. Wherever speeches on the new political
+conceptions were made there was mention of the name of Rome’s deliverer
+from the yoke of Caesar, and from Mirabeau to Danton the people
+loved to connect the name of Brutus with their heroes. Even the opponents
+of the revolution believed themselves to be inspired by him.
+When Charlotte Corday murdered David’s friend Marat, she declared
+in prison that she hoped to meet Brutus in Elysium. This veneration
+for antiquity, which was characteristic of the revolutionary period, was
+greatly fostered by David’s classical compositions.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_fig11" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 33em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig11.jpg" width="2079" height="2486" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 11. Michel Gérard and his Family (1789)</span></p>
+ <p><i>Museum, Le Mans</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>The narrative of the German writer Halem,<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">4</a> who visited Paris the first
+year of the revolution, and attended some theatrical presentations, tells
+us vividly how familiar the populace was with David’s painting. He attended
+a performance of the “Brutus” of Voltaire, at the National
+Theater, and relates that although he got to the Box Office at five o’clock
+in the afternoon, he had the utmost difficulty in obtaining a seat. He
+writes, “Mirabeau stood near me at the ticket office and because of his
+celebrity was given a place in the fourth balcony. I followed him through
+the crowd as best I could and managed to get a chair in a rented loge.
+Mirabeau’s entrance was received with thunderous applause and cries
+of ‘To the gallery, Mirabeau.’ As he did not respond a deputation
+waited on him, the spokesman saying, ‘The French nation demands its
+Brutus.’ He had to give in, and was borne away to be received in the
+gallery with rapturous applause. What a triumph when later Valerius’
+words to Brutus,</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="in0">‘On you alone all eyes here are turned,<br>
+‘You who broke our chains and gave us the gift of freedom,’</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span></p>
+
+<p class="in0">were addressed pointedly to him. At the end of the play I was amazed
+to see David’s painting of Brutus reproduced on the stage. In speaking
+Brutus’ last words with which the play closes:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="in0">‘Rome now is free. That is enough.<br>
+The gods be thanked,’</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="in0">Vanhove, the leading actor, assumed the pose of David’s Brutus, and the
+bodies of his sons were borne across the back of the stage. Every Parisian
+knows David’s picture. Everyone instantly recognized the intention of
+publicly honoring the artist through this presentation, and general applause
+heightened the celebration.” So reads the narrative.</p>
+
+<p>What had happened? Why this enthusiasm of crowd and intellectuals
+for a new day? Why these celebrations within celebrations? Even
+today, almost one hundred and fifty years later, the words “French Revolution”
+rouse our blood, literature is divided into opposing camps by
+which either the revolution or the monarchy is condemned, and there
+are many who hold in abhorrence the events of those days and the theories
+that brought them into being and believe that the awful bath of
+blood might have been avoided—as though revolutions were the work
+of men and not natural occurrences like tidal waves that the individual
+can neither bring into being nor arrest in their course. In the history of
+the human race we see again and again how one social stratum after
+another climbs up, pushing aside the one that preceded it. When, as in
+France, a monarchy and aristocracy has been in power long enough to
+weaken in its rule because security and luxury have undermined its morale
+and its strength, another stratum, scenting this weakness, seeks to
+wrest to itself this power which its fresh and undrained life force fits it
+more ably to use. In France this social stratum was the Bourgeoisie, the
+Third Estate, which from the beginning of the new era—the sixteenth
+century—had grown strong commercially and illustrious in art and
+literature, but had not yet achieved any political rights.</p>
+
+<p>The nobility, however, preferred to die rather than allow the power
+which they had held for hundreds of years to pass from their hands—quite
+naturally, for the function of government is their only element. So
+came the unequal battle in which from the beginning the victory was to
+the young and powerful stratum. To the ruling class form alone was
+left, while the class which aspired to rule possessed passion. Like all
+young, unpractised and fanatical fighters, their representatives shot far
+beyond their goal, and because, though victors, they were still unpractised
+in the use of power, they abused it, destroyed senselessly whatever<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
+still lived of the old régime, and then turned upon each other until the
+strongest pushed the others aside and became supreme. These strongest
+among the strong were successively the leaders of the Constituent
+and Legislative Assemblies: first Mirabeau, later the so-called Terrorists,
+among them Danton, Robespierre and Marat, and finally Napoleon.</p>
+
+<p>The democratic idea was victorious in the French Revolution despite
+Napoleon, who, at first, embodied this idea in himself, and whose Empire
+was only the short reaction which follows all new experiments. Its
+consequences have persisted to our own day, when as the revolution’s
+final result one monarchy after another in the European scene has gone
+into eclipse.</p>
+
+<p>If we would be just we must admit that during the revolution there
+were heroes on both sides, among the monarchists as well as the revolutionaries.
+Among the monarchists—to name a few of the more notable—were
+the King, the Queen and Charlotte Corday. On the revolutionary
+side we can muster practically all of the leaders, who sooner
+or later almost all perished on the scaffold for their principles, and
+we can familiarize ourselves with these men through David’s portraits.</p>
+
+<p>The outward events of the beginning of the revolution are well
+known. The financial difficulties of the Government compelled the King
+and his Advisors to convene the States General, which had not met for
+generations. The elections of the deputies had already roused popular
+passion, and when the Government, after the Assembly had convened,
+endeavored to establish the old order in which all the power was vested
+in the upper classes and the Third Estate had none, revolt broke loose.
+Under Mirabeau’s leadership the representatives of the Third Estate
+left the Assembly, and met, for lack of other quarters, in the Jeu de
+Paume (the Tennis Court), where they took oath not to dissolve until
+they had established a new constitution. This “Oath of the Tennis
+Court” was immortalized by David in a famous composition of which
+only sketches by David and paintings after his cartoon by other artists
+have been preserved.<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">5</a></p>
+
+<figure id="i_fig12" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 32em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig12.jpg" width="1989" height="2679" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 12. Portrait of Barère (1793)</span></p>
+ <p><i>Palais, Versailles</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>It was a year later, when the Revolutionary Assembly had established
+its power, that it recalled that great day of the beginning of the revolution
+and commissioned David to paint the picture. It is again the German
+poet Halem, who describes the circumstances for us, in a letter
+written by him after a visit to the Jacobin Club. He writes: “After continued<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
+speechifying, Dubois de Crancé, a member of the National Assembly,
+rose and recalled to the memory of those present that day on
+June 20th of the preceding year, when six hundred harried and unarmed
+Deputies, surrounded, as he put it, ‘by the Oriental pomp and the bayonets
+of despotism,’ laid the cornerstone of French freedom by the well-known
+oath of the tennis court at Versailles. Never could he recall
+this event, said he, without his heart beating faster, without a glow of
+patriotic feeling. He proposed the formulation of an address to the assembly
+in which they should be asked to sanction (1.) That the tennis
+court, grave of despotism and cradle of freedom, be declared a national
+monument, closed, and dedicated to stillness.... (2.) That the wonderful
+moment of this first oath be perpetuated by a painting 120′ high and 30′
+wide, painted by the greatest of the French masters, and hung in the
+National Convention. ‘I say,’ he continued, ‘by the greatest of the masters,
+and to whom else could I refer than to him who so nobly depicted
+Brutus and the Oath of the Horatii?’ The vaulted hall rang with loud
+cries of assent. David the painter was present. Everyone turned toward
+him, and pale with enthusiasm the young man stepped to the orator’s
+platform and thanked the Assembly in trembling tones for its trust,
+which he hoped from his heart to adequately repay, adding touchingly,
+‘Sleep will not visit me for many a night.’</p>
+
+<p>“Then ensued a noble rivalry. Abbé Dillon arose first to vindicate his
+right to appear in the picture among those taking the oath. He was one
+of the few clerics who had belonged to the National Assembly before the
+day of the Oath. At that moment he had been obliged to take charge of
+the unimportant clerical archives, and consequently had not been present.
+He called the members present to witness and his claim was admitted.
+Then arose the Comte de Noailles to voice his approval of commemorating
+the Oath of those brave citizens. ‘But, alas,’ said he, ‘the
+former aristocracy sees itself excluded and how many of us echoed that
+oath in our hearts. If only the painter could depict us standing in the
+distance with yearning hearts and the burning wish that we might be
+among the celebrants of the Oath.’ A third stood up and expressed the
+wish that the suppliants might be included in the picture. A fourth demanded
+that those wretches who had been present at the Oath, but who
+had later fallen for the good cause be not included. A fifth got up and
+related a story of Bailly who after fruitless efforts to calm the mob
+around the tennis court, stepped out and commanded silence <em>in the
+name of the National Assembly</em>. This decision, this command, the name<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
+of the National Assembly then spoken openly to the people for the first
+time, had a great effect, had quieted the mob and perhaps determined
+its future mood. The orator asked the painter if he could make use of
+this incident in his composition. The painter stepped once more to the
+platform and thanked them all for their remarks, begging them to remember,
+however, that the picture must have both unity and historical
+accuracy. He was generally applauded. Mirabeau then took the floor
+and with marvellous adroitness conceded full despotic power to genius
+such as that of the artist David, and proposed that Dubois de Crancé
+prepare a written petition for the National Assembly. Dubois made the
+excuse that he was about to leave for the country and cries of ‘Mirabeau!
+Mirabeau!’ resounded. Mirabeau understood the call and accepted
+the formulation of the address. He read it at one of the next sittings
+and the master’s hand was recognized.” So much for the account of the
+eyewitness.</p>
+
+<p>David exhibited the cartoon for “The Oath of the Tennis Court” in
+the Salon of 1791 and on Barère’s proposal the National Assembly
+voted that the painting be carried out at the cost of the State and be hung
+in the National Convention as an incentive to zeal. In the Catalogue of
+the Exhibition David had stated that it was not his intention to make
+likenesses of the members of the National Assembly. How easily,
+nevertheless, the Parisian public recognized the various personalities
+and what a sensation the composition made is proved by the fact that
+Barère practically became a personage through the fact that David portrayed
+him writing, in the left foreground, near the principal group—placing
+on paper for posterity the tale of the great event. Barère’s not
+too inspired journal, <i lang="fr">Point du Jour</i>, became from that moment a much
+sought-after sheet.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_fig13" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig13.jpg" width="1433" height="1806" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 13. Lavoisier and his Wife (1787)</span></p>
+ <p><i>Private Collection, New York</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<figure id="i_fig14" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig14.jpg" width="1421" height="1802" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 14. Mme. de Richmond and her Son</span> (<i>c.</i> 1800)</p>
+ <p><i>Collection of Mr. Edward J. Berwind, New York</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>Despite the many characteristic types, David’s composition “The
+Oath of the Tennis Court” is essentially in the monumental style in
+which quite justly details are subordinated to the spirit of the whole.
+The thronging crowd stands out against the bare walls of the Tennis
+Court, in a clearly defined linear pattern, built up by the myriad outstretched
+hands. The figures are all filled with a mighty dramatic force.
+Bailly, the president, in the centre, stands like a statue of bronze. For
+the first time David shook himself free of historical subjects, depicted a
+contemporary event and proved himself well able to adapt his idealistic
+style to such a theme. In this simplified idiom he attained the expression
+of a dignified, rhetorical passion which he was unable to encompass to a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
+like degree in his historical subjects, and the lofty idealism of the composition
+speaks well for the sincerity and intensity of his convictions.</p>
+
+<div class="ilb">
+<figure id="i_fig16" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 18em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig16.jpg" width="1133" height="1407" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 16. Marat</span></p>
+ <p>(Drawing)</p>
+ <p>Study for the painting in Brussels</p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<figure id="i_fig17" class="figcenter p4" style="max-width: 10em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig17.jpg" width="611" height="721" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 17. Danton</span></p>
+ <p>(From drawing in the Museum, Lille)</p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<figure id="i_fig15" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 17em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig15.jpg" width="1076" height="1388" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 15. Le Pelletier</span></p>
+ <p>(From the engraving in the Louvre)</p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+</div>
+
+<p>The radical Jacobin Club, whose members had pledged themselves so
+enthusiastically to the promotion of his art, became thereafter one of his
+favorite haunts. Because, as an artist, he was not particularly judicious
+politically he allowed himself to be influenced by the extremists whose
+biting logic is often more compelling to temperamental laymen than are
+more moderate councils. David had, as his whole career clearly proves,
+a rarely fine instinct for the elementary forces in political and social
+life, and those to whom he now turned, the representatives of the
+“Mountain”—to whom Marat, Danton and Robespierre belonged—were
+as a matter of fact the strongest personalities on whom leadership
+was soon to devolve. Thanks to them he was elected to the National
+Assembly in 1792. He never assumed any leading part, for a defect in
+his speech interfered with his public speaking, but he often gave vent to
+his enthusiasm only by loud cries of assent.</p>
+
+<p>For the rest his contribution lay in the field of art. He busied himself
+with cartoons for monumental paintings, with monuments, with arranging
+national festivals, sketching classical costumes for all the functionaries,
+and in organizing the artist world, always, we must admit, from
+an idealistic standpoint. He has been much criticised for the fact that he
+concurred in the King’s execution, and later in Danton’s. In the condemnation
+of the King, however, he followed his party; in Danton’s
+case his reasons were personal.</p>
+
+<p>The principal oration against the King at his trial in 1793 was made
+by Barère, the lawyer, who advocated David’s composition to the National
+Assembly, and whom David later immortalized as historiographer
+in his work. David painted a masterly portrait of him delivering
+the Impeachment of Louis XVI (<a href="#i_fig12">Fig. 12</a>). In the composition which
+lies before him on the parapet is written the beginning of the famous
+speech which ends with the words, “The Tree of Liberty could not grow
+were it not watered with the blood of Kings.” Barère, good-looking and
+a clever orator, was not among the nobler of the revolutionaries. He belongs
+to that very small group of revolutionary leaders who did not
+themselves become sacrifices, but outlived the revolution in all its phases
+and held public office even in the times of reaction under Napoleon and
+the Bourbons. The Abbe Sieyès was another of this group. He was from
+the very first a representative of the Third Estate and achieved some
+reputation under Napoleon. David, too, whose art safeguarded him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
+among the dangers of the revolution, belongs to them. Both Sieyès,
+whose clerical frock was his protection, and David were helped by the
+fact that they knew how to stand aloof. Barère, however, was the type
+of politician who trims his sails to meet the wind and uses his sagacity
+to judge not where right but where might is and then diplomatically
+allies himself to it in order to always be in the vanguard of events. His
+accusations against the King only expressed the general feeling of the
+people whom he strove to please.</p>
+
+<p>True, this general sentiment would not have been possible had not
+the monarchy for years been its own worst enemy and made of itself a
+laughing stock. There is, indeed, no excuse for political murder. The
+King merited the guillotine as little as did thousands of others on both
+sides who were sacrificed to it on account of their political opinions.
+That Louis XVI was arraigned before a tribunal of his people, however,
+was in part at least the fault of the monarchy itself. This particular
+King possessed very few of those qualities which a nation expects from
+its sovereign. It is one of Fate’s most remarkable ironies that Louis XVI
+had every desire to be democratic—but his manner of so being was unfortunate
+to a degree. The story runs that as nineteen year old Dauphin
+he used to pursue the servants laden with soiled laundry in order to tickle
+them under the arms, and as King the blacksmith’s hammer and anvil
+were his favorite diversions. The young and charming Marie Antoinette
+found it hard to accustom herself to a clumsy husband with soiled hands
+who emerged red-faced from his smithy and approached her affectionately.
+It happened that did the King espy from a window masons working
+in the courtyard below he would run down with rolled-up sleeves to
+assist them. There is a certain kind of good nature that is inappropriate
+to Princes. His portraits show him as having a clumsy, phlegmatic figure
+and plain, not too intelligent features. A typical representative of a
+doomed caste, he lacked any energy to stem misfortune, any originality
+or appreciation of the new conceptions of the day. It seems as though a
+curse rests on people of this type, that everything they do tends only to
+make their situation worse, as though they help to bring about their own
+destruction. What weakness when in the hour of the greatest danger
+Louis writes to his brother, the Comte d’Artois: “I have revoked the
+orders that I gave. My troops will abandon Paris, and I will use more
+gentle means. Don’t speak to me of a Coup d’État, a display of force. I
+feel it is wiser to wait for the storm to abate, and to expect everything
+from time, from the awakening of right-thinking people and the love<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
+of the French nation for their King.” Ideas of this kind never arrested
+a revolution! It was fortunate for him that his phlegmatic temperament
+could find refuge in prayer. This quality helped him to meet
+death with resolution but was of small service to the caste he represented.
+The times were too violent for Christian temperaments such as
+the King’s. Once when David received a commission for a portrayal of
+Christ, and his patron remarked subsequently that the figure looked
+more like Cato, David’s reply was: “The times are not favorable for
+Christendom.”</p>
+
+<figure id="i_fig18" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig18.jpg" width="1412" height="1852" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 18. Madame Seriziat and Son (1795)</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Louvre, Paris</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<figure id="i_fig19" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig19.jpg" width="1437" height="1850" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 19. Monsieur Seriziat (1795)</span></p>
+ <p><i>Louvre, Paris</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>The King, however, continued to rely on the love of the French for
+their monarch. As a matter of fact this sentiment was centuries old and
+had persisted until the early years of his reign, but the aristocracy had
+helped by derision and calumny to destroy all veneration for the monarchy,
+poets and writers sowed doubts as to the efficacy of this form of
+government, and the nation began to lose its age-old respect as the
+King’s weaknesses became apparent. It is common prejudice that
+Princes on account of their eminent position should be different and
+more distinguished than the common run of mortals, although history
+proves that notable personalities are as rare on the throne as in other
+walks of life. If a ruler is gifted, he can allow himself to come into contact
+with his people; if, as in most cases, he is not, he is better advised to
+allow himself to be admired from afar. Louis XVI, however, did just
+the opposite. We know what undignified scenes took place when the mob
+on several occasions penetrated the palace. An innkeeper stepped up to
+the King and spoke to him saying, after the King’s reply, “You did well
+to give me a civil answer, otherwise I’d have made you headwaiter in my
+inn tomorrow.” If the King had given this rascal the blow in the face he
+deserved, he might have been spared his long martyrdom with the scaffold
+at the end. Instead, however, he went up to another ruffian who had
+thrust a red cap on his head, and who seemed to be stumbling drunkenly
+against a door and helped him to open it. Even on the scaffold he wanted
+to help the executioner cut off his hair. The cool fashion in which he
+went to meet his doom, at least, merits our admiration. An American
+historian has fittingly remarked: “The unruffled dignity with which he
+met death was the finest act of his reign.”</p>
+
+<p>Posterity has devoted much sympathy to Marie Antoinette whose
+portraits by Vigée LeBrun (<a href="#i_fig25">Fig. 25</a>) and other court painters are familiar
+to all art lovers. Although she, too, was by no means an outstanding
+ruler her life is particularly rich in human and touching incidents. Her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
+very weaknesses are those which arouse one’s sympathy. Who could
+blame the young Princess, brought to Paris from Vienna at the age of
+fifteen, that she remained in tutelage to her mother and sought her advice?
+But this very relationship which resulted when misfortune overtook
+her, in an appeal for help to the foreign courts, brought about her
+downfall. Who can fail to understand that the lovely and vivacious Marie
+Antoinette, surrounded by the pleasure-loving society of Paris, and tied
+to a dull husband to whom, nevertheless, she remained faithful, should
+have looked about her for congenial friends. It was this, however, that
+gave rise in court circles to those calumnies which so injured her reputation
+among her subjects and finally ruined her—calumnies founded
+only on gossip, not on facts. Who could blame her for finding burdensome
+the exaggerated etiquette of the French court, the public dinner of
+the King and Queen once a week, the ridiculous ceremonies of the lever,
+the crowd which attended even the birth of her children. And why
+should this inexperienced Queen have been held answerable for extravagant
+expenditures for gowns and festivities when her predecessors had
+spent just as much and the money was always given with the King’s
+approval? Her only faults were inexperience and lack of caution. Unfortunately,
+when her husband proved himself unfit, she essayed, to her
+undoing, to take the political reins in her own hands. In her endeavour
+to save herself and her family she allowed her feminine sympathies and
+antipathies to influence her politically and so made matters worse. The
+price she paid for her mistakes was terrific. In all the history of royalty
+there is hardly a more terrible plunge from the pinnacle of power and
+wealth to the depths of misery.</p>
+
+<p>Art and culture never bloomed more luxuriantly in France than in
+the early years of Marie Antoinette’s reign.<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">6</a> The most exquisite taste
+pervaded the mode and was displayed at court functions; the furniture,
+ornaments, bronzes and porcelains designed for Marie Antoinette are
+among the most delightful productions of French decorative art; the
+great French painters of the Rococo period—Boucher, Fragonard and
+Hubert Robert—were still alive, as well as the sculptors Houdon, Falconet
+and Clodion. It was natural that the young Queen should have
+preferred this art to David’s with its cold, stern quality and sombre,
+tragic motifs; that she ignored revolutionary literature, preferring to
+amuse herself with charming Italian operas or the music of Gluck which
+she introduced to France.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span></p>
+
+<p>That all this splendour collapsed suddenly with the revolution was
+not the most serious thing that faced the Queen—misfortune pursued
+her into her most intimate family life. She, who loved her children above
+all else and who, when the gathering disasters grew closer and closer to
+her husband, saw the collapse of one pillar after another of her very existence.
+Her youngest child died in his eleventh month. The Dauphin,
+a gifted and charming lad of seven, sickened. How could the mother
+who lay sobbing across the death-bed of her son at Meudon worry over
+the gathering storms in Paris through which pealed the knell announcing
+the Dauphin’s death? Then came the days when the mob hung
+threateningly around the palace and forced her to leave Versailles
+for Paris in its triumphant train. When the populace stormed the
+Tuilleries and she feared for the fate of her other children how deeply
+offended was the dignity which she possessed in the same measure that
+the King lacked it. When the Royal family were brought back from
+their unlucky flight to Varennes amid the abuse and insults of the mob,
+the King accepted it all with his usual calm and even tried to converse
+with his followers. The Queen, on the contrary, suffered so horribly
+under the humiliation that her hair turned white over night. This, however,
+was but the beginning. Then came the parting with the King who
+was led to the scaffold (January 21, 1793); there was the even more
+painful parting with her children, and the torture of almost a year in
+prison without news of them, within sight of the bloody heads which,
+like that of her friend the Princesse de Lamballe, were carried past her
+window on pikes. When she was haled before the Tribunal, where she
+made answer calmly to all accusations, she was but a shadow of herself.</p>
+
+<p>David made a drawing of her on her way to the scaffold (October 16,
+1793)—a horrifying sketch (<a href="#i_fig9">Fig. 9</a>). Does there perhaps speak from it
+the injured vanity of an artist whose work had once been ignored by this
+former Queen? What a study in contrasts! This was she who only a few
+years previously had been the lovely model for the most charming portrait
+of the court painters.</p>
+
+<p>Marie Antoinette was executed during the “reign of terror,” so-called,
+the sanguinary and precarious years 1793–94. Following the results
+of the revolution and its excesses all Europe had combined against
+France, and only the utmost concentration of internal forces made
+victory against such a coalition possible. The National Convention
+placed the direction of affairs in the hands of a committee of nine,
+among whom were Danton, Robespierre, Marat and St. Just, and this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
+Committee saved France. They formed and sent into the field the volunteer
+armies which, at first unorganized, gradually obtained ascendancy
+over the experienced coalition troops and finally drove them from the
+field. Everything that might work injury to the troops at the front was
+ruthlessly put aside. Hundreds of aristocrats followed the King and
+Queen to the scaffold. Murder was the order of the day and thinned out
+not only the friends of the old régime, but also the ranks of the revolutionaries
+themselves. The earliest of these to fall in connection with the
+King’s execution was Le Pelletier, formerly the Comte de St. Fargeau,
+a member of the Convention, who was murdered by a member of the
+King’s body-guard on the eve of the execution of the King, on January
+20, 1793, because he had voted for the King’s death. Busts of Le Pelletier
+and Brutus were placed in the Palace of Justice, and David quickly
+completed a fine painting of the victim which he offered to the Convention
+in the following terms: “Fellow Citizens, each one of us is responsible
+to the Fatherland for those gifts which nature has bestowed on us;
+diverse though their expression may be, the goal is the same for us all.
+Every true patriot should use every means to inspire his fellow citizens
+and bring before them at all times the great examples of heroism and
+virtue. I am moved by these thoughts in offering to the National Convention
+the painting of Michel Le Pelletier who was murdered in cowardly
+fashion because he voted for a tyrant’s death.”</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately this painting has been lost. Le Pelletier’s descendants,
+into whose possession it passed, were Royalists, and hid the painting, destroying
+the plates and all the engravings which had been made from it.
+The reproduction (<a href="#i_fig15">Fig. 15</a>) was made from the only existing impression
+in the Cabinet of Engravings in the Louvre. The composition is conceived
+in the grand and austere manner which characterized David’s
+work in these days of terror and fanatically exaggerated idealism.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_fig20" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 31em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig20.jpg" width="1956" height="2591" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 20. Marat (1793)</span></p>
+ <p><i>Museum, Brussels</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>Before six months were up another assassination, this time of one
+of the leaders of the revolution—Marat—roused the members of the
+Convention and the populace to the utmost. Hardly had the news
+spread abroad before one of the members of the Convention arose crying:
+“Where art thou, David? You made a portrait of Le Pelletier for
+posterity when he died for his country, now the occasion has arisen for
+another work.” “This too I will do,” David answered, and produced one
+of his most moving compositions (<a href="#i_fig16">Figs. 16</a> and <a href="#i_fig20">20</a>). It is planned with
+great power and simplicity, and filled with deep and tragic feeling, for
+Marat was his friend. Nothing has aroused more astonishment than this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span>
+friendship of David’s for Marat who has been regarded as the bloodthirsty
+instigator of the horrors and deviltries of the revolution. If we
+look into the matter more closely, however, we must recognize in Marat
+qualities which explain the esteem of men like David. He had remarkable
+philosophic and scientific gifts. While his enemies described him as
+a quack doctor, or, as Carlisle erroneously states, a veterinary, as a matter
+of fact his professional contributions as an oculist were so remarkable
+that some of his writings have been reprinted even of late years.
+Before the revolution he was the most celebrated oculist of the aristocracy,
+and the Comte d’Artois, later Charles X, had appointed him as his
+personal physician at a salary of two thousand pounds. His philosophical
+writings, such as the three volume <cite>Essays on Man</cite> which appeared in
+English and French, achieved a reputation for him abroad. Although he
+did not become a member of the French Academy, on account of his disagreement
+with Voltaire and his attack on Newton, no less a person than
+Goethe expressed himself concerning this injustice. Benjamin Franklin,
+too, was among those who visited Marat and were interested in his experiments
+in physics.</p>
+
+<p>On the outbreak of the revolution he abandoned his career as doctor
+and scholar to develop an astonishing public zeal founded on his passion
+for the new ideas. He influenced the development of the new forms of
+government in no small measure, advised against copying the English
+constitution with which he had familiarized himself during a stay in
+England, and opposed all who attempted to assume Dictatorship, even
+Mirabeau, then Lafayette and later General Dumouriez, whose treason
+he foresaw before Dumouriez went over to the Austrians and the Girondists.
+He voted for the condemnation of the King, whom he accused
+of treason to his country, but advised against his condemnation for
+events which happened prior to the revolution. That he was not so
+bloodthirsty as his opponents would have us believe is proved by his insistence
+that Malesherbes, the king’s advisor, should not be condemned
+with him as he was “a wise and venerable old man.”</p>
+
+<p>How many of the wild imprecations which were published against his
+enemies, and particularly against the nobility in his journal <cite lang="fr">L’Ami du
+Peuple</cite> may be laid at his door, is a question. This paper was suppressed
+at various times, and while Marat was in hiding it appeared with distorted
+versions of his opinions given out by his enemies or supposed
+friends, in the endeavour to bring discredit on him. The really established
+facts concerning him place him in no unfavorable light. He opposed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
+the Girondists because he opposed a foreign war, from which he
+felt not only the Monarchists but those Radicals who worked in the dark
+like the Girondists hoped to draw advantage, and which he felt might
+result in the establishment of a military dictatorship. He foresaw the
+September murders, and demanded the establishment of a tribunal for
+the prisoners. This was not done, and the murders consequently took
+place.</p>
+
+<p>True his impassioned pen evoked death and destruction upon his opponents,
+but he was persecuted all his life and his enemies retaliated in
+kind. More than once he fled from death, hiding for weeks at a time in
+cellars and in sewers and contracting from lack of nourishment all sorts
+of bodily ills which his iron energy enabled him to disregard. Ill, unable
+to attend the Convention, although working all day long, he sought relief
+in hot baths where he wrote by placing a board across the bath for his
+books and papers. With, in any case, but a short time to live, he fell victim
+to the murderer’s knife in the hands of an eccentric and talented
+young noblewoman, Charlotte Corday, who hoped to end the revolution
+by murdering Marat, whereas her deed had exactly the opposite effect.
+She belonged to the Girondist circles whose persecution followed the
+outbreak of the war and whose suppression Marat demanded when at
+first victory seemed doubtful.</p>
+
+<p>Marat was unquestionably a true friend of the people and his published
+and spoken convictions were utterly sincere. In spite of his powerful
+and completely independent position, for he was affiliated with no
+particular party, he rejected every salaried position, every political distinction
+and lived in the poorest circumstances, the very bathtub which
+he used and which later attained a sort of celebrity as a curiosity being
+borrowed from a neighbor. He received petitioners without number,
+and endeavoured in the “Letterbox” of his paper, which he was the first
+to introduce, to answer the countless questions put by the people. Charlotte
+Corday only obtained an interview with him after several unsuccessful
+attempts, by pretending that she was seeking help for a widow
+with five children. The paper which Marat holds in his hand in David’s
+picture was sent in by her to obtain admission, and not without reason
+or effect has the artist made these words legible: “13 July, 1793, Charlotte
+Corday to Citizen Marat.” “To be unfortunate is to be sure of your
+assistance.” An order for 25 francs which Marat had made out for the
+widow in whose name Charlotte Corday sought his aid lies on the stool
+in the foreground. Her dagger seems to have found him while he affixed
+his signature to it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span></p>
+
+<p>This composition is among David’s finest achievements in its combination
+of very simple forms and great expressiveness. We almost feel the
+corpse still lives, still breathes. The most touching naturalness is combined
+with a truly heroic style comparable to that of France’s great
+tragic poets, such as Racine and Corneille. If we remember that at the
+time this picture was painted, the elegant Rococo painters were still
+producing their piquant compositions, we recognize that in art as in life
+a new era had dawned, an art founded on entirely new conceptions,
+which built its compositions with large and massive forms and sought
+again those depths of inspiration which had entirely disappeared from
+the art of the court painters.</p>
+
+<p>David painted still another composition as propaganda for his political
+ideals. A thirteen-year-old drummer boy, Joseph Bara, fell in the
+battles in the Vendee in December, 1793, and David was commissioned
+by the Convention to immortalize the death of this young hero of the
+Republic. This painting, now in the Museum at Avignon, although unfinished,
+and very simple in conception, has many charming qualities.
+French writers have particularly praised the purity and elegance of the
+drawing and the beauty of the youthful form; and in fact the swelling
+rhythmic line and vivacity of the bodily forms are very pleasing. If,
+however, we analyse the essentially novel quality in this art, it lies in the
+reduction of the composition to its bare essentials, combined with a
+deepened expressiveness. The scene of the battle in which the boy fell is
+only lightly indicated. In the background are clouds which might be
+cannon smoke, and far to one side the disappearing form of a standard
+bearer. The boy presses the republican cockade to his breast with one
+hand—there is no other indication of the day’s realities—everything
+else is universal, idealistic. The nakedness, the boy’s idealized features,
+the wide empty spaces of the background with its suggestion of a hill—everything
+is concentrated on the suffering and inspiration which speak
+from the lines of the body. The moment of transition from life to death—which
+to be sure the friends of the revolution had ample chance of observing—is
+wonderfully depicted. We feel the trembling of the body,
+the lift of the breast, the stiffening of the mouth and of the half-closed
+eyes. The curious color scheme of the painting, the thin sulphur yellow
+background, the pale blue shadows in the figure, the luxuriant dark
+brown hair and the brightly colored cockade—contrive a curious effect.</p>
+
+<p>Close bonds of friendship united David to Danton and Robespierre,
+the two other leaders of the Reign of Terror, as well as to Marat—although<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
+this applies only to the early days where Danton is concerned.
+The break with him is one of the episodes in the painter’s life which is
+most difficult to explain although David can hardly have been alone to
+blame, for Danton’s violent nature was prone in moments of passion to
+transform friends into foes. It is unfortunate, however, that David did
+not exhibit more independence in his political opinions, and that even
+though he allowed himself to be dragged in Robespierre’s train, he
+helped in the downfall of this most stirring of the revolutionary heroes.</p>
+
+<p>The varying attitudes of revolutionary critics make it even harder to
+evaluate Danton’s personality and contribution than that of Marat.
+Unlike Marat he was no knight of the pen, but a man of words and
+deeds, living fiercely in the passions of the moment, and always at his
+best in the times of greatest difficulty.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_fig21" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig21.jpg" width="1468" height="1778" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 21. St. Just (1792)</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Private Possession, Paris</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<figure id="i_fig22" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig22.jpg" width="1419" height="1776" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 22. Self Portrait (1794)</span></p>
+ <p><i>Louvre, Paris</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>The personal documents which give us intimate glimpses of the personalities
+of the other revolutionary leaders are entirely lacking in
+Danton’s case. He was too impulsive for this form of expression, or, in
+his leisure moments, too lazy. His portraits give one an impression of
+the strength and softness, obstinacy and good nature, energy and procrastination,
+which characterized this hero of the revolution whose dramatic
+fate has been the inspiration of many a poet. His career was short
+but glorious. He rose like a meteor from the obscurity of a provincial
+law practice to a dominating position, and during the years 1792 to 1794
+his powerful figure was in the foreground and associated with every important
+event. His opponents accused him of cruelty and dishonesty.
+It is undeniable that he occasionally indulged his wild impulse to destroy
+those that opposed him, as witness his speech, “Revolutions cannot
+be carried out on tea.” Although the September murders occurred
+during his day, his guilt lies rather in not preventing them, than in any
+instigation of them. He was occupied at that time with the formation of
+the volunteer army, and the monument erected to his memory by the
+City of Paris in the eighties, which depicts him inspiring the citizens
+with flaming words to departure for the tottering front, was well deserved.
+Whatever the faults of his stormy and excitable nature, he did
+more than any other to save his country in a moment of grave danger.
+So far as his dishonesty is concerned, he seems now and then to have
+dealt not all too accurately with State and private property, but his patriotism
+was none the less sincere. We must remember that not all active
+natures can live on nothing, like Marat and Robespierre, and that a
+powerful physical constitution demands other recreations. Danton had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
+far more love of life than the dry Robespierre, and liked to be surrounded
+by his men and women friends. He finally, to the horror of some historians,
+acquired a small country property where he hoped, his labours
+over, to retire with wife and children, an ambition destined never to
+be fulfilled.</p>
+
+<p>There is in the Museum at Troyes a portrait by David of Danton’s
+first wife,<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">7</a> the brave Gabrielle, a healthy, capable and intelligent
+housewife with black eyes and rosy cheeks—a true type of the new
+Bourgeoisie. She seems to have been as cheerful as she was kind, and
+gave Danton several children to whom he was tenderly attached. She
+was destined not to see his downfall. When in February, 1793, he returned
+from the Belgian front, he found that his wife had died and been
+buried several days previously. It is characteristic both of his love for
+her and his untamed nature that seven days after her death he had both
+grave and coffin opened up, embraced the corpse and commissioned a
+sculptor friend to make a death mask and a bust of her. His friends had
+great difficulty in saving him from an emotional breakdown. Even the
+cool Robespierre sought to comfort him in the most feeling manner in a
+letter in which he pledges him his devotion and friendship unto death.
+How quickly and how passionately they lived, these revolutionaries! A
+couple of months later Danton married a sixteen-year-old girl, and a
+year after that, Robespierre, who had promised—and undoubtedly with
+sincere conviction—to be true to him till death, brought him to the
+guillotine.</p>
+
+<p>The dual rule of two temperaments so opposed as Danton’s and
+Robespierre’s could not endure for long. One cannot conceive a greater
+contrast than that between the robust Danton, who loudly proclaimed
+his every thought and the elegant frail Robespierre who was all self-control
+and deliberation.</p>
+
+<p>How clever and calculating an actor Robespierre was is shown by
+the account of his attempted murder by a young girl after the manner
+of Marat’s. The attempt failed. The crowd surged up the stairs to his
+room to congratulate him. Robespierre was seated in a corner calmly
+peeling an orange. Without a word he looked sternly at the intruding
+crowd, till in embarrassment they crept away. In his place Danton undoubtedly
+would have launched into an impassioned speech of thanks.</p>
+
+<p>Robespierre and his friend St. Just (<a href="#i_fig21">Fig. 21</a>) are both men of pleasing
+appearance—almost good-looking as compared to Danton’s ugly bull-dog<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
+countenance. They were, especially Robespierre, who wore a wig
+and sword to the last, neat and even elegant in their dress, which differed
+sharply from Danton’s almost gypsy-like effect.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately the “Titan”—so accustomed was he to towering above
+his opponents in the Convention and pelting them with his Shakespearian
+witticisms—underestimated his puny but quick-witted and accurate
+opponent, Robespierre, and before he realized it, he had met his
+doom. Just as Danton was about to mitigate the rigours of the Convention’s
+procedure, just as he hoped to take things a bit more easily
+personally, came his impeachment—plotted so subtly by Robespierre
+and his helper St. Just that there was no escape. So desperate a fight
+did the giant put up, however, for himself and his friends that it hung
+by a thread that his accusers might find themselves ruined in his stead.
+After a number of most dubious witnesses had testified against Danton,
+St. Just felt it wiser to deny him all defence by having the Court decide
+that anyone who conducted himself so offensively toward his judges as
+Danton, could be condemned without further hearing. Danton’s mere
+presence was enough to dismay the jury, who, moreover, were not really
+convinced of his guilt. When they retired, a rumor went about that he
+had been acquitted. His accusers, thereupon, rushed to the jury room
+and forced the rebellious members to submission. It is here that our
+artist, who was a devoted admirer of Robespierre, appears in no favorable
+light. He pressed about the jury with other members of the Convention,
+and the report runs, called out to those who were still hesitating,
+“Do you still believe Danton innocent? Has he not already been
+judged by public opinion? Only cowards could so conduct themselves!”
+What a fine argument!! One member of the jury burst into sobs, and,
+as he could not bring himself to vote for Danton’s impeachment, he was
+asked: “Who is more useful to the Republic, Robespierre or Danton?”
+“Robespierre,” replied the juryman sobbing. “Then Danton must go to
+the guillotine,” was the response.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the day of the execution with its procession of three wagons,
+each bearing five or six condemned prisoners, and towering above
+them all, Danton looking proudly over the heads of the throng. The
+procession passed the little Café de Parnasse where, once upon a time, he
+had met his Gabrielle; then the Café de la Regence, and whom did he
+see there? It is hard to believe. There sat his former friend, the traitorous
+David, busily making a drawing of him (perhaps the drawing in
+the museum at Lille, <a href="#i_fig17">Fig. 17</a>). “Lackey!” Danton called to him in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
+scorn. Next, as the procession passed Robespierre’s house, Danton
+called out, “You will soon follow me! Your house will be torn down,
+and men will cast salt upon the earth where it stood.”</p>
+
+<p>Danton tried to the last to cheer the friends around him—the ordinarily
+merry Camille Desmoulins who was grieving over his bride,
+Lucille; the poet Fabre, who affirmed that one of his accusers, who was
+also a poet, would doubtless steal his unprinted manuscripts and publish
+them under his own name. “Soon that will no longer worry you,” said
+Danton to him. The executions were quickly under way. The sun was
+setting, and Danton’s giant figure was silhouetted darkly against the
+evening sky. One of his friends wanted to embrace him but the executioner
+would not permit it. He wanted to finish his task before sundown.
+“Idiot,” said Danton to him, “Will you be able to prevent our
+heads from kissing each other in the basket?” For one moment he
+flinched when he thought of his young wife, “My beloved, shall I never
+see you again?” Then, with an effort, he exclaimed, “Come Danton, let
+there be no weakness,” and to the executioner, “Show my head to the
+people. It is worth it.” These were his last words.</p>
+
+<p>The curse uttered by Danton as he passed Robespierre’s house was
+fulfilled all too quickly. Before five months were up, Robespierre trod
+the same path, and the wagon was halted before his house to let the
+deposed Dictator see the mob in its fury sprinkling his door with the
+blood of a slaughtered ox.</p>
+
+<p>And now the earth began to tremble under David’s feet. He was to
+the last a devoted adherent of Robespierre. When the latter on the eve
+of his fall read to the Jacobins his defence which ended with the words,
+“I am ready to drink the poisoned cup,” David cried out “We will drink
+it with you.” He must have been thinking of his portrayal of the death
+of Socrates, but he probably hardly realized how imminent was the fall
+of the last great leader of the revolution and how very nearly he himself
+was involved in that fall.</p>
+
+<p>David, as we know, did not complete his painting of Bara. This was
+because he was planning for the Convention a festival in honor of the
+fallen drummer boy. He was a great master in the arrangement of such
+celebrations. With their carefully designed costumes, massed choirs, improvised
+statues and profusion of flowers and patriotic orations, they
+must have been astonishingly impressive, comparable only to the national
+festivals of the Roman Empire. Unfortunately these artistic
+manifestations of the revolution, which constituted an appreciable part<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
+of David’s life work, were in their nature transitory. David had set the
+date of the Bara festival for the 10th Thermidor (July 26, 1794). This
+was the very day of Robespierre’s downfall, and his execution took place
+two days later. Through this coincidence of date—or had David been
+warned?—he did not attend the sitting of the Convention on the 10th
+Thermidor. Had he done so, he would undoubtedly have been arrested
+and guillotined with Robespierre’s other adherents.</p>
+
+<p>When he came into the Convention hall three days later he was denounced
+by André Dumont and obliged to defend himself. He probably
+believed the end had come. He was no orator, and his defect of speech
+made things still harder for him. He stood there, pale and fearful, and
+it is said a nervous perspiration so dewed his forehead that it dripped
+down his coat to the floor. Where now was the courage with which he
+had offered to die with Robespierre; with which when Marat was attacked
+in the Convention he had once exclaimed: “Kill me in his place!”
+Yes, it was undoubtedly easier to make drawings of one’s enemies and
+former friends on their road to the guillotine than to defend one’s life
+before a tribunal of the people. He made so pitiful an impression that
+they let him go. Two days later, however, it was thought wiser to arrest
+him. At first his sentence was light and he was allowed to work, but
+soon, after another stormy session of the Convention, he was transferred
+to the Luxembourg. His imprisonment lasted five months. Toward
+the end, conditions were again made easier and he was allowed
+to work. Then he was set free, and again, this time at the instigation of
+his fellow artists, imprisoned for months. Finally during the general
+amnesty at the end of the year 1795 he again obtained his freedom. This
+was the end of his political activities. The terrible months of uncertainty
+during his imprisonment, when death so often stared him in the face,
+must have been a time of spiritual growth for him, for they resulted in
+his painting a marvellous series of portraits. His achievement at this
+time, and during the following years when the revolution slowly ebbed,
+is the greatest of his artistic career.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_fig23" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig23.jpg" width="1396" height="1766" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 23. Woman of the Revolution (1795)</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Museum, Lyon</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<figure id="i_fig24" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig24.jpg" width="1450" height="1764" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 24. Napoleon as First Consul (1797)</span></p>
+ <p><i>Private Possession, Paris</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>There is first of all a portrait depicting the artist at the period of his
+imprisonment (<a href="#i_fig22">Fig. 22</a>). It is seldom that a self portrait expresses so
+vividly the perplexities of a period of terror as do the haunted eyes of
+this young fanatic. These eyes have been called evil, and David himself
+described as a good artist but an evil man. The moral equipment of the
+revolutionaries cannot be summarized in such simple fashion, however.
+David’s political opponents hit nearer the mark when they called him to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
+the defence of Marat, “What does that prove so far as Marat is concerned?
+Only the devotion of an honorable man who is allowing himself
+to be carried away by excitement.” That David’s political life was so
+passionate, may be due in part to the youthful violence of his friends.
+Nearly all the revolutionary leaders were in their early thirties, an age
+which is apt to be the stormy period of a man’s life. Old people do not
+bring about revolutions. David, to be sure, was forty at the time of its
+outbreak, but see how youthful he still looked; and the unspent store of
+his strength is proved by the great age to which he lived.</p>
+
+<p>He painted another important work during his imprisonment—a
+little landscape of the Luxembourg Gardens as seen from his window
+(now in the Louvre), one of the first modern realistic landscapes which
+seem to foreshadow Courbet’s efforts. The eighteenth-century conception
+of landscape was very different. The landscapes were like theatrical
+scenery, built up with carefully divided “wings.” Here, for the first
+time, a French artist dared to paint an unpromising bit of earth exactly
+as he saw it, with all nature’s accidental qualities. A garden fence in the
+middle runs diagonally across the picture, while over in one corner is an
+avenue of trees which should conventionally have been in the center of
+the canvas—no planned symmetrical construction, no coulisses in
+the foreground. Here, too, was a break with tradition—a new beginning.</p>
+
+<p>The two portraits of Monsieur and Madame Seriziat (<a href="#i_fig18">Figs. 18</a> and
+<a href="#i_fig19">19</a>), painted by David while he was still under arrest, are particularly
+illuminating as regards his personality. How could an artist, above
+whose head the sword of Damocles still hung, paint such sunny and
+optimistic portraits? We would, in fact, appreciate only one side of
+David if we think of him always as the stern Roman, never as the light-hearted
+Frenchman. From the beginning to the end of his artistic career,
+side by side with his classic compositions and his moving revolutionary
+portrayals (<a href="#i_fig23">Fig. 23</a>), he painted a series of charming portraits
+which prove that through all the horrors of the revolution he never lost
+his Gallic light-heartedness or his feeling for grace. At the beginning of
+the series stands the pleasing portrait of Vigée LeBrun, painted in 1793,
+and at the end, the famous portrait of Madame Recamier painted in
+1800. In these works there is still an echo of eighteenth century elegance,
+a trace of that esprit and glamour which always distinguishes
+the best of French art. Yet the forms, the simple outlines, the wide
+empty spaces of the background and the flatness of the treatment is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
+wholly new. And besides in these portraits we find for the first time
+representations of the Bourgeoisie which replace those of the aristocracy
+of the eighteenth century and whose best types became henceforth
+the patrons of art which in former days the courts had been.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_fig25" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 33em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig25.jpg" width="2088" height="2788" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 25. Portrait of Vigée LeBrun (1793)</span></p>
+ <p><i>Museum, Rouen</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<figure id="i_fig26" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 30em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig26.jpg" width="1859" height="1261" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 26. Madame Recamier (1800)</span></p>
+ <p><i>Louvre, Paris</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<figure id="i_fig27" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 18em;">
+ <img src="images/i_fig27.jpg" width="1104" height="1254" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p><span class="smcap">Fig. 27. Ingres as a Boy</span> (<i>c.</i> 1795)</p>
+ <p><i>Private Collection, Paris</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>Scarcely a year had passed since David’s escape from prison when his
+freedom was again endangered by the royalist youth who believed that
+the moment of reaction had arrived. But now there appeared in his studio
+one day—this was at the end of 1796—an officer sent by General
+Bonaparte who asked in his name whether he would accept an offer of
+safety with his army in Italy. It is evidence of the extraordinary farsightedness
+of Napoleon that his feelers extended everywhere—wherever
+there might be future support for his power. But David did not accept
+the offer: not that he had not at once recognized in Bonaparte his
+coming greatness—in fact he already called him his “hero”—for
+David’s instinct was in this respect just as unerring as was Bonaparte’s—but
+that he had most likely promised himself, as a result of the terrible
+experience of the last years, to no longer become embroiled in political
+affairs. Napoleon’s political position was at this time not yet assured,
+he did not give up the idea of tempting our artist. When he returned
+from Italy he called at his studio for the first time and wished to
+be painted. His restless spirit, however, could endure only one sitting.
+The wonderful sketch which resulted (<a href="#i_fig24">Fig. 24</a>) is still in existence and
+proves that Bonaparte knew what he was about when he desired David
+to become the blazoner of his coming power. No artist has given us from
+the very beginning so idealized a conception of his personality. The
+breadth of the design in this unfinished composition; the noble verve of
+the position; the dauntlessness of expression: everything was in keeping
+with the great historical style that Napoleon himself might have
+dreamed of. A few weeks later David received an invitation from Napoleon
+to accompany him on his Egyptian campaign. Again the artist refused
+although he had already entirely succumbed to the personality of
+the great general. When Napoleon returned from Egypt he visited David
+frequently and flattered him by taking him around Paris and talking
+over with him his plans for beautifying the city. At the end David fell
+completely under the influence of the stronger personality, as had happened
+before in the case of Marat and Robespierre. And in the same degree
+that Napoleon’s personality was more powerful than that of the
+revolutionaries, his influence was the more crushing. Only in this way
+can we account for the fact that the one-time revolutionary-champion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
+of democratic ideals became at the end the court painter of the emperor.
+But this was not to the advantage of David’s art. So long as
+Napoleon had not yet reached the height of his power—that is until
+about 1800—our artist succeeded in producing several imposing compositions
+in honor of the First Consul, especially the famous portrait on
+horseback, where he is shown ascending the Alps, symbolically representing
+his rise to the highest heights of glory—certainly an extraordinary
+translation of a still living and even young personage into the
+realm of the ideal and of history. But when Napoleon had become emperor
+and David his none too carefully treated servant, his art became
+weaker and weaker from year to year, the while his compositions grew
+larger in size. When after the downfall of the emperor and the return of
+the Bourbons he left France in exile and settled in Brussels, where he
+lived until the year 1824, he still attracted the attention of the world
+through his many pupils and admirers, though his art now belonged to
+the past.</p>
+
+<p>David belongs with the few artists who are mentioned not only in the
+history of art but also in political history—perhaps a doubtful advantage,
+for preoccupation with two so conflicting fields as art and politics,
+was only possible through the sacrifice of one or the other. Indeed David
+as politician lived only in the shadow of the greater ones. In the field of
+art he was at his best when his political ideas did not tempt him too
+much toward abstract themes—that is to say, in portraiture, when he
+had the model before him. As a human being his forte lay in a highly
+sensitive response to the most intense intellectual and emotional currents
+of his time. Since, during the greater part of his lifetime, these
+currents were not primarily of an artistic nature, his art could not always
+take advantage of them.</p>
+
+<p>This too intense interest in the great events of the day was perhaps
+his weak point: the fact that he submitted too easily to the ephemeral
+demands of his contemporaries, preferring the fortune of a successful
+present to the glory which the future reserves only for the highest aims
+and the complete renunciation of the demands of the day. From his
+earliest years David had the critics on his side, and the steady stream of
+admirers that had gathered about him showed no decrease, remaining
+with him even in the most dangerous periods of his life. How different
+did it fare with one of his really great contemporaries—Beethoven—who
+throughout his life had to contend with uncomprehending critics,
+but who is quoted as having said in this connection, “Damn me as much<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
+as you like; you are not able to damn me into eternity.” Just as to the
+great ones is given as a recompense for the misunderstanding of their
+day the consciousness of their own value to the future, so the artist who
+is glorified in his own time knows his own limitations. David said himself
+that many of his own works such as the Brutus no longer had a living
+value. It was his bad fortune that he was in too close contact with
+the affairs of the revolution, for the greatest art (we return here to our
+introductory remarks) cannot arise in the midst of bloodshed. There can
+be no doubt of where the unattached and eternal art lay during David’s
+period, when we call to mind the poetry of Goethe or the music of
+Beethoven. The centers where the greatest poet and the greatest musician
+of the days of the revolution lived—Weimar and Vienna—were
+far removed from the theater of the struggle, just as Rembrandt’s art
+flowered outside the scene of the Thirty Years War. From a distance
+the deafening war clangor permeated into the quiet worlds of these rulers
+in the realm of art; from a distance through transfiguring light appeared
+to them the new ideas for which the struggle was waged. Such
+should be the milieu where the greatest art is born—impregnated with
+the shower of the newly created ideas, but quietly and not to such a degree
+that its own existence is imperilled.</p>
+
+<p>This chance for perspective also makes it possible for the really great
+artist to judge worldly matters more clearly than the one who lives in
+the midst of the fray. How much more impartially, for instance, did
+Beethoven, who otherwise did not care for politics, judge the events of
+the times than David, who worried about them half his lifetime! Beethoven,
+also, like the best of his contemporaries, was democratically inclined
+and applauded the new revolutionary ideas. When Napoleon became
+First Consul he recognized his greatness and desired to celebrate
+in his music the hero who had brought the revolution to completion.
+He began his great symphony, the “Eroica,” and wrote upon the title
+page the name of Bonaparte next to his own. When the news was
+brought to him that Napoleon had crowned himself emperor, indignant
+that his illusions had been dispelled and that Bonaparte had become as
+tyrannical as the crowned heads which the revolution had deposed, he
+tore up the dedication and began the symphony anew, ending it with the
+funeral march.</p>
+
+<p>The fascination of the art and the personality of David lies in the fact
+that they reflect the period of the greatest intellectual and social upheaval
+of his nation—an upheaval such as comes to every nation once<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
+in its history, with such a force that through it the whole world is shaken.
+In such moments of history creations of centuries collapse at one blow.
+The foundations of faith and of morals waver; the ties of family and
+friendship are torn apart and even the customary tasks of the day, under
+other circumstances serving as an anchor alike to the weak and the
+strong, appear useless and cease: like the flood of the terrific storm
+which engulfs us, rudely tearing away from the strongest the guiding of
+their own fate, and forcing the slothful into the maelstrom of the higher
+general will. What remains for the individual who, hesitating, stands at
+the edge of the precipice, viewing the tragic drama? Can he do better
+than to plunge into the stream, keeping afloat as best he may?</p>
+
+<p>Happy the one who in such periods succeeds like our artist in preserving
+so much of his own identity that from out the history of this
+chaos his name still rings with vibrant life.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center smaller p4 vspace">
+<span class="gesperrt1">ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY COPIES PRIVATELY</span><br>
+PRINTED FOR FREDERIC FAIRCHILD SHERMAN<br>
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+
+<div class="chapter footnotes">
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES</h2>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">1</a> The picture is not dated, but since the portrait of Madame de Verninac which is almost identical
+in composition is dated 1799, it is most likely executed shortly thereafter.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">2</a> The figure studies in this sketchbook are interesting from another point of view (compare <a href="#i_fig10">Fig. 10</a>,
+a study of a beggar closely related to the composition of the Belisarius, although later in date).
+They prove clearly the endeavour of David to replace by his own the eighteenth-century style of
+drawing as he had learned it in the Boucher school. Instead of modelling the figures through diagonal
+parallel lines, indicating the shadows and neglecting the outlines, he tries to produce the effect of plasticity
+through clearly connected outlines alone, leaving out the modelling entirely. In this respect also
+David is the predecessor of artists of the most modern school. He developed his style of drawing in
+connection with his studies after Roman sculptures and was strongly influenced in his method of designing
+by a young French sculptor, Lamarie, whom he met in Rome. (See Charles Saunier: <cite>Louis
+David</cite>, p. 16.)</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">3</a> Illustrated in the excellent biography of David by Léon Rosenthal in the series: <cite lang="fr">Les Maitres de
+l’Art</cite>, p. 30.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">4</a> <cite lang="de">Briefe aus der französischen Revolution</cite>, edited by G. Landauer, 1922.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">5</a> Reproduced in Charles Saunier, <cite>David</cite>, p. 44 and 48.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">6</a> The best book on the subject is by Pierre de Nolhac, <cite lang="fr">La Reine Marie Antoinette</cite>, Paris.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">7</a> Reproduced in the book on Danton by Louis Madelin (Paris, 1914). The following pages are
+based upon this excellent biography.</p>
+
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter transnote">
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="Transcribers_Notes">Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
+
+<p>Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made
+consistent when a predominant preference was found
+in the original book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
+
+<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected; unbalanced
+quotation marks were remedied when the change was
+obvious, and otherwise left unbalanced.</p>
+
+<p>Illustrations in this eBook have been positioned
+between paragraphs and outside quotations. In versions
+of this eBook that support hyperlinks, the page
+references in the List of Illustrations lead to the
+corresponding illustrations.</p>
+
+<p>In the original book, two groups of illustrations
+were printed side-by-side on the same page and
+not in numeric sequence. In this eBook, they may be
+displayed side-by-side or one below the other,
+in the same sequence as in the original book.</p>
+
+<p>Footnotes, originally at the bottoms of the pages that referenced them,
+have been collected, sequentially renumbered, and placed at the end of
+the book.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75887 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+This book, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this book outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+book #75887 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/75887)