Os Litores Trazendo a Brutus os Corpos de Seus Filhos, Roma, Itália (Les Licteurs Rapportant à Brutus les Corps de Ses Fils / The Lictors Bring to Brutus the Bodies of His Sons) - Jacques-Louis David
Roma - Itália
Museu do Louvre, Paris, França
OST - 323x422 - 1789
This painting
was exhibited at the salon of 1789, its full title was J Brutus, First Consul,
returned to his house after having condemned his two sons who had allied
themselves with the Tarquins and conspired against Roman liberty the lictors
return their bodies so that they may be given burial.
In this
painting David also deals with the subject of death in service of the state.
This was an inflammatory subject in 1789, speaking out for self-sacrifice, the
sacrifice of one's own flesh and blood for a higher ideal.
Lucius Junius
Brutus (not to be confused with Julius Caesar's assassin Marcus Brutus, who
lived some 500 years later), had helped to rid Rome of the last of its kings,
the tyrannical Tarquin the Proud. This came about because Tarquin's son Sextus
had raped the virtuous Lucretia. She then committed suicide in the presence of
both her husband Collatinus and Brutus, who withdraw the knife from the fatal
wound and swore on Lucretia's blood to avenge her death and destroy the corrupt
monarchy. Tarquin was exiled and the first Roman republic was established in
508 BC, with Brutus and Collatinus elected as co-consuls. As the picture title
tells us, Brutus' two sons, Titus and Tiberius, were drawn into a royalist
conspiracy to return Tarquin, and their father condemned them to death.
For the grim and
terrible event depicted in the painting, David adopted a radical compositional
format. The main character, Brutus, is placed at the extreme left, plunged into
deep shadow. His body is tense and knotted as he broods over the consequences
of his act, he grasps the death warrant and clenches his feet one across the
other. This last detail, in addition to the position of his arms, was probably
taken from the figure of the prophet Isaiah on the Sistine Chapel Ceiling by
Michelangelo. For the sake of accuracy David based the features of Brutus on a
famous antique bust, the so-called Capitoline Brutus, of which he owned a copy.
On the other side of the image the inconsolable women are brightly illuminated.
The centre of the picture is taken up by a still-life of a sewing basket, an
emblem of domesticity, which is rendered in stark clarity.
David
skillfully illuminated the grief and allegorised the suffering, fear and pain
of his figures. He shows the mother, accusing and suffering, her daughter
beside her, hands raised defensively, and finally the younger daughter sunk
down in pain at her impotence. Another figure at the right edge of the painting
personifies grief. In the shadow sits the "hero" with the dark mien
of a thinker. His features are stoic and harsh, his left hand is holding the
written accusation in a claw-like grip, and he is seated in the shadow of the
Roma, the symbol of the state to which the sacrifice is ultimately being made.
Behind him, the son whose life has fallen victim to the requirements of the
state is being borne in. A column strictly divides the theatrical arrangement
into the representation of the dark force of destiny and the obvious emotional
effect of the event.
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