On view

Orientation Gallery
Susan & John Diekman Gallery

The Death of Socrates,

after 1787

Jacques-Louis David and studio, 1748–1825; born Paris, France; died Brussels, Belgium; active Paris, Brussels, and Rome, Italy
y1982-82

This painting depicts the ancient Greek philosopher Socrates, who drinks poisonous hemlock rather than renounce his beliefs after he was convicted of corrupting Athenian youth with his teachings. Like the contemporary artist Yinka Shonibare, whose work is on view nearby, David turned to history to interpret present-day events. Painting on the eve of the French Revolution, the artist intended this scene to serve as an allegory for independent thought at a moment of political change. This rough canvas appears to be a lifetime copy of David’s signed version of The Death of Socrates, perhaps intentionally unfinished to instruct David’s students on the techniques of painting. The left section is nearly complete, the transition from greater to lesser degrees of finish demonstrating the stages of its construction. Scholars suggest that David painted the least-finished portions himself while his student Anne-Louis Girodet-Trioson may have completed the more-finished areas, reversing typical studio procedure. Today, the work continues to serve as a teaching tool.

Comparative image: Jacques-Louis David, The Death of Socrates, 1787. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Catharine Lorillard Wolfe Collection, Wolfe Fund, 1931

More Context

Handbook Entry

More About This Object

Information

Title
The Death of Socrates
Dates

after 1787

Maker
Jacques-Louis David and studio
Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
133 × 196 cm (52 3/8 × 77 3/16 in.) frame: 160.7 × 225.6 × 13.7 cm (63 1/4 × 88 13/16 × 5 3/8 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, gift of Carl D. Reimers
Object Number
y1982-82
Culture
Materials

Private collection, London (until 1982); Colnaghi, New York (in 1982; sold to Princeton University Art Museum).