Charlotte Corday |
The Death of Marat: Jean Louis David |
I am a bit
of a Jean Louis David fan, so I was excited to read that two of his greatest
works would be on display at the NGV during the Napoleon exhibition: Napoleon Crossing the Alps and The Death of Marat. The life-size
Napoleon on his white charger was everything I expected, but I was sadly
disappointed to discover that The Death
Of Marat was a copy, and quite a small one at that. The real McCoy is six
feet by four and lives in the Fine Arts Museum
in Brussels .
It is a
powerful painting, with a high emotional impact, as David indeed intended it to
be. David might be the first political spin doctor - he certainly pulled off a
tour de force of manipulating public opinion with this one. Here's how he came
to paint it:
The French
Revolution was in full swing: guillotine operators doing double shifts, Madame
Defarge busily knitting culottes for the Sans-Culottes, the Scarlet Pimpernel
flat out smuggling aristos to safety, Marie Antoinette promoting her Cake Diet.
In the
legislative assembly, the deputies belonged to different political parties,
just as they do in our very own Parliament today. On the one hand you had your
extreme radical, off-with-their-heads republicans, known as the Jacobins. And in the opposite corner, the Girondists: a
more moderate faction who, while still backing the Republic, tried to apply the
brakes to the frenzy and wholesale slaughter of the Reign of Terror.
Jean-Paul
Marat, a deputy to the Convention and a firebrand journalist, was one of the
most radical voices of the Jacobins and directly responsible for the
denunciation and execution of many people, prominent Girondists among them.
Twenty-five-year-old
Charlotte Corday, member of a minor aristocratic family and ardent Girondist
sympathiser, decided that if Marat were not there to incite the mobs to more
violence, the Girondist policy of moderation might prevail. It seemed like a
good idea to travel to Paris
and save her country by killing Marat. She
could see the headlines already: "Brave Damsel Slays Wicked Tyrant - Saves
France!"
Like
Baldrick in Blackadder, Charlotte
devised a Cunning Plan. She would approach Marat in the guise of an admirer who
wanted to give him a list of Girondist plotters, fodder for the guillotine.
Stopping only to pack a spare set of undies and the cook's best filleting
knife, she set off for Paris .
Marat was
not at the Chamber of Deputies, where she went first. He was working from home
(so that's not a new concept, either!) so that he could immerse himself in a
bath of medicinal herbs to soothe the nasty, itchy, suppurating skin disease
that covered his body from scalp to toes. Not a pretty sight, and smelly to
boot. He had tied a grubby wet rag round his head and was using a plank across
the bath as a desk.
It all
backfired big-time. 150 years before Goebbels even invented the word propaganda,
the Jacobins pulled off the biggest propaganda event of the Revolution. It was
Marat, not Charlotte ,
who was the martyr, he who received a hero's funeral while she was
ignominiously guillotined four days later.
She was
jeered all the way to the scaffold. Her
thick chestnut curls were roughly cut off close to her head because the only
thing capable of slowing the guillotine blade was human hair. As her head fell
into the basket, a young assistant (I imagine an overexcited teenager doing
work experience) grabbed it by the hair, brandished it to the crowd and slapped
both cheeks. This was considered going a bit too far: he was reprimanded and
dismissed. Charlotte Corday's remains were unceremoniously tossed into an open,
pestilent, public grave, among those of the other guillotine victims.
Marat was buried in the Pantheon |
The very day after the murder, David, himself a friend of Marat and a committed Jacobin, was commissioned by the Convention to paint Marat's portrait. He accepted with enthusiasm, and set about the creation of this idealised image.
The Death of Marat: Jean Louis David |
Marat's
flawless body is that of a young, healthy man. The knife is not where Charlotte left it,
gruesomely sticking out of his chest, but lying next to the bath. The grubby
rag has been transformed into a pristine turban.
The picture
is dramatic and poignant; the viewer feels compassion and outrage. David
deliberately referenced classic religious art, depicting Marat as a secular
martyr. The bloody gash echoes Christ's stigmata and the hanging arm and
inclined head has often been compared to Michelangelo's Pieta.
Indeed, the
whole pose resonates with the many depictions of Christ's Descent from the
Cross: Rembrandt, Rubens, Van der Weyden … Marat recalls them all. David uses
Caravaggio's "cinematic" lighting for dramatic effect: spotlight on
the body against a dark background.
Winston
Churchill was an admirer of Charlotte Corday and kept a reproduction of her
portrait on his wall. He said it was a great help when dealing with Charles de
Gaulle: he could point out what happened to arrogant Frenchmen who did not mend
their ways.
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