Oath of the Horatii

<em>Oath of the Horatii</em> by Jacques-Louis DavidOath of the Horatii by Jacques-Louis David, 1785, in the Louvre, Paris, France.

Oath of the Horatii, oil painting by French artist Jacques-Louis David that was completed in 1785. The work, depicting a scene from Roman legend, created a sensation when it debuted and remains one of the best-known Neoclassical paintings.

David is arguably history’s most extraordinary political propaganda painter. He was court painter to Napoleon, and much of what we know of the emperor’s mythic persona and the iconography of the French Revolution comes from David’s theatrical, allegorical paintings. As well, David was the father of the Neoclassical art movement, which depicted classical myths and history as analogous to contemporary politics.

Oath of the Horatii tells the story, recorded around the turn of the first millennium of the Common Era by the Roman historian Livy, of sons from two families, the three Horatii brothers and the three Curiatii brothers, who engaged in combat to settle the wars between Rome and Alba Longa around 669 BCE. The men are required to fight but one of the women from the Curiatii family is married to one of the Horatii brothers, and one Horatii sister is betrothed to a brother in the Curiatii family. Nevertheless, Horatii senior exhorts his sons to fight the Curiatii and they obey, despite the lamentations of their grief-stricken sisters.

In depicting the moment when the men chose political ideals over personal motives, David asks viewers to regard these men as role models during their own politically tumultuous time. As concerned with realism in painting as he was with idealism in politics, David traveled to Rome in order to copy the architecture from life. The painting was an enormous success when it was exhibited in the 1785 Salon in Paris. David’s paintings still resonate powerfully with viewers because of his skill in articulating his strong beliefs.

Ana Finel Honigman