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The Death of Socrates
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The Death of Socrates

Medium

Pen and black ink, over black chalk, touches of pen and brown ink; squared in black chalk

Dimensions

Sheet: 11 in. × 16 3/8 in. (27.9 × 41.6 cm)

Collection

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY

Credit

Purchase, Walter and Leonore Annenberg Acquisitions Endowment Fund and Mr. and Mrs. J. Tomilson Hill and Mark Fisch and Rachel Davidson Gifts, 2015

Classification

Drawings

Department

Drawings and Prints

Rights

Public Domain

About Jacques Louis David

1748–1825France

David was considered the most influential painter of the Neoclassical movement in France, characterized by a style of austere and ethical painting that reflects the moral climate of the last years of the ancien régime. He became an active revolutionary and worked for the new French Republic. He was then attracted to Napoleon I and developed an Empire style marked by warm Venetian color. Following the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy in 1816, David went into exile in Brussels. He had a large number of pupils, and his influence was felt by the majority of French 19th-century painters. His compositional innovations were a break with the existing Rococo fantasy. Comment on works: Portraits: History.