Thursday, January 18, 2018

Art: Scio Me Nihil Scire

Jacques-Louis David, La Mort de Socrate (Death of Socrates) 1787

The cup of poison Hemlock

Plato depicted as an old man

Now located in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC, Jacques-Louis David’s masterpiece depicts the death of Socrates as recounted in Plato’s Phaedo as his mentor had been charged with corruption of the youth and sentenced to die by poison Hemlock. David signed the work in two places: once under Crito, the distraught young philosopher apprentice clutching his master’s thigh (signifying his identification with the subject) and once near Plato as a gesture of gratitude for the Phaedo which had inspired his painting. Commissioned in 1786, the painting served to symbolize defiance of corrupt authority, a foremost virtue in the dawn of the French Revolution.