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The Intervention of the Sabine Women is a 1799 painting by the French painter Jacques-Louis David, showing a legendary episode following the abduction of the Sabine women by the founding generation of Rome.

The Intervention of the Sabine Women
ArtistJacques-Louis David
Year1799 (1799)
Dimensions385 cm × 522 cm (152 in × 206 in)
LocationLouvre

David began planning the work while he was imprisoned in the Luxembourg Palace in 1795. France was at war with other European nations after a period of civil conflict culminating in the Reign of Terror and the Thermidorian Reaction, during which David had been imprisoned as a supporter of Robespierre. David hesitated between representing either this subject or that of Homer reciting his verses to his fellow Greeks. He finally chose to make a canvas representing the Sabine women interposing themselves to separate the Romans and Sabines, as a "sequel" to Poussin's The Rape of the Sabine Women.

Work on the painting commenced in 1796, after his estranged wife visited him in jail. He conceived the idea of telling the story, to honour his wife, with the theme being love prevailing over conflict and the protection of children. The painting was also seen as a plea for the people to reunite after the bloodshed of the revolution. Its realization took him nearly four years.

The painting depicts Romulus's wife Hersilia – the daughter of Titus Tatius, leader of the Sabines – rushing between her husband and her father and placing her babies between them. A vigorous Romulus prepares to strike a half-retreating Tatius with his spear, but hesitates.

The rocky outcrop in the background is the Tarpeian Rock, a reference to civil conflict, since the Roman punishment for treason was to be thrown from the rock. According to legend, when Tatius attacked Rome, he almost succeeded in capturing the city because of the treason of the Vestal Virgin Tarpeia, daughter of Spurius Tarpeius, governor of the citadel on the Capitoline Hill. She opened the city gates for the Sabines in return for "what they bore on their arms". She believed that she would receive their golden bracelets. Instead, the Sabines crushed her to death and threw her from the rock, later named for her.


Significance


The genesis of Les Sabines and the work itself represented a significant departure for the day.[1] Historical depictions had been typically commissioned. David however, conceived, produced and promoted his work for profit.[2] He produced marketing material to accompany the first exhibition. Le Tableau des Sabines, Exposé Publiquement au Palais National des Sciences et des Arts ("the Tableau of the Sabines, Public Exhibition at the National Palace of Arts and Science") contained his own account of the historic episode and had an endnote explaining his rationale for using nudity in the painting.[3] Its 1799 exhibition attracted a large number of paying visitors for several years. In 1819 David sold Les Sabines and his Léonidas at Thermopylae to the Royal Museums for 10,000 francs.[citation needed]

Starting in 1977, France issued a series of definitive stamps featuring the head of Hersilia based on David's painting.[4]

After the expulsion of artists including David from the Louvre, the painting was held in the ancient church of Cluny, which he used as a workshop. That building is now operated as the Musée de Cluny.


References


  1. Tony Halliday (2006), "The Trouble with Tatius", Oxford Art Journal, 29 (2): 197–211, doi:10.1093/oxartj/kcl002
  2. Halliday Tatius p.199 fn.1, quoting Dorothy Johnson: In Search of a Beholder: On the Relation between Art, Audiences, and Social Spheres in Post-Thermidor France, Art Bulletin, vol. 74, 1992, pp. 19–36
  3. David, Jacques-Louis (1800), Le tableau des Sabines, exposé publiquement au Palais national des sciences et des arts (in French), Paris: Pierre Didot, retrieved 12 December 2016
  4. Stanley Gibbons Stamps of the World 2012.



На других языках


- [en] The Intervention of the Sabine Women

[es] El rapto de las sabinas (cuadro de Jacques-Louis David)

El rapto de las sabinas es un óleo sobre lienzo neoclásico terminado en 1799 por Jacques-Louis David. El título en español es equívoco y el título original es Las Sabinas, o La intervención de las Sabinas, ya que el cuadro no representa el rapto en sí, sino el momento en que, mucho tiempo después del rapto en sí, romanos y sabinos se enzarzaron en guerra y las sabinas, a la sazón hijas y hermanas de sabinos, pero esposas y madres de romanos, intervinieron para detener la guerra.

[fr] Les Sabines

Les Sabines (titres alternatifs L'Intervention des Sabines, Les Sabines arrêtant le combat entre les Romains et les Sabins) est un tableau peint par Jacques-Louis David entre 1796 et 1799. Peinture d'histoire appartenant au courant néoclassique, elle marque une évolution dans le style de David après la Révolution, qualifié par lui-même de « grec pur ».

[it] Le Sabine

Le Sabine è un dipinto a olio su tela (385x522 cm) conservato nel Musée du Louvre di Parigi e realizzato a partire dal 1794 dal pittore Jacques-Louis David.

[ru] Сабинянки, останавливающие сражение между римлянами и сабинянами

«Сабинянки, останавливающие сражение между римлянами и сабинянами»[2] (фр. Les Sabines — «Сабинянки») — картина французского художника Жака Луи Давида. Картина была приобретена в 1819 году и в настоящее время находится в 75-м зале на 1-м этаже галереи Денон в Лувре. Инвентарный № INV. 3961.



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