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7.14: The Death of Socrates

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    The Death of Socrates

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    Artist: Jacques-Louis David
    Medium: Oil on canvas
    Art Historical Time Period: Neoclassicism, 1787

    Jacques-Louis David painted The Death of Socrates to honor the moral courage of the ancient Greek philosopher who chose to die rather than abandon his beliefs. Socrates was sentenced to death for corrupting the youth and disrespecting the gods of Athens. David’s painting shows the moment Socrates prepares to drink poison, surrounded by grieving students. Late 18th-century France was deeply engaged in debates about justice, reason, and civic virtue. David used this ancient story to reflect Enlightenment values and to question the morality of political power.

    The painting was innovative in its use of classical composition to express emotional and philosophical depth. David used clean lines and idealized figures to create a sense of order and clarity. Yet the emotional tension is strong—Socrates is calm and resolute, while his followers are devastated. This contrast highlights the moral strength of Socrates and the cost of truth. The painting influenced future artists and thinkers by showing that art could be both intellectually rigorous and emotionally powerful. It helped define Neoclassicism and inspired later works that explore moral sacrifice, including political martyrdoms and civil rights imagery in modern art.

    Vocabulary

    • civic virtue behavior that supports the good of the community
    • composition the arrangement of elements in a work of art

    • Enlightenment – a period focused on reason, science, and human rights

    • martyrdom – dying for a cause or belief

    • Neoclassicism – an art style inspired by ancient Greece and Rome

    Student Authors

    • Ivana Ortega ’27 and Cristian Rodriguez ‘26

    References and Image Attribution

    • Crow, T. E. (1995). Painters and public life in eighteenth-century Paris. Yale University Press. 

    • Lee, S. (2002). David: Art and revolution. Yale University Press. Rosenblum, R. (1975). Transformations in late eighteenth-century art. Princeton University Press.

    • Image: “David - The Death of Socrates” via Wikimedia Commons, under Public Domain. Modified from original.

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