Oath of the Horatii

David’s Neoclassical scene of three brothers swearing an oath.
Type: Painting
Medium: Oil on canvas
Genre: History painting
Themes: war, politics, myth
Artist: Jacques-Louis David
Movement: Neoclassicism
Region: France
Period: 18th Century

Basic Information:

  • Current Location: The Louvre, Paris
  • Significance: One of the best-known paintings in Neoclassical style; became a defining image of pre-Revolutionary France

The Story Depicted:

  • Based on a Roman legend from the 7th century BC about a dispute between Rome and Alba Longa
  • Instead of full war, each city chooses three champions to fight
  • Three Horatii brothers from Rome agree to fight three Curiatii brothers from Alba Longa
  • The painting shows the brothers swearing an oath before their father, who holds out their swords
  • Only one Horatii brother survives, but he defeats all three Curiatii by separating them

Key Elements in the Painting:

  • Left side: Three Horatii brothers saluting their swords, showing no emotion
  • Center: The father holding three swords, emotionless
  • Right side: Three weeping women and two children
    • Camilla (in white): A Horatii sister betrothed to a Curiatii
    • Woman in brown: A Curiatii married to a Horatii
    • Both will lose loved ones regardless of outcome

Themes & Symbolism:

  • Patriotic duty over personal feelings - men willing to sacrifice for the state
  • Gender contrast: Resolute, taut men vs. tender, weeping women
  • Reflects political tensions as French Revolution approached (painted 1784, Revolution 1789)
  • Emphasizes loyalty to the state rather than family or church

Historical Context:

  • Commissioned by King Louis XVI’s assistant as an allegory about loyalty to the state/king
  • David changed the agreed-upon scene to his own invention
  • Ironically, David later voted for Louis XVI’s execution during the Revolution
  • Sources: Livy’s Ab Urbe Condita and Dionysius’s Roman Antiquities

Artistic Technique:

  • Simple yet powerful use of tonal contrasts
  • Clear compositional divisions between male/female, duty/emotion
  • Neoclassical style emphasizing clarity and moral purpose

Reception:

  • Immediate success with critics and public
  • Even the Pope requested a viewing in Rome
  • Initially displayed poorly at the 1785 Paris Salon, but public demand forced it to be moved to a prominent location
  • Enhanced David’s fame and allowed him to take on students