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Mars Being Disarmed by Venus

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Year
  
1824

Artist
  
Jacques-Louis David

Created
  
1822–1825

Media
  
Oil paint

Medium
  
Oil on canvas

Dimensions
  
3.08 m x 2.65 m

Genre
  
History painting

Support
  
Canvas

Mars Being Disarmed by Venus arthistoryprojectcomsiteassetsfiles10915jacq

Location
  
Musées royaux des Beaux-Arts de Belgique, Brussels

Similar
  
Jacques-Louis David artwork, Oil paintings, History paintings

Mars being disarmed by venus top 5 facts


Mars Being Disarmed by Venus is the last painting produced by the French artist Jacques-Louis David. He began it in 1822 (aged 73) during his exile in Brussels and completed it three years later, before dying in an accident in 1825. He sent it to an exhibition in Paris from his exile, knowing that by then Romanticism was ascendant in the Salon. In 2007 it was displayed in the main hall of the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium in Brussels, close to the entrance.

At over 3 m (10 ft) high it is an imposing work. Set before a temple floating in the clouds, Venus the goddess of love and her followers, the three Graces and Cupid, are shown taking away the weapons, helmet, shield and armour of Mars the god of war. He allows himself to be disarmed and gives in to Venus's charms. Most of David's models for it were figures involved in the Théâtre de la Monnaie: Venus was modelled by the actress Marie Lesueur, Cupid by Lucien Petipa, Mars by a subscriber or 'abonné', and one of the Graces by the Prince of Orange's mistress.

References

Mars Being Disarmed by Venus Wikipedia