This book draws a novel triangular connection between practices of drawing, questions of posture and notions of figural agency-carefully recreating Jacques-Louis David's crafting of the human figure. Based on comprehensive research in David's rarely seen drawing notebooks, it shows how understudied procedures, such as tracings, reversals, collages, grids, and revolving sketchbooks, are highly significant for his final artworks, affecting both the structure and meaning of his historical canvases. The changing conditions under which David worked-before the French Revolution, upon release from imprisonment, and as Napoleon's First Painter-are centered here to examine notions of autonomy and activity in four of his most well-known pictures.
Forming new connections between stance and consciousness-of the artist working in his studio, the figures acting within the painting, and the political actions they represent-Mayer shows how paintings subconsciously reflect the history of their own making. Thus, her study examines the archetypical and best-known neoclassical painter in France from a different perspective, one that looks behind the finished painted surfaces and into his diversified preparatory methods. Her book offers a new view of David's drawing as a rich, dispersed, and sometimes contradictory process, where new modes of figuration are linked to questions of artistic autonomy and historical agency in times of political agitation.
| ISBN: | 9781836245711 |
| Publication date: | 10th March 2026 |
| Author: | Tamar Mayer, Jacques Louis David |
| Publisher: | Voltaire Foundation an imprint of Liverpool University Press |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Pagination: | 366 pages |
| Series: | Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment |
| Genres: |
Paintings and painting History of ideas European history: Reformation Literary studies: c 1600 to c 1800 Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900 Drawing and drawings Archaeological theory Architecture |
This book draws a novel triangular connection between practices of drawing, questions of posture and notions of figural agency-carefully recreating Jacques-Louis David's crafting of the human figure. Based on comprehensive research in David's rarely seen drawing notebooks, it shows how understudied procedures, such as tracings, reversals, collages, grids, and revolving sketchbooks, are highly significant for his final artworks, affecting both the structure and meaning of his historical canvases. The changing conditions under which David worked-before the French Revolution, upon release from imprisonment, and as Napoleon's First Painter-are centered here to examine notions of autonomy and activity in four of his most well-known pictures.
Forming new connections between stance and consciousness-of the artist working in his studio, the figures acting within the painting, and the political actions they represent-Mayer shows how paintings subconsciously reflect the history of their own making. Thus, her study examines the archetypical and best-known neoclassical painter in France from a different perspective, one that looks behind the finished painted surfaces and into his diversified preparatory methods. Her book offers a new view of David's drawing as a rich, dispersed, and sometimes contradictory process, where new modes of figuration are linked to questions of artistic autonomy and historical agency in times of political agitation.
Jacques-Louis David's Drawings features in the following genres: Paintings and painting, History of ideas, European history: Reformation, Literary studies: c 1600 to c 1800, Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900, Drawing and drawings, Archaeological theory, Architecture
Jacques-Louis David's Drawings is available in Paperback
Jacques-Louis David's Drawings was written by Tamar Mayer, Jacques Louis David and published by Voltaire Foundation an imprint of Liverpool University Press
Jacques-Louis David's Drawings has 366 pages
Yes it is part of Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment series
£76.50