The Death of Marat: Difference between revisions
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== Context == |
== Context == |
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[[Jean-Paul Marat]] (May 24, 1743 – July 13, 1793), was a Swiss-born French physician, philosopher, political theorist and scientist best known as a radical journalist and politician from the French Revolution. |
[[Jean-Paul Marat]] (May 24, 1743 – July 13, 1793), was a [[Swiss]]-born French physician, philosopher, political theorist and scientist best known as a radical journalist and politician from the French Revolution. |
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Marat often sought the comfort of a cold bath to ease violent itchings due to a skin disease long said to have been contracted years earlier, when he was forced to hide from his enemies in the Paris sewers. |
Marat often sought the comfort of a cold bath to ease violent itchings due to a skin disease long said to have been contracted years earlier, when he was forced to hide from his enemies in the Paris sewers. |
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David was a close friend of Marat, as well as a strong supporter of [[Robespierre]] and the Jacobins. Due to his difficulty speaking (he had a benign but large facial tumor, the result of an injury sustained while fencing) he was overwhelmed by their natural capacity for convincing crowds with their speeches. Determined to memorialize his friend, David painted |
David was a close friend of Marat, as well as a strong supporter of [[Robespierre]] and the [[Jacobins]]. Due to his difficulty speaking (he had a benign but large facial tumor, the result of an injury sustained while fencing) he was overwhelmed by their natural capacity for convincing crowds with their speeches. Determined to memorialize his friend, David painted this portrait of Marat soon after his murder. David's patron requested a work matching the style of David's ''[[:File:Lepeletier-David 1.JPG|The Death of Lepeletier de Saint-Fargeau]]''. Earlier in the same year, David had completed this painting depicting the first martyr of the Revolution, a deputy murdered on [[January 20]]. The official reason for Lepeletier's death was because he voted for the death of King [[Louis XVI of France|Louis XVI]], though he was possibly also the victim of some obscure plot implicating Spain. |
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Despite the haste in which |
Despite the haste in which David painted this portrait of Marat (the work was completed and presented to the [[National Convention]] less than four months after Marat's death), it is generally considered David's best work, a definite step towards modernity, an inspiring political statement. At the time of its creation, all contemporary sources clearly indicate that the painting was not to be dissociated, neither in its exhibition nor in its evaluation, from ''The Death of Lepeletier''. The two were to function as a pair if not properly as a "diptych". Until David's death in 1825, the two paintings remained together. The unfortunate disappearance of ''The Death of Lepeletier'' prevents modern viewers from observing the ''The Death of Marat'' the way David had planned it. |
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== Style |
== Style== |
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{{Unreferenced section|date=September 2009}} |
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{{Inappropriate tone|section|date=August 2009}} |
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{{Essay|section|date=August 2009}} |
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Marat's figure appears quite idealized. For example, the painting contains no sign of his skin problems. David, however, drew other details from his visit to Marat's residence the day before the assassination: the green rug, the papers, and the pen. David promised his peers in the Natonal Convention that he would later depict their murdered friend invocatively as "''écrivant pour le bonheur du peuple''" (writing for the good of the people). ''The Death of Marat'' is designed to commemorate a personable hero. Although the name [[Charlotte Corday]] can be seen on the paper held in Marat's left hand, the assassin herself is not visible. Close inspection of this painting shows Marat at his last breath, when Corday and many others were still nearby (Corday did not try to escape). Therefore, David intended to record more than just the horror of martyrdom.<ref>{{cite book |
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| isbn = 0-521-56337-2 }}</ref> In this sense, for realistic as it is in its details, the painting, as a whole, from its start, is a methodical construction focusing on the victim, a striking set up regarded today by several critics as an "awful beautiful lie"— certainly not a photograph in the forensic scientific sense and barely the simple image it may seem (for instance, in the painting, the knife is not to be seen where Corday had left it impaled in Marat's chest, but on the ground, beside the bathtub). |
| isbn = 0-521-56337-2 }}</ref> In this sense, for realistic as it is in its details, the painting, as a whole, from its start, is a methodical construction focusing on the victim, a striking set up regarded today by several critics as an "awful beautiful lie"— certainly not a photograph in the forensic scientific sense and barely the simple image it may seem (for instance, in the painting, the knife is not to be seen where Corday had left it impaled in Marat's chest, but on the ground, beside the bathtub). |
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''The Death of Marat'' has often been compared to ''[[Michelangelo's Pietà]]''. Note the elongated arm hanging down in both works. David admired [[Caravaggio]]'s works, especially ''[[The Entombment of Christ (Caravaggio)|Entombment of Christ]]'', which mirrors ''The Death of Marat'''s drama and light. |
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First and most significantly, this painting is a portrait of the man that Charlotte Corday killed on the 13th of July. The painting as we know it has often been compared to ''[[Michelangelo's Pietà]]'' — note, in particular, the elongated arm hanging down in both works. David was also a known admirer of Caravaggio's works, especially for their composition and light, and ''[[The Entombment of Christ (Caravaggio)|Entombment of Christ]]'' (1602-1604), kept in the Vatican's Pinacotheca, is another often quoted reference. The similarities may be the result of an "unconscious mental alchemy" in the brain of an artist reputed for his extended visual culture, but they may be deliberate. That David sought, in art, to transfer the sacred qualities long associated with the monarchy and the Catholic Church to the new French Republic is indisputable — no doubt he was expected to do so by the leaders of the Terror. Consequently, he painted Marat, martyr of the Revolution, in a style reminiscent of a Christian martyr, with the face and body bathed in a soft, glowing light, but as Christian Art had done it from its beginning, he also played here with multileveled references including Classical Art, this in order, not only to respond to an immediate political event (aspect that "ate" the literature on the subject, probably due to the impact of French Revolution on occidental imagination), but as well to compete with Rome as Capital and Mother City of the Arts, the French revolutionairs being thrilled with the idea of forming a kind of new Roman Republic (a fact proved by so many of their published speeches). |
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David sought to transfer the sacred qualities long associated with the monarchy and the Catholic Church to the new French Republic. He painted Marat, martyr of the Revolution, in a style reminiscent of a Christian martyr, with the face and body bathed in a soft, glowing light. As Christian Art had done it from its beginning, David also played with multileveled references to Classical Art. Suggestions that Paris could compete with [[Rome]] as Capital and Mother City of the Arts and the idea of forming a kind of new [[Roman Republic]] appealed to French Revolutionaries, who often formed David's audience. |
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In that perspective, more models, having a Roman origin (as a student of the Academy of France, David spent many years in Rome where he made more than 1,000 drawings he later kept in 12 albums, copied from the ancient masters) possibly interfered. Quite interesting is to observe that almost all of these models (the relief of Il letto di Policletto from the Palazzo Mattei, the statue on the façade from the jesuit church ''Il Gesu'', the Giuditta with the head of Holoferne painted by Guido Reni or the copy made by Carlo Maratta, reliefs with the Death of Meleagre, etc.) were to be seen in the same Roman neighbourhood, precisely the one were David stayed at the Academy of France (which was then located in Via del Corso, close to the Campidoglio). Doing so in the long hot summer of 1793 (this heat being the reason of the rapid decay of Marat's corpse which gave so much trouble for the funeral), David actually continued a fascinating regeneration process (of the Arts and of himself) he initiated earlier in the year with his Death of Lepeletier, an image achieved in less than three months, quoting his own previous Hector from his Andromaque mourning the body of Hector (his 1783 reception work to the Academy), both images (Hector, Lepeletier) reprocessing previous works such as The Testament of Eudamidas by Poussin (the most Roman of the French painters) before 1650, and the saint Sebastien carved by Giuseppe Giorgetti before 1672 (for the basilica of San Sebastiano fuori le Mura in Rome). |
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Therefore, rarely has a painting been such a paradox, for this "multifaceted" image is simultaneously a portrait, a historical painting in the highest sense (the way David himself emphasized it in the lists he later left of his own works), a realistic image, an idealized one, a burning topical act, and a scholarly intended condensation of multiple ancient models. The key of the artistic achievement being to succeed in this "meticulous mix", this to elaborate a powerful and haunting "icon for the masses", and at the same time, to give birth to a classical gem, what David would later often summarize this way : on the one hand, a perfect mirror of its time, on the other hand, a work that any Antique viewer could have taken as a product of his own age (an ambition that will sustain everything David and many of his pupils will henceforth undertake). |
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== Later history == |
== Later history == |
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[[Image:Charlotte Corday.jpg|thumb|''Charlotte Corday'' by [[Paul Jacques Aimé Baudry]], painted 1860.]] |
[[Image:Charlotte Corday.jpg|thumb|''Charlotte Corday'' by [[Paul Jacques Aimé Baudry]], painted 1860.]] |
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[[Image:Munch death of marat I 1907.jpg|thumb|One of two versions of ''Death of Marat'' made by [[Edvard Munch]] in 1907]] |
[[Image:Munch death of marat I 1907.jpg|thumb|One of two versions of ''Death of Marat'' made by [[Edvard Munch]] in 1907]] |
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Widely admired during the Terror whose leaders ordered several copies of the original work (copies made in 1793-1794 by David's pupils to serve propaganda), ''The Death of Marat'' slowly ceased to be 'frontpage history' after Robespierre's overthrow and execution. At his request, it was returned to David in 1795, himself being prosecuted for his involvement in the Terror as a close friend of Robespierre (he would have to wait for Napoleon's rise to become prominent in the arts once more). From 1795 to David's death, the painting languished in obscurity and fell into oblivion. During David's exile in Belgium, it was hidden, somewhere in France, by Antoine Gros, David's dearest pupil. In 1826 (and later on), the family tried to sell it, with no success at all. It was rediscovered by the critics in the mid-nineteenth century, especially by [[Charles Baudelaire]] whose famous comment in 1846 became the starting point of an increased interest among artists and scholars. In the 20th century, the painting inspired several painters (among them Picasso and Munch who delivered their own versions), poets (Alessandro Mozzambani) and writers (the most famous being Peter Weiss with his play ''[[Marat/Sade]]''). |
Widely admired during the Terror whose leaders ordered several copies of the original work (copies made in 1793-1794 by David's pupils to serve propaganda), ''The Death of Marat'' slowly ceased to be 'frontpage history' after Robespierre's overthrow and execution. At his request, it was returned to David in 1795, himself being prosecuted for his involvement in the Terror as a close friend of Robespierre (he would have to wait for Napoleon's rise to become prominent in the arts once more). From 1795 to David's death, the painting languished in obscurity and fell into oblivion. During David's exile in Belgium, it was hidden, somewhere in France, by [[Antoine Gros]], David's dearest pupil. In 1826 (and later on), the family tried to sell it, with no success at all. It was rediscovered by the critics in the mid-nineteenth century, especially by [[Charles Baudelaire]] whose famous comment in 1846 became the starting point of an increased interest among artists and scholars. In the 20th century, the painting inspired several painters (among them Picasso and Munch who delivered their own versions), poets (Alessandro Mozzambani) and writers (the most famous being Peter Weiss with his play ''[[Marat/Sade]]''). |
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The original painting is currently displayed at the [[Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium|Royal Museum of Fine Arts]] in [[Brussels]], being there as a result of a decision taken by the family to offer it, in 1886, to the city where the painter had lived quietly and died in exile after the fall of Napoleon. Some of the copies (the exact number of those completed remains uncertain) made by David's pupils (among them, Serangeli and Gérard) survived, notably visible in the museums of Dijon, Reims, and Versailles. The original letter, with bloodstains and bath water marks still visible, has survived and is currently intact in the ownership of [[Robert Lindsay, 29th Earl of Crawford]].<ref>The Earl of Crawford has the largest collection of French revolutionary manuscripts in [[Scotland]]. </ref> |
The original painting is currently displayed at the [[Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium|Royal Museum of Fine Arts]] in [[Brussels]], being there as a result of a decision taken by the family to offer it, in 1886, to the city where the painter had lived quietly and died in exile after the fall of Napoleon. Some of the copies (the exact number of those completed remains uncertain) made by David's pupils (among them, Serangeli and Gérard) survived, notably visible in the museums of Dijon, Reims, and Versailles. The original letter, with bloodstains and bath water marks still visible, has survived and is currently intact in the ownership of [[Robert Lindsay, 29th Earl of Crawford]].<ref>The Earl of Crawford has the largest collection of French revolutionary manuscripts in [[Scotland]]. </ref> |
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Other artists have also depicted the death of Marat, sometimes long after the facts, whose works refer or not to David's masterpiece. Among these later works, the ''Charlotte Corday'' by [[Paul Jacques Aimé Baudry]], painted in 1860, during the [[Second French Empire|Second Empire]], when Marat's "dark legend" (the angry monster insatiably hungry for blood) was widely spread among educated people, depicts [[Charlotte Corday]] as a true heroine of France, a model of virtue for the younger generations. The versions of Picasso and Munch are less trying to refer to the original context in itself than to confront modern issues with those of David, in terms of style. |
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== Filmography == |
== Filmography == |
Revision as of 04:49, 9 December 2009
La Mort de Marat | |
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Artist | Jacques-Louis David |
Year | 1793 |
Type | oil on canvas |
Location | Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, Brussels |
The Death of Marat (Template:Lang-fr ) is a 1793 painting in the Neoclassic style by Jacques-Louis David and is one of the most famous images of the French Revolution. It is referring to the assassination of Jean-Paul Marat, killed on the 13th of July 1793 by Charlotte Corday.
Context
Jean-Paul Marat (May 24, 1743 – July 13, 1793), was a Swiss-born French physician, philosopher, political theorist and scientist best known as a radical journalist and politician from the French Revolution.
Marat often sought the comfort of a cold bath to ease violent itchings due to a skin disease long said to have been contracted years earlier, when he was forced to hide from his enemies in the Paris sewers.
David was a close friend of Marat, as well as a strong supporter of Robespierre and the Jacobins. Due to his difficulty speaking (he had a benign but large facial tumor, the result of an injury sustained while fencing) he was overwhelmed by their natural capacity for convincing crowds with their speeches. Determined to memorialize his friend, David painted this portrait of Marat soon after his murder. David's patron requested a work matching the style of David's The Death of Lepeletier de Saint-Fargeau. Earlier in the same year, David had completed this painting depicting the first martyr of the Revolution, a deputy murdered on January 20. The official reason for Lepeletier's death was because he voted for the death of King Louis XVI, though he was possibly also the victim of some obscure plot implicating Spain.
Despite the haste in which David painted this portrait of Marat (the work was completed and presented to the National Convention less than four months after Marat's death), it is generally considered David's best work, a definite step towards modernity, an inspiring political statement. At the time of its creation, all contemporary sources clearly indicate that the painting was not to be dissociated, neither in its exhibition nor in its evaluation, from The Death of Lepeletier. The two were to function as a pair if not properly as a "diptych". Until David's death in 1825, the two paintings remained together. The unfortunate disappearance of The Death of Lepeletier prevents modern viewers from observing the The Death of Marat the way David had planned it.
Style
Marat's figure appears quite idealized. For example, the painting contains no sign of his skin problems. David, however, drew other details from his visit to Marat's residence the day before the assassination: the green rug, the papers, and the pen. David promised his peers in the Natonal Convention that he would later depict their murdered friend invocatively as "écrivant pour le bonheur du peuple" (writing for the good of the people). The Death of Marat is designed to commemorate a personable hero. Although the name Charlotte Corday can be seen on the paper held in Marat's left hand, the assassin herself is not visible. Close inspection of this painting shows Marat at his last breath, when Corday and many others were still nearby (Corday did not try to escape). Therefore, David intended to record more than just the horror of martyrdom.[1] In this sense, for realistic as it is in its details, the painting, as a whole, from its start, is a methodical construction focusing on the victim, a striking set up regarded today by several critics as an "awful beautiful lie"— certainly not a photograph in the forensic scientific sense and barely the simple image it may seem (for instance, in the painting, the knife is not to be seen where Corday had left it impaled in Marat's chest, but on the ground, beside the bathtub).
The Death of Marat has often been compared to Michelangelo's Pietà. Note the elongated arm hanging down in both works. David admired Caravaggio's works, especially Entombment of Christ, which mirrors The Death of Marat's drama and light.
David sought to transfer the sacred qualities long associated with the monarchy and the Catholic Church to the new French Republic. He painted Marat, martyr of the Revolution, in a style reminiscent of a Christian martyr, with the face and body bathed in a soft, glowing light. As Christian Art had done it from its beginning, David also played with multileveled references to Classical Art. Suggestions that Paris could compete with Rome as Capital and Mother City of the Arts and the idea of forming a kind of new Roman Republic appealed to French Revolutionaries, who often formed David's audience.
Later history
Widely admired during the Terror whose leaders ordered several copies of the original work (copies made in 1793-1794 by David's pupils to serve propaganda), The Death of Marat slowly ceased to be 'frontpage history' after Robespierre's overthrow and execution. At his request, it was returned to David in 1795, himself being prosecuted for his involvement in the Terror as a close friend of Robespierre (he would have to wait for Napoleon's rise to become prominent in the arts once more). From 1795 to David's death, the painting languished in obscurity and fell into oblivion. During David's exile in Belgium, it was hidden, somewhere in France, by Antoine Gros, David's dearest pupil. In 1826 (and later on), the family tried to sell it, with no success at all. It was rediscovered by the critics in the mid-nineteenth century, especially by Charles Baudelaire whose famous comment in 1846 became the starting point of an increased interest among artists and scholars. In the 20th century, the painting inspired several painters (among them Picasso and Munch who delivered their own versions), poets (Alessandro Mozzambani) and writers (the most famous being Peter Weiss with his play Marat/Sade).
The original painting is currently displayed at the Royal Museum of Fine Arts in Brussels, being there as a result of a decision taken by the family to offer it, in 1886, to the city where the painter had lived quietly and died in exile after the fall of Napoleon. Some of the copies (the exact number of those completed remains uncertain) made by David's pupils (among them, Serangeli and Gérard) survived, notably visible in the museums of Dijon, Reims, and Versailles. The original letter, with bloodstains and bath water marks still visible, has survived and is currently intact in the ownership of Robert Lindsay, 29th Earl of Crawford.[2]
Other artists have also depicted the death of Marat, sometimes long after the facts, whose works refer or not to David's masterpiece. Among these later works, the Charlotte Corday by Paul Jacques Aimé Baudry, painted in 1860, during the Second Empire, when Marat's "dark legend" (the angry monster insatiably hungry for blood) was widely spread among educated people, depicts Charlotte Corday as a true heroine of France, a model of virtue for the younger generations. The versions of Picasso and Munch are less trying to refer to the original context in itself than to confront modern issues with those of David, in terms of style.
Filmography
- In 1897, the French Georges Hatot directed La Mort de Marat. This early silent film made for the Lumière Company is a brief single shot-scene of the assassination of the revolutionair. A remarkable aspect of the print of this film available nowadays is that it's hand coloured. Many early films were hand painted, including those by the Lumière Company.
- Danton (A. Wajda, France, 1982) - Historical drama (several scenes in David's atelier, including one showing the painting of Marat's portrait).
In popular culture
This section contains a list of miscellaneous information. (September 2009) |
- In 1986, the painting appears behind Dr. Robert (pseudonym for Robert Howard) on the Blow Monkeys' 'Animal Magic.' album. 'Animal Magic' is the second album from the British band, The Blow Monkeys by the label then known as RCA/Ariola (now BMG). Animal Magic
- The depiction appears on the paper-back cover of Victor Hugo Ninety-Three, with introduction written by Graham Robb.
- The front cover of Cold Chisels third album, East, depicts lead singer Jimmy Barnes in an identical pose, passed out with a ciggarette in his mouth.
- Marat's death scene as depicted by David is recreated in the film About Schmidt (2002) by a scene involving Jack Nicholson in an identical pose in a bathtub, letter and pen in hand. In the film, however, the character has merely dozed off.
- Death of Marat is the name of an indie rock band from Arizona. The members are bassist John Brandon, guitarist Michael Juliano, and drummer/vocalist Jef Wright. Juliano and Wright originally played together under the name Mars Observer Mission before officially adopting the Death of Marat moniker, as they said, "after the famous French Revolution painting by Jacques-Louis David".
- The painting is recreated with slight variations in the 2006 movie Land of the Blind in a scene in which Chairman Thorne is murdered while bathing. A laptop substitutes for the paper that Marat is holding in the painting.
- In 2006, the rap singer AKRO, leader of the rap band Starflam, took David's painting as model for the cover of his first solo album, « De l’encre, de la sueur et du sang », which shows him, AKRO, in a re-enactment of the scene.
- In the R.E.M. song "We Walk", a repeated lyric is "Marat's bathing," an open allusion to Jean-Paul Marat.
- The Circle takes the square song "Kill The Switch" references the painting in the chorus, "In death a noble pose, a Marat David."
- Mentioned as the title of a dessert in popular fiction novel "Sunshine" by Robin McKinley.
- South Korean novelist Kim Young-ha writes of The Death of Marat in the opening pages of I Have the Right to Destroy Myself.
- In 2007, A print of the painting is hanging on the wall of the bar where Hank and his father are having a drink. Californication: Season 1, Episode 8: "California Son"
- In 2008, the experimental band Have A Nice Life uses a zoomed in rendition of the painting, showing from the bottom half of the face to half of the written page, as an album cover.
- In 2008, The New Regime's album Coup uses a rendition of the painting as an album cover.
- In the Venezuelan soap opera "La Mujer De Judas", the serial killer La Mujer de Judas used this artwork as one of depictions for one of her victims.
- The band 'The Motion Sick' has a song called 'Jean-Paul' from five points of view concerning the assassination.
- The image depicted of Jean-Paul Marat was recreated by the NME when photoing Carl Barat (The Libertines and Dirty Pretty Things) in an article relating to Carl Barat's illness at the time of the shoot.
- In 2009, the painting is hanging in the house of a suspect in the movie The Pink Panther 2.
- In the video game "Fallout 3", there is a skeleton in the Statesman Hotel who is in a bathtub, holding a note, in the same exact position as Marat in the painting.
Footnotes
- ^ Vaughan, William (2000). Jacques-Louis David's 'Marat'. Cambridge University Press. pp. 16–17. ISBN 0-521-56337-2.
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Bibliography
- Thibaudeau, M.A., Vie de David, Bruxelles (1826)
- Delécluze, E., Louis David, son école et son temps, Paris, (1855) re-edition Macula (1983) - First-hand testimony by a pupil of David
- David, J.L., Le peintre Louis David 1748-1825. Souvenirs & Documents inédits par J.L. David son Petit-Fils, ed. Victor Havard, Paris (1880)
- Holma, Klaus, David. Son évolution, son style, Paris (1940)
- Adhémar, Jean, David. Naissance du génie d'un peintre, ed. Raoul Solar, Paris (1953)
- Bowman, F.P., 'Le culte de Marat, figure de Jésus', Le Christ romantique, ed. Droz, Genève,pp. 62 sq. (1973)
- Wildenstein, Daniel et Guy, Documents complémentaires au catalogue de l’oeuvre de Louis David, Paris, Fondation Wildenstein (1973) - fondamental source to track all influences constituting David's visual culture
- Starobinski, Jean, 1789, les emblèmes de la raison, ed. Flammarion, Paris (1979)
- Schnapper, Antoine, David témoin de son temps, ed. Office du Livre, Fribourg (1980)
- Kruft, H.-W., "An antique model for David's Marat" in The Burlington Magazine CXXV, 967 (October 1983), pp. 605-607; CXXVI, 973 (April 84)
- Traeger, Jorg, Der Tod des Marat: Revolution des menschenbildes, ed. Prestel, München (1986)
- Thévoz, Michel, Le théâtre du crime. Essai sur la peinture de David, éd. de Minuit, Paris (1989)
- Guilhaumou, J., La mort de Marat, ed. Complexe, Bruxelles (1989)
- Mortier, R., 'La mort de Marat dans l'imagerie révolutionnaire', Bulletin de la Classe des Beaux-Arts, Académie Royale de Belgique, 6ème série, tome I, 10-11 (1990), pp. 131-144
- Simon, Robert, "David’s Martyr-Portrait of Le Peletier de Saint-Fargeau and the conundrums of Revolutionary Representation" in Art History, vol.14, n°4 (December 1991), pp. 459-487
- Sérullaz, Arlette, Inventaire général des dessins. Ecole française. Dessins de Jacques-Louis David 1748-1825, Paris (1991)
- David contre David, actes du colloque au Louvre du 6-10 décembre 1989, éd. R. Michel, Paris (1993) [M. Bleyl, "Marat : du portrait à la peinture d'histoire"]
- Malvone, Laura, "L'Évènement politique en peinture. A propos du Marat de David" in Mélanges de l'Ecole française de Rome. Italie et Méditerranée, n° 106, 1 (1994)
- Pacco, M., De Vouet à David. Peintures françaises du Musée d'Art Ancien, XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles, ed. MRBAB, Bruxelles (1994)
- Hofmann, Werner, Une époque en rupture 1750-1830, Gallimard, Paris (1995)
- Crow, T., Emulation. Making artists for Revolutionary France, ed. Yale University Press, New Haven London (1995)
- Monneret, Sophie, David et le néoclassicisme, ed. Terrail, Paris (1998)
- Robespierre, edited by Colin Haydon & William Doyle, Cambridge (1999)
- Lajer-Burcharth, E., Necklines. The art of Jacques-Louis David after the Terror, ed. Yale University Press, New Haven London (1999)
- Lee, S., David, ed. Phaidon, London (1999); * Aston, Nigel, Religion and Revolution in France, 1780-1804, McMillan, London (2000)
- Jacques-Louis David’s Marat, edited by William Vaughan & Helen Weston, Cambridge (2000)
- Rosenberg, Pierre & Louis-Antoine Prat, Jacques-Louis David 1748-1825. Catalogue raisonné des dessins, 2 volumes, éd. Leonardo Arte, Milan (2002)
- Idem, Peronnet, Benjamin, « Un album inédit de David », Revue de l’Art, n°142, (2003-2004) pp. 45-83
- Coquard, Olivier, "Marat assassiné. Reconstitution abusive" in Historia Mensuel, n°691 (juillet 2004)
- Vanden Berghe, Marc & Ioana Plesca, Nouvelles perspectives sur la Mort de Marat: entre modèle jésuite et références mythologiques, Bruxelles (2004) / New perspectives for David's Death of Marat, Brussels (2004) [1]
- Idem, Lepeletier de Saint-Fargeau sur son lit de mort par Jacques Louis-David : saint Sébastien révolutionnaire, miroir multiréférencé de Rome, Brussels (2005) [2]
- Sainte-Fare Garnot, N., Jacques-Louis David 1748-1825, Paris, Ed. Chaudun (2005)
- Johnson, Dorothy, Jacques-Louis David: New Perspectives, University of Delaware Press (2006)
- Guilhaumou, Jacques, La mort de Marat (2006) [3]
- Plume de Marat - Plumes sur Marat, pour une bibliographie générale, (Chantiers Marat, vol. 9-10), Editions Pôle Nord, Bruxelles (2006)
- Angelitti, Silvana, "La Morte di Marat e la Pietà di Michelangelo" in La propaganda nella storia, sl, (sd), www.e-torricelli.it/pmm/marat/michelangelo.html [4]
- Pesce, Luigi, Marat assassinato : il tema del braccio della morte : realismo caravagesco e ars moriendi in David, s.ed., sl, (2007) [5]