Thursday, 14 December 2023

Philippe Borde on David (new book)

 Philippe Bordes's latest book, Jacques Louis David, la traite négrière et l'esclavage. Son séjour à Nantes, mars-avril 1790  is published on December 7th ( in the"Passerelles" collection, Éditions de la MSH), with full text is available on Open Edition Books.


The book is a detailed study of David's sketch for an Allegory of the Revolution in Nantes, now in the collection of the Musée d'Arts in Nantes.


"From his trip to Nantes in the spring of 1790, Jacques Louis David brought back a vast allegorical composition, inspired by the revolutionary spirit that had already taken root in the port city. The present essay offers a close analysis of this work, highlighting the fact that, during his stay in France's first slave port, the painter was inevitably confronted with the reality of the slave trade. By deciphering the iconographic polysemy of his drawing, Philippe Bordes sees it as a metaphor for the slavery - or more precisely, Black-White slavery, in both the colonial and metropolitan sense - that David wanted to deploy there. He links this composition to the influence of his Parisian entourage, which included several members of the Société des Amis des Noirs, and to the lively debates on the abolition of the slave trade within and outside the Assemblée Nationale. The renewed story of David's stay in Nantes is thus revealed as the moment when this giant of painting entered the Revolution as both citizen and artist."  Jacques Louis David, la traite négrière et l'esclavage | FMSH

Here is Philippe Bordes talking about David in a lecture of June 11, 2017, delivered in conjunction with the exhibition America Collects Eighteenth-Century French Painting at the National Gallery of Art, Washington:  When No One Liked Jacques Louis David (nga.gov)

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