The Fight Between Mars and Minerva

Jacques-Louis David · PD

The Fight Between Mars and Minerva


Details

Year
1771
Medium
oil paint
Type
painting
Dimensions
114 × 140 cm

The story

David painted this in 1771 as a 22-year-old student competing for the Prix de Rome, the prize that sent its winner to Italy on the state's money. That year the eight contestants were shut in their studios and given ten weeks to paint a scene from Homer's Iliad. David chose the moment when Minerva, goddess of wisdom and backer of the Greeks, overpowers Mars, the war god siding with Troy. Mars topples backward while Venus reaches in from a pink cloud to catch him. David lost. The prize went to a rival, and he would fail twice more before finally winning the Rome scholarship in 1774.

The Fight Between Mars and Minerva — Jacques-Louis David — MuseScope