| Support Type: | Canvas |
| Paint Type: | Oil Paint |
| Current Location: | Louvre Museum, Paris |
Drouais was an exceptional artist. Though he lived a very short life, he created art much better than many Neoclassical artists of that time. Two years before his death, in 1786, he created Marius at Minturo, just at the bare age of 22~23. He possessed a gift of art to forge weapons hard and sharp, figures defined and expressive. This painting is the perfect example of that. Gaius Marcius was an adored and respected general. But when he was defeated by his rival Sulla, he was taken prisoner to Minturnae in 89 BCE. He was sentenced to death. When a soldier was sent to execute Marius, we see him agitated, offended and wounded with pride behind that ego-induced rage. We see him challenge the soldier. We feel it says, “Try to kill me, I dare you.” The soldier who is well aware of Marius’ merit and position and valour recoils in fear, moral dilemma, and a heroic intensity that makes him cower to raise his sword. Marius, in comparison, is lounging, clearly agitated but not enough to actually fight the soldier. This goes to show the sublimity of his presence and how he was also keenly aware of it. The dark background helps in highlighting Marius as this untouchable warrior and the soldier, not even half of what he is; yet he has been given with the duty of killing him. It’s rhetorical and comical in the saddest way possible. To kill the one you dreamed of being like one day.
Sources:
Loading Interpretations....