Associated Press Writer
WILLIAMSTOWN, MASS. (AP) - His horse is wild-eyed and muscular, a
gallant force galloping toward a mountain top as soldiers in the
background push a cannon alongside a rocky ledge.
But the horseman himself is a study in calm. His right hand is
stretched above the horse's mane and his smooth face looks
confident. A golden-sheathed sword dangles along-side his
impeccable uniform.
He is Napoleon Bonaparte, framed by the painter Jacques-Louis
David in a scene that reinterprets the general crossing the Alps
to invade Italy.
The painting was commissioned by the king of Spain, who thought a
flattering portrait would curry enough favor to keep Napoleon
from taking over his country.
"Bonaparte Crossing the Alps'' was a nice gesture, but it didn't
work. Napoleon, who later would crown himself emperor, soon
crossed the Pyrenees and conquered Spain.
"Empire to Exile,'' an exhibit of David's work at the Clark Art
Institute, traces Napoleon's rise from general to emperor in the
early Nineteenth Century and ends with the painter's work that
was done when he left France.
It's a collection of both stunning artwork and political
propaganda. Take, for instance, "Bonaparte Crossing the Alps.''
Despite its overwhelming majesty and the details David painted
into the general and his stallion, the painter had a few things
off.
For one, the portrait doesn't really look like Napoleon.
And the general actually traversed the Alps on the back of a
mule, not a fiery steed.
"He wasn't trying to capture historical accuracy as much as he
was concentrating on painting Napoleon as a conquering hero,''
said Michael Cassin, the Clark's curator of education.
David's political and artistic careers had long been intertwined.
Active in the French Revolution, he was frequently commissioned
to design banners for revolutionary parades and create paintings
to inspire the political upheaval.
But his revolutionary commitment landed him more than
commissions. He was imprisoned for a year in 1794, and took
advantage of the time to try reasserting himself as a painter.
In a self portrait he painted while in jail, David - who hides an
embarrassing facial tumor - is clutching a paintbrush and
palette, as if defining himself as an artist instead of a
politico.
Still, France - and more important, Napoleon - recognized him as
both. He left prison as one of Europe's leading artists, and when
Napoleon became emperor, he gave David the title of First
Painter.
The neoclassical works he began churning out soon influenced
French society and style. The designs he used to paint his
subjects' clothing and their surroundings were soon copied by
furniture makers and clothing designers.
"When Napoleon became emperor, David became a kind of visual
czar,'' Cassin said. "He was not only the person who recorded
Napoleon's victories, he also created the visualization of
everything to do with Napoleon's style.''
Within years of giving himself the title of emperor, Napoleon's
image moved from warrior to statesman.
"Napoleon in His Study at the Tuileries,'' which was commissioned
in 1811 by a Scottish nobleman, still shows Napoleon as a
military man.
He's clad in a dress uniform as his sword is cradled in a chair,
still within easy reach. But just as noticeable as his weapon is,
there is a draft of the Code Napoleon, which became the
cornerstone of French law.
A clock behind him shows the time at almost quarter past four,
and the candles in the rooms are burned down to the last of their
wax.
Within a few years, France would be invaded by a new European
alliance, and Napoleon was exiled to the island of Elba. He
returned to France in 1815, but went into exile again after his
defeat at Waterloo at the hands of the British general
Wellington.
After Napoleon's fall, David moved to Brussels, where he began
painting portraits of fellow exiles.
While some of his subjects still proudly wear their French
uniforms, the paintings are more austere than David's earlier
works. He seems to meet his subjects eye-to-eye, many of their
gazes staring straight off the canvas.
David also spent his later years painting mythological scenes,
sometimes using his new political contacts as his models.
In "Cupid and Psyche,'' he had the son of an American diplomat to
pose as a nude, winged Cupid awkwardly leaving a bed he shared
with Psyche.
The painting offended some critics who were put off by David's
depiction of Cupid as a gangly teenager coupled with placid and
serene lover.
But David's work, although not traditional, captures the essence
of Cupid's representation of love's physical side, while his
Psyche embodies love's emotional aspect.
Like his interpretation of Napoleon about to invade Italy, David
also took liberties at delivering the stories in his later works.
"He's like a contemporary moviemaker who rethinks an old story
and puts a new twist on it,'' Cassin said.