If You Like Joseph Ducreux, You'll Love Democritus the Laughing Philosopher

What do you mean I’m funny? Funny how?

By Google Arts & Culture

Portrait of the Artist with a Mocking Face (18th Century) by Joseph Ducreux (1735-1802), Paris, musée du LouvreOriginal Source: Paris, musée du Louvre

Joseph Ducreux

Joseph Ducreux was a French nobleman, a portrait painter, and engraver who worked at the court of King Louis XVI of France. During his life, he was famed for his miniature portraits and for making the last painting of the king prior to his execution.

But Ducreux found fame again, over two hundred years later when his Portrait de l'artiste sous les traits d'un moqueur became a popular Internet meme. The image was often overlaid with text that rewrote rap lyrics in verbose, archaic terms.

It's easy to see why modern people found Ducreux' artwork funny - it's not what you expect of 18th-century artists. Most portraits of the era depicted their subject with a degree of decorum: standing, sitting at a desk, or perhaps riding a horse. Ducreux' painting is… unusual.

Ducreux was fascinating by physiognomy and produced many unconventional portraits. But he wasn't the only artist in history to create weird or even deliberately ugly art. In the 17th Century, Dutch artists invented the tronie, a kind of comedy portrait.

Democritus (1630) by Johannes MoreelseCentraal Museum

Johannes Moreelse

In 1630, Johannes Moreelse painted this work, known today as Democritus, The Laughing Philosopher. Like Ducreux, Moreelse was clearly fascinated by the faces and manners of humans.

Democritus was an ancient Greek philosopher who is best known for developing a theory of atoms. He was known as the 'Laughing Philosopher' because he mocked the futile ambitions of humans.

Here, he's depicted as a contemporary Dutch scientist surrounded by symbols of knowledge: the books, the candle, and the globe.

Democritus was a popular subject around 1630. Hendrick ter Brugghen painted him in 1628, Rembrandt painted a picture of him in 1628-9, and in 1630 he was painted by Diego Velázquez and twice by Moreelse.

Democritus (1628) by Brugghen, Hendrick terRijksmuseum

Hendrick ter Brugghen

Democritus (17th Century) by Diego Velazquez (1599-1660), Rouen, Beaux-arts museumOriginal Source: Rouen, musée des Beaux-Arts

Diego Velázquez

Democritus, the Laughing Philosopher (c. 1630) by Moreelse, JohannesMauritshuis

Johannes Moreelse

Democritus (1630) by Johannes MoreelseCentraal Museum

By painting Democritus, artists could indulge their passion for painting unusual poses and expressions, but still give their work a veneer of respectability. What better to hang on your wall, than a funny painting of an respected philosopher?

Heraclitus (1630) by Johannes MoreelseCentraal Museum

If you found Johannes Moreelse's Democritus interesting, why not take a look at his other work, including this portrait of Heraclitus, known as 'The Weeping Philosopher'. A rival of Democritus, the two thinkers were often depicted together in intriguing compositions.

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The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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