Painting painted in 1774. After its presentation in the competition for the Prix de Rome, it was recovered by David and entrusted to Michel-Jean Sedaine. In the Sedaine family, the painting then passed into the collection of the Comte de Brissay, son-in-law of Sedaine. In 1860 the House of the Emperor acquired it for 3000 francs, and it was installed at the National School of Fine Arts. The painting was restored in 1860 and 1981.[1]
The scene
Antiochus is bedridden, suffering from a sickly languor. His father, King Seleucus, is at the foot of the bed in the dark. To save his son, he called on the great physician Erasistratus.
The latter is beside him, taking his pulse: his left hand on Antiochus' wrist. The doctor asked that the women of the palace present themselves, one by one, before Antiochus. When Stratonice's turn comes, the young prince's pulse quickens, Erasistratus then raises his right hand, index finger pointing to the "cause of the disease".
Erasistratus convinced the king to give up the beautiful Stratonice to his son, and the prince recovers.[2]
^Antoine Schnapper; Arlette Sérullaz, eds. (1989). Jacques-Louis David 1748-1825: catalogue de l'exposition rétrospective Louvre-Versailles 1989-1990 (in French). Paris: Réunion des Musées nationaux. p. 54. ISBN2-7118-2326-1.
^Pierre Theil (1965). L'esprit éternel de la médecine, anthologie des écrits médicaux anciens. L'Antiquité occidentale. Vol. 1. Compagnie générale de publicité et d'édition. p. 218.