
Self-Sacrifice of Marcus Curtius
Hans Baldung Grien·1530
Historical Context
Baldung's Self-Sacrifice of Marcus Curtius from 1530 depicts the Roman legend of the young nobleman who leaped into an abyss that had opened in the Roman Forum, sacrificing himself to fulfill an oracle's requirement that Rome's most precious possession be cast into the chasm. The subject combined Roman heroism, self-sacrifice, and the spectacular visual drama of horse and rider plunging into an abyss—elements that suited Baldung's interest in subjects of violent dramatic action and his characteristic approach to the human figure in extremis. Classical Roman subjects of heroic self-sacrifice had particular resonance in the early Reformation period when civic and religious virtue were intensely discussed, and Baldung's secular mythology responded to the humanist culture of Strasbourg's educated elite. The equestrian subject also demonstrated his mastery of the horse in motion that was a standard test of academic figure painting.
Technical Analysis
The dramatic action of the leap is rendered with Baldung's characteristic energy and bold compositional sense.
Look Closer
- ◆The horse rearing at the abyss's edge is painted with visible anatomical study—muscular shoulder.
- ◆Baldung's acid palette—bright yellow, vivid red—makes the scene lurid and intense rather than.
- ◆The crowd of Roman onlookers fills the upper left in compressed space, a mass of helmets and.
- ◆The gaping chasm that Marcus rides into is rendered as pure darkness—no depth, no bottom—making.


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