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A triumphal march with a man holding a large head on a pike with trumpeters ahead of him. All around are cheering groups of people in bright clothing.
A triumphal march with a man holding a large head on a pike with trumpeters ahead of him. All around are cheering groups of people in bright clothing.
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The Triumph of David

by Nicolas Poussin

Date: c.1631-3

Currently on display

in Room 11

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Item details
  • Acquisition

    Bourgeois Bequest, 1811

  • Accession number

    DPG236

  • Artist

    Nicolas Poussin

  • Date

    c.1631-3

  • Dimensions

    118.4 x 148.3 cm

  • Materials

    Oil on canvas

  • Notes

    Adopted by an anonymous donor, 2001

One of the earliest masterpieces by the French artist Nicolas Poussin (1594-1665), this painting captures David’s triumphal entry into Jerusalem after defeating the Philistines’ champion Goliath. In this story told in the Bible’s Old Testament Book of Samuel, the young shepherd boy David outwitted the eight-foot giant Goliath by striking his forehead with a well-aimed stone shot from his sling. The cheering crowd that meets David upon his return is almost audible and provides the artist with the opportunity to explore the theatrical language of human gesture from numerous angles. This ranges from the solemn thanksgiving of an old man and the joyful abandon of young women with their arms held high, to the incomprehension of small children as they nestle and play in their mothers' arms. 

An X-ray taken of the canvas showed that Poussin reworked the composition several times during the course of the painting’s production, both in the background architecture and in the foreground figures, before finally settling on this arrangement.  

A triumphal march with a man holding a large head on a pike with trumpeters ahead of him. All around are cheering groups of people in bright clothing.

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