Jean Broc

The Death of Hyacinthos, by Jean Broc. Musée Sainte-Croix, Poitiers.

Jean Broc (1771–1850) was a French neoclassical painter. His most famous work, The Death of Hyacinthos, was completed and exhibited at the Salon in 1801.[1]

Hyacinthus was a young male beauty and lover of the god Apollo. One day, while playing with a discus, Hyachinthus was struck with the object and consequently died. The painting depicts Apollo's mourning for his dead lover. Some myths link a jealous Zephyr to the incident, blaming his jealousy of Hyacinthus for a gust of wind resulting in the youth's death.

Broc studied under Jacques-Louis David and is well known for the cultivation of the intellectual group known as Les Primitifs (a.k.a., Barbus or "The Bearded Ones").

  1. ^ Meslay, Olivier (2003). "British Painting in France before 1802". The British Art Journal. 4 (2): 3–19. JSTOR 41614454.

Jean Broc

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