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The Likeness of Truth 1

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In my recent series looking at paintings of classical deities, you might have wondered why I didn’t include any goddess of truth. Although sometimes named as Aletheia (Greek ἀλήθεια) or Roman Veritas, neither is quite the same as the personification of truth normally depicted in paintings. This is because, for much of the history of art, truth has had even greater connotations for the painter, in terms of the faithfulness and accuracy of their work. This weekend, it’s that personification which I examine, and in this first article I show a selection of paintings up to the late eighteenth century.

Truth is one of the oldest recorded themes in painting, going back to the ancient Greek painter Apelles of Kos, who flourished around 330 BCE. Rivalry between painters in Apelles’ day could become intense, and at times underhand methods were called into play. One of his rivals accused Apelles of taking part in a conspiracy against Ptolemy, one of Alexander’s generals. This almost led to Apelles’ execution, but the artist instead expressed himself in his allegorical painting of Calumny, in which an innocent youth is falsely accused by Ignorance, Envy, Treachery, and Deceit.

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Sandro Botticelli (1445–1510), Calumny of Apelles (c 1496-7), tempera on panel, 62 x 91 cm, Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence. Wikimedia Commons.

Inspired by Lucian’s detailed description of the painting, in his ekphrasis, Botticelli’s intricate Calumny of Apelles (c 1496-7) tries to reconstruct the allegory.

The youth who is the victim of the calumny is being dragged by his hair, clad only in a loincloth, with his hands pressed in prayer. On the throne at the right, perched on a dais, sits Midas, with ass’s ears, extending his right hand towards the distant figure of Slander. On either side of Midas are Ignorance and Suspicion, speaking simultaneously in those ears.

Slander is shown as a beautiful woman, holding a blazing torch in her left hand, and the accused’s hair in her right. At her left, between Slander and Midas, is Envy, who reaches his left hand out towards Midas’ eyes. The two women attending Slander are Fraud and Conspiracy. To the left is Repentance, dressed in deep mourning, her clothing in tatters. She glances back at the naked Truth, who looks up to the gods.

In more modern painting, Truth has a different appearance which is based on a family of classical proverbs, which refer to her being at the bottom of well, having been put there or even killed by liars and lies.

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Annibale Carracci (1560–1609), An Allegory of Truth and Time (1584), oil on canvas, 130 x 169.6 cm, Royal Collection of the United Kingdom, England. Wikimedia Commons.

Annibale Carracci’s Allegory of Truth and Time from 1584 is one of the earliest paintings to follow this proverbial line. The winged Father Time lacks the scythe which became his most frequent attribute, and is here putting his shoulder to Truth to raise her from the well. She’s clutching a mirror in her right hand.

Trampled under the feet of Truth is the strangely chimeral two-faced figure of Deceit. The two figures framing the image are more controversial: the official identification gives them as Good Luck or Happiness on the left, and Happy Ending on the right. That on the left bears a winged caduceus and a cornucopia (horn of plenty), which is an unusual combination which may allude to good health as well as abundant food. That on the right is scattering Spring flowers, which might relate her to Flora.

There doesn’t appear to be any visual precedent to Carracci’s image, which must therefore be the presumptive start of Truth’s painted mythography. Interestingly, the first recorded occurrence of the phrase the naked truth is in the year after Carracci’s painting (1585).

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Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640), The Triumph of Truth (from the Medici Cycle) (1622-25), oil on canvas, 394 x 160 cm, Musée du Louvre, Paris. Wikimedia Commons.

Later paintings of Time saving Truth aren’t uncommon: this is Peter Paul Rubens’ The Triumph of Truth, painted as part of his Medici Cycle, between 1622-25. But the mirror and well are missing.

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Nicolas Poussin (1594–1665), Time Defending Truth against the Attacks of Envy and Discord (1641), oil on canvas, diam 297 cm, Musée du Louvre, Paris. Wikimedia Commons.

Nicolas Poussin’s later tondo Time Defending Truth against the Attacks of Envy and Discord (1641) puts Father Time at its centre, with a firm grip around Truth’s waist, while Envy and Discord sit below them. On this occasion Time doesn’t have a hand free for his other attribute, an hour-glass.

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Charles Le Brun (1619–1690), Venus Clipping Cupid’s Wings (c 1655), oil on canvas, 116.2 × 104.2 cm, Museo de Arte de Ponce, Ponce, Puerto Rico. Wikimedia Commons.

In about 1655, Charles Le Brun painted this more lighthearted tondo showing Venus Clipping Cupid’s Wings. Truth is at the back, where she has emerged from her well at the left, and holds an eternal flame, a combination which was to become more widely known in the Statue of Liberty.

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François Lemoyne (1688–1737), Time Saving Truth from Falsehood and Envy (1737), oil, dimensions not known, Wallace Collection, London. Wikimedia Commons.

François Lemoyne (1688–1737) was a brilliant, highly accomplished and successful Rococo painter who suddenly committed suicide on 4 June 1737, when he was only 39. For reasons which remain obscure, the day after he finished painting Time Saving Truth from Falsehood and Envy (1737) for a friend and patron, Lemoyne stabbed himself in the chest and throat nine times before he collapsed and died.

Lemoyne’s Truth has no mirror, and is being borne aloft by winged Father Time, who holds his scythe in the other hand. Behind them is the unmistakable marble lip of a well, from which she has presumably emerged, only to be confronted by Falsehood and Envy, whose personification Time is pushing to the ground.

Tomorrow, I’ll show what became of Truth in the nineteenth century.


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