Hexagram 49: Ge -

Revolution
Fine Art
Jacques-Louis David — The Death of Marat

Jacques-Louis David — The Death of Marat

Jacques-Louis David (1793)

David painted this Neoclassical work commemorating journalist and radical deputy Jean-Paul Marat, assassinated in his medicinal bath during the French Revolution's Reign of Terror. The painting depicts violent political transformation, showing Marat moments after death with the assassin's knife on the floor, connecting to Revolution's theme of sudden, decisive change in the social order.

Practical Integration

David paints a martyr's death as political icon. In his 1793 Neoclassical work, journalist Jean-Paul Marat slumps in his medicinal bath, assassinated knife on the floor, letter still clutched in his hand. Charlotte Corday stabbed him three days into the Reign of Terror, transforming personal murder into revolutionary symbol. The composition strips away chaos to reveal stark geometry—white cloth, green bath wrap, wooden crate as writing desk. David memorializes the moment when violence ruptures the old social order. This is Gé (革), the Chinese hexagram of Revolution. The character originally meant animal hide tanned and processed—skin transformed through fire and treatment into something new. Ancient diviners saw this configuration when Lake (Dui) sits above Fire (Li): water and flame cannot coexist peacefully, yet their conflict drives transformation. Marat's bath literalizes this image—water meant to soothe his diseased skin becomes the site where fire (political fury) extinguishes his life, even as his death ignites revolutionary fervor. David painted this Neoclassical work commemorating journalist and radical deputy Jean-Paul Marat, assassinated in his medicinal bath during the French Revolution's Reign of Terror. The painting depicts violent political transformation, showing Marat moments after death with the assassin's knife on the floor, connecting to Revolution's theme of sudden, decisive change in the social order. The Judgment text speaks to David's painting directly: \"Revolution. On your own day you are believed. Supreme success, furthering through perseverance.\" Marat died July 13, 1793. Within weeks, David had transformed him into revolutionary saint. The painting appeared at the National Convention that autumn, establishing the visual vocabulary for martyrdom that would sustain the Republic. Zhou Dynasty diviners consulted this hexagram during dynastic transitions, when heaven's mandate shifted from exhausted rulers to vigorous successors. The text promises that revolution succeeds not through chaos but through proper timing—when the old form has truly decayed beyond repair. The Image Text declares: \"Fire in the lake: the image of Revolution. Thus the superior man regulates the calendar and clarifies the seasons.\" After toppling the monarchy, French revolutionaries abolished the Gregorian calendar, replacing saints' days with rational decimal time. David's painting participates in this temporal revolution—Marat becomes not merely dead but eternally dying, frozen in the revolutionary present. In the I-Ching sequence, Revolution follows The Well: after drawing on timeless sources, radical transformation becomes possible. The old skin must be shed completely.

References & Citations

  1. The Death of Marat — Jacques-Louis David-1793. David painted this Neoclassical work commemorating journalist and radical deputy Jean-Paul Marat, assassinated in his medicinal bath during the French Revolution's Reign of Terror. The painting depicts violent political transformation, showing Marat moments after death with the assassin's knife on the floor, connecting to Revolution's theme of sudden, decisive change in the social order.

The Judgment

Revolution. On your own day you are believed. Supreme success, furthering through perseverance. Remorse disappears. Revolutionary change must be undertaken at the right moment—not too early, when the old still functions, and not too late, when decay has set in. Bowie's timing was precise: 1972, when the counterculture had exhausted itself but no new form had crystallized. Ziggy arrived exactly when the culture needed permission to molt. The judgment says 'on your own day you are believed'—meaning the revolution succeeds not through argument but through demonstration. Bowie didn't convince anyone that identity was moltable; he showed them by doing it. Supreme success comes not from overthrowing the old, but from making the new so vivid that the old becomes irrelevant.

seasonal change
complete
the this
nǎiand
believe(f)
yuánfirst-rate
hēngfulfillment
is worth
zhēnpersistence
huǐregret(s)
wángwill pass

The Image

Fire in the lake: the image of Revolution. Thus the superior man sets the calendar in order and makes the seasons clear. Fire in the lake creates steam—the visible sign of transformation. The image instructs: make time itself visible, clarify the seasons of change. Bowie's genius was making transformation theatrical, turning the internal molting into public spectacle so others could recognize their own season of change. The superior man doesn't hide the revolution; he performs it clearly so others can read the signs. Ziggy on stage was the calendar made visible: this is the season of molting, this is the day you can become something else. The clarity of the performance—the makeup, the costume, the alien narrative—made the abstract concept of identity-transformation into something concrete enough to imitate.

the lake
zhōngwithin
yǒuis
huǒthe fire
seasonal change
jūnthe noble
young one
accordingly
zhìorganizes
the calendar(s)
míngand
shíthe time

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1鞏用黃牛之革

gǒngbound
yòngusing
huángyellow
niúcow
zhī...'s
rawhide

Line 2巳日乃革之征吉無咎

complete
the this
nǎiand
the change
zhīhas arrive(al)
zhēngto expedite
is promising
no
jiùblame

Line 3征凶貞厲革言三就有孚

zhēngto expedite
xiōngis ill-omened
zhēnpersistence
is difficult
of change
yánwhen talk
sānthree times
jiùhas
yǒuthen be
confident

Line 4悔亡有孚改命吉

huǐregret(s)
wángpass
yǒube
confident
gǎichange
mìngthe mandate
promising

Line 5大人虎變未占有孚

the mature
rénhuman being
tiger(-like)
biàntransformation
wèieven before
zhāndivining
yǒube
confident

Line 6君子豹變小人革面征凶居貞吉

jūnthe noble
young one
bàopanther
biàntransformation
xiǎothe lesser
rénpeople
merely change
miànleather masks
zhēngto expedite
xiōngis ill-omened
to practice
zhēnpersistence
is promising

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

In the Zhou Dynasty, 革 (gé) originally depicted animal hide being tanned—the transformation of dead skin into something useful and new. The oracle bone form shows the hide stretched between poles, changing state. Fire over Lake: the trigrams show transformation through elemental conflict. Fire heats water until it must change form. Revolution occurs not through destruction but through reaching the point where the old vessel can no longer contain what's inside.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

革 was consulted when the old order had exhausted itself—not through corruption, but through completion. Dynastic change, personal transformation, the moment when continuation becomes impossible and molting becomes necessary. The character's meaning evolved from 'tanned hide' to 'revolution' because both involve the same process: taking what was and making it into what must be.

Character Analysis

革 combines 革 (leather/hide) with the radical for 'self' (己). The etymology is explicit: revolution is the self shedding its skin. Not the destruction of identity, but its transformation. Fire (離) above Lake (兌): joy beneath, clarity above. The revolution isn't grim—it's the relief of finally becoming what you've always been beneath the old skin.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Fire (離 Lí)

Upper Trigram

Lake (兌 Duì)

Binary

101110

Energy State

Lake over Fire creates steam—transformation through elemental conflict. Water heated until it must change state. The old form becomes untenable; the new form emerges not through force but through natural law. Revolutionary change that feels inevitable in retrospect.

Trigram Symbolism

☱ Lake (兌 Duì): Joy, openness, what is expressed ☲ Fire (離 Lí): Clarity, illumination, what is seen Lake above Fire: the performance illuminates what was always hidden beneath the surface. Joy (Lake) rises as steam (Fire's transformation of water). The revolution is joyful because it's the relief of finally becoming visible.

For the classical Wilhelm translation and line-by-line commentary, see Wilhelm Translation.