the artistic soup of the 1700s 1700s--rococo, salon, neo-classical, sturm und drang 100 years of...
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The Artistic Soup of the 1700s1700s--Rococo, Salon, Neo-Classical, Sturm und Drang
100 years of conflicting styles
From the frills of the Rococo --- to the solidity of the Revolutions
Mme Pompadour, Louis XV’s mistress
Greenough, Washington
Rococo (1730-80)-Louis XV and XVI
expresses beauty for beauty’s sake…the label is made during the 19th century, French for “little rock” and “shell,”
motifs of rococo decoration
Boucher’s Toilet of Venus, 1751displays the ideal woman,feminine charm in its lightest moments.Mme Pompadour commissioned the work for her chambers.
Fragonard---The Swing, 1767
Can you find the delicate pink slipper? The whispering statue? The clueless boyfriend? The amorous suitor?
After the Sun King’s (Louis XIV) reign is over in 1715, wealth is spread to the aristocracy
Marie Antoinette and her Children, 1789
in the year of the French Revolution,made Marie Antoinette
look motherly. Painted shortly before the queen’s imprisonment and
beheading.Child points to an empty cradle.
Women join the ranks of the elite….salon leaders and academic
painters
Elisabeth Vigee-Lebrun1755-1842
held out for the aristocracy
Say you want a
revolution…France and the U.S. explode1789 and 1776
Paris Women Marching to Versailles, engraving, 1789
Libya rebels, 2011
Chardin, Soap Bubbles, 1733revolution breeds morality and idealism of the everyday man
•Life is fleeting and fragile…•Brings up the still sense of Dutch bourgeoisie paintings•A reaction against the frills of rococo•DC’s National Gallery has one of three versions
Jean Jacques Rousseau, philospher of the French Revolution, condemns: "moral or political inequality, which consists of the different privileges which some men enjoy to the prejudice of others, such as that of being more rich, more honored, more powerful."
Jacques Louis David (1748-1825)becomes the painter of the French Revolution
as well as the Neo-Classical Period’s leading academic artist
a moralist with a message Heroic, academic,balanced composition
Oath of the Horatii, 1784What “threes” do you see?
Lictors Bringing Back to Brutusthe Bodies of His Sons, 1789Brutus appears in the shadows…What is David warning about?
How do we express the
heroic ?Nazi poster from the 1930s“Long live Germany” Edmonia Lewis
Forever Free, 1867Displays the complexity of freedom for African Americans after the Civil War.Currently housed at Howard University
…how do we reflect struggle?
What is the fine line between heroism and propaganda?
Ignorance=Fear, Keith Haring, 1989
What are components of courage?
DAVID, Death of Marat, 1793
• Marat is killed by Charlotte Corday who felt that he was leading the revolution with excessive bloodiness
• Painting is made in same year that Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette are guillotined
• Marat is in a bath due to a crippling skin disease
• Note that Marat clutches says that Corday is taking Marat’s life due to her suffering: “I am just too unhappy to deserve your kindness.”
• Marat becomes instant martyr for the cause—wound is displayed at funeral
HOUDON, Ben Franklin, 1779
• Houdon was a fellow Freemason, as were Voltaire, Mozart, Haydn, Jefferson and our founding fathers
• Franklin’s wigless image created a stir in France
Voltaire
Masonic symbol of the unfinished pyramid and the all seeing eye
The Demons of
Sturm und Drang 1760-1800
Fuseli, The Nightmare, 1781
•“Storm and Stress”•Germanic literature, art and music movement•Subjective and emotional•Our inner self rules•Rebellion against the rational revolutionary movement•Early Romanticism•Goethe, 1749-1832•“real” = painful, confllicted
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