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Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

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Page 1: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

Page 2: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

Rococo

“intentional visual redundancy”

Enlightenment

Strong belief in ratonality, science, new forms of governance, epsecially democracy

Page 3: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

Rococo Style in Europe

Elegant designs and pastel color base

Frivolous, playful subjects

Curves and dainty figures

Favored by aristocratic class which were more concerned with pursuit of pleasure

Mainly developed in France in wake of death of Louis XIV

SLIDE: Germain Boffrand’s Salon de La Princesse, Hotel de Soubise, Paris. Begun 1732

Page 4: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

Jean Honore Fragonard, The Swing, 1766. Oil on canvas.

Page 5: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

This room is the setting for an ensemble of canvases by Fragonard and a remarkable group of French eighteenth-century furniture. Four of these canvases — The Pursuit, The Meeting, The Lover Crowned, and Love Letters — were commissioned in 1771 for Madame du Barry, mistress of Louis XV, and were installed in a new pavilion on the grounds of her château at Louveciennes. Upon their completion they were rejected in favor of a series commissioned from Joseph-Marie Vien.

Page 6: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas
Page 7: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

"If exclusive privileges were not granted, and if the financial system would not tend to concentrate wealth, there would be few great fortunes and no quick wealth. When the means of growing rich is divided between a greater number of citizens, wealth will also be more evenly distributed; extreme poverty and extreme wealth would be also rare."

-- Diderot

Page 8: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

Chardin, Saying Grace, 1740

Page 9: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

William Hogarth, The Marriage Contract, from “Marriage a la Mode.” 1743-45

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Page 13: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

Joseph Wright of Derby, An Experiment on a Bird in the Pump, 1768. Oil on canvas.

Page 14: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

Richard Boyle (Lord Burlington)Chiswick House1724-29

Classical Revival, England

Page 15: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

Palladio, Villa Rotunda, Vicenza. Begun 1560s

Page 16: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

J. L. David, Oath of the Horatii,

Page 17: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

J. L David, The Death of Marat1793

Page 18: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

Thomas Jefferson. In 1796, Jefferson began to build a great house for himself atop a small mountain near Charlottesville, Virginia (Monticello means "small mountain" in Italian). He continued to build and modify the house until his death in 1826. The house is an expression of the Age of Enlightenment, with such features as a built-in calendar and a greenhouse. The design is Neoclassical in style, employing elements from Greek and Roman architecture.

Page 19: Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas

Four of these canvases — The Pursuit, The Meeting, The Lover Crowned, and Love Letters — were commissioned by Madame Du Barry, mistress of Louis XV, for a new pavilion in the garden of her château at Louveciennes.

These masterpieces of rococo painting decorated the London residence of J. Pierpont Morgan before Mr. Frick acquired them.