Includes bibliographical references (pages 253-268) and index. Bound with: The Emergence of a theatrical science of man in France, 1660–1740; and, Enlightenment Virtue, 1680-1794.
Contents:
List of illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction. Historical perspective: the peaceable kingdom of Louis XV ; The painters ; Toward a new artistic idiom -- I. Historia in stasis. Chapter 1. The action de repos. Prolegomena to the theory and practice ; Meditation, contemplation ; The dynamic body suspended ; Narrative disrupted ; Moments in the present and the future -- Chapter 2. Corporeality and repose. Fontenelle's ideal ; Corporeal conversations ; Figures of seduction ; The expression of repose ; From narrative representation to figural presentation -- II. The figure in artistic practice. Chapter 3. Figure/study/artwork ; Copying the figure ; The whole and the part ; The emergence of corporeal repose ; The new body language -- Chapter 4. The story beyond the figure. From study to subject ; Autonomous figures in painting ; Repertoires of models ; Life study and historical subject -- III. The fabrication of a new grand genre. Chapter 5. Before the painting ; The figure: from the idea to the painting ; The emergence of new creative practices ; The single body and the multiplication of bodies ; The figure: from reuse to quotation -- Chapter 6. Epilogue: on novelty in painting. Brand new beauties ; The painting of the present -- Bibliography -- Index.
Summary:
French painting of Louis XV's reign (1723-1774), generally categorized by the term rococo, has typically been understood as an artistic style aimed at furnishing courtly society with delightful images of its own frivolous pursuits. Instead, this book shows the significance and seriousness underpinning the notion of pleasure embedded in eighteenth-century history painting. During this time, pleasure became a moral ideal grounded not only in domestic life but also defining a range of social, political, and cultural transactions oriented toward transforming and improving society at large. History, painting, and the seriousness of pleasure in the age of Louis XV reconsiders the role of history painting in creating a new visual language that presented peace and happiness as an individual's natural right in the aftermath of Louis XIV's bellicose reign (1643-1715). In this new study, Susanna Caviglia reinvestigates the artistic practices of an entire generation of painters born around 1700 (e.g., François Boucher, Charles-Joseph Natoire, and Carle Vanloo) in order to highlight the cultural forces at work within their now iconic images. -- Publisher.
Series:
Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment, 0435-2866 ; 2020:02
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.