Reminders: - Art History Teaching Resources



Chapter 29: 18th Century Art in Europe and the Americas

Major Developments

Historical Background

• Europe started the 18th century in a semi-feudal state

• Economic and political power was centrally-based

• Aristocratic class held most of the power

• By the end, industrial manufacturing would shift the economic paradigm

• The Enlightenment pushed thinkers to improve the institutions of mankind; enlightenment thinking saw nature as both rational and good; observation of natural laws could lead to happiness for mankind.

• We’ll see the effects of the Enlightenment in paintings of science, and in the order and rationality of neo-classical painting, a reaction against the frivolity of Rococo and a response to social upheavals across Europe in this century.

The Rococo Style

Define Rococo:

Rococo Style emerges in Europe during the 18th century, leading on from the Baroque

What was the Baroque? What was Rococo?

• The Baroque is a period of artistic style that used exaggerated motion and clear, easily interpreted detail to produce drama, tension, exuberance, and grandeur in sculpture, painting, architecture, literature, dance, and music. The style started around 1600 in Rome, Italy and spread to most of Europe

• The popularity and success of the Baroque style was encouraged by the Roman Catholic Church, which had decided in response to the Protestant Reformation (drastically simplified art) that the arts should communicate religious themes in direct and emotional involvement.

• The aristocracy also saw the dramatic style of Baroque architecture and art as a means of impressing visitors and expressing triumphant power and control. {SEE BERNINI AND CARAVAGGIO]

Definition of Rococo:

• Follows the end of the Baroque period at the end of the 17th century and lasts across Europe until the revolutions at the end of the 18th century;

• Is in existence even as “Enlightenment reason” is born – duality of aristocratic taste and the fermentation of a “democratic, scientific, rational” style

• Perhaps comes from Portugese barroco – irregularly shaped pearl; French rocaille – shell or rock ornament used in gardens;

• Charaterized by 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 the death of Louis XIV in 1715.

• Fête galante paintings (see: Watteau) are an important part of the rococo period of art, which saw the focus of European arts move away from the hierarchical, standardized grandeur of the church and royal court and toward an appreciation for intimacy and personal pleasures.

INTENTIONAL VISUAL REDUNDANCY; LOTS OF GOLD, STUCCO AND DECORATION; AN EXTENSION OF THE BAROQUE.

Define Enlightenment:

• The Enlightenment was loosely characterized as a set of values that came to prominence during the 18th century and bolstered various revolutions and shifts in social governance across Europe and America

• It was not so much a cohesive movement, but rather at its core was a critical questioning of traditional institutions, customs, and morals, and the emergence of a strong belief in rationality and science.

• Originating about 1650 to 1700, it was sparked by philosophers Baruch Spinoza (1632–1677), John Locke (1632–1704), Pierre Bayle (1647–1706), physicist Isaac Newton (1643–1727), and philosopher Voltaire (1694–1778).

• The Enlightenment pushed thinkers to improve the institutions of mankind and to criticize undemocratic forms of rule; enlightenment thinking saw nature as both rational and good; observation of natural laws rather than blindly obeying religious ones. Meritocracy (to a certain extent – based on those privileged enough to have an education).

• We’ll see the effects of the Enlightenment in paintings: of science, and in the order and rationality of neo-classical painting, a reaction against the frivolity of Rococo and a response to social upheavals across Europe in this century.

How are the Rococo and Enlightenment connected?

Enlightenment was based in the salons of the aristocrats and often funded by them in part (Catherine the Great of Russia supported Voltaire and Diderot), even while its writers and philosophers argued against indulging the tastes of the rich.

Other developments of this period:

• Italy and its Classical Revival emerges, this classical revival spreads across Europe, along with the notion of The Grand Tour (Slide: Pompeo Batoni, Lord Thomas Dundas, 1764).

• Pompeii and Herculaneum are uncovered in 1748 and 1738 respectively

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

After the death of Louis XIV in 1715 the French court and the accompanying aristocracy moved from Versailles back to the city of paris. Social rooms were smaller than at Versailles, but no less lavishly decorated.

- Men and women held salons daily or weekly and the rooms were elaborately furnished.

- Salons became the sites for witty displays of humor and manners, sophisticated conversations, and a life dedicated to leisure.

- Decorated with gold, silver, chandeliers, paintings, and mirrored walls just like there had been at Versailles, with which to reflect candlelight.

Pastel colors for the walls, stucco details, light airy rooms and a visual “feast” for the eyes were all elements of the Rococo interior.

Jean-Antoine Watteau, 1684-1721 (painted sophisticated or idyllic, idealized scenes for new urban aristocrats who purchased paintings for their homes from city art dealers). SEE VIDEO.

Francois Boucher, 1703-1770 (gained patronage under Louis XV’s mistress Madame Pompadour, worked on the decoration of royal palaces at Fontainebleau and Versailles, in 1765, became royal painter to the king, and was known for painting erotic pictures with loose mythological underpinnings e.g. Girl Reclining (1751) nominally based on a Venus “type”). SEE VIDEO

2) SLIDE: Jean Honore Fragonard, The Swing, 1766. Oil on canvas.

See Smarthistory:

Fragonard (1732-1806) studied with Boucher, went to Rome at the age of 20 for the artistic training – was there 1756-61 – and like Watteau and Boucher, Fragonard catered to the French aristocracy who wanted to decorate their city homes.

The Swing combines suggested sensuality with a soft, pastel nature setting.

( What did we learn from the reading? Do you “buy” Posner’s line of thought? Is there a moral element (ie. does Fragonard tell us this behavior is right or wring?)

Why does the swinging figure appear in the 17th c? Emblematic of pleasure, erotic intent, distinct from religious subject matter, the fickleness of women

- Watteau began to use it; painted at Versailles in 1699; becomes the double-entendre par excellence

Blindman’s buff, seesaw, swing

- Allows landscape painting in

- Clearly meant to be sensually explicit or titillating, supposedly commissioned by a gentleman of the court for his pleasure house

- Inspired by Watteau’s pleasures of Summer in which a swing also appears

- Two lovers watched over by the swing pushing bishop in the background and the statuary – VOYEURISM

- Cupid holds his finger to his lips as if he may keep the secret (based on Falconet”s sculpture of Cupid from 1757, done for Louis XV’s mistress, Madame de Pompadour)

- The young man makes a futile attempt to cover the view up the lady’s skirt with his hat, yet his gaze is direct and enraptured

- Her gaze is directed straight down at his

- Almost farcical – she kicks off her shoe and it remains suspended in the air. Shoe = metaphor for loss of virginity

- Humorous, sensual, and also capturing a particular moment in terms of the swing reaching its highest point or climax, alluding to the suggested climax of emotion in the painting

- Perhaps a secular revision of Baroque art and the work of artists such as Bernini.

Fragonard’s Room at the Frick (Video: )

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. In 1790 Fragonard brought the paintings to his native Grasse and installed them in his cousin’s house, along with two additional large panels, four overdoors, and four slender panels of hollyhocks. These masterpieces of rococo painting decorated the London residence of J. Pierpont Morgan before Mr. Frick acquired them in 1915.

- Perhaps a secular revision of the movement we looked at directly before this, Baroque art and the work of artists such as Bernini.

The Enlightenment

SLIDE: de la Tour portraits & the Encyclopedia

The critical reaction against artists like Boucher (and rococo art more generally) acquired its most definitive and eloquent expressions in the writings and salons of the philosopher Denis Diderot (1713–1784), though these texts were not widely disseminated until the nineteenth century.

• Like earlier critics, Diderot objected to Boucher's unapologetically artificial colors, which were very often likened to women's cosmetics, and his tendency to use brilliant painterly effects and sensual subjects over substantive, edifying narrative.

• The critical reaction was not purely an artistic matter, however, but was connected to a broader context of Enlightenment ideologies concerning reason and rational thought upon which social interactions should be founded.

The Encyclopedia

• The quintessential marker of the revolution in thought and culture that we now call the Enlightenment is the Encyclopedia. It was a general encyclopedia published in France between 1751 and 1772, with later supplements, revised editions, and translations.

• It was edited by Diderot and Jean le Rond d'Alembert. The work comprised 28 volumes, with 71,818 articles and 3,129 illustrations

• At its beginnings the Encyclopedia was no more than a venture for profit, projected by a shrewd French publisher. It was to be a translation of the Chambers’ Cyclopaedia (1728), an extremely successful English reference work.

• Once Diderot and D’Alembert were given full control of it, they proceeded to expand its scope vastly. The work was to contain nothing less than the basic facts and the basic principles of all knowledge; it was to be a sort of war machine of the thought and opinion of the Enlightenment.

We now view the Encyclopedia more as a major historical event than as an original contribution to any of the branches of knowledge.

• Those who ranged themselves on the side of the encyclopedists in effect formed a party, or the rudiments of one, which served as the spiritual predecessor for groups of reformers who were to preside in large measure over the transformation of the conditions of life in France and throughout the western world during the next generation.

• Indeed, the Preliminary Discourse of the Encyclopedia could be regarded as the manifesto of the French Enlightenment, at least in the retrospective view of the historian. To be sure, it was not designed to be a pronouncement heralding or justifying revolutionary political action as were the Declaration of Independence, the Declaration of the Rights of Man, and the Communist Manifesto, but it expressed the spirit of an intellectual and emotional revolution going on in the eighteenth century that in one way or another lay in the background of each of these.

• It breathed a confidence that man, through his own intelligent efforts, could transform the conditions of human life and that the beginning of that revolution could already be seen in the sciences and arts.

"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." (Wealth, Diderot)

SLIDE: Chardin

Supplementary Slides: Bernard Lépicié, Greuze

• Chardin did not attend the best art academy, he never traveled to Italy (in fact, he only once left Paris, for an audience with Louis XV in Versailles), he did not have a studio of pupils, he was not a prolific painter (about one-third of his 300 or so surviving paintings are copies), he was never acclaimed by his peers and he did not paint the historical and religious works that the French Academy's ''doctrine of hierarchy'' considered the most important.

• Rather, he worked alone and slowly, concentrating on still life in his youth, opting for genre paintings in his middle years and then returning to still life between the ages of 50 and 70.

• Jean-Siméon Chardin was one of the major artists of still life paintings and genre scenes (the depiction of ordinary people in everyday life) in the eighteenth century. He was admired by Diderot, Denis for the seriousness of his subjects, which inspired virtue and refined manners, and it is believed that he educated Diderot in his understanding of art and aesthetics.

• Chardin began still life paintings about 1725. Like the genre scenes, they portrayed kitchen utensils and food in simple, rustic, middle class settings.

• By 1728, Chardin was accepted into the Royal Academy as a painter of animal and fruit subjects, the lowest category for the official art world.

• Chardin began to paint figurative genre scenes and reached the pinnacle of success between 1735 and 1750.

• The honest virtue of the middle class was a recurring theme in Chardin's work. In Saying Grace, of 1740, an austere home is the backdrop for a scene representing a mother teaching her child a prayer at the dinner table in appreciation for their humble meal.

• Unlike other genre painters of the time, Chardin portrayed women with dignity and gave them an important role in the perpetuation of family values.

• Chardin remained a dedicated and active member of the Royal Academy but died in obscurity in Paris in 1799. During the nineteenth and twentieth centuries his refined compositions inspired still life painters.

Art & The Market

Transition: the beginnings of a democratization of knowledge also paralleled the democratization of art and its consumption through the medium of the print, and the messages with which artists chose to embed in their works. Quite the opposite of Fragonard’s swinging figures was the English satirical artist William Hogarth.

5) SLIDE: Hogarth & printing

William Hogarth’s (1697 – 1764) moralizing attitudes presented as humorous commentary on the farce of modern upper middle class and aristocratic life, certainly fit with the civic agendas and elevating aspirations of the Enlightenment Age of Reason.

( See Watteau and Gersaint article – quotes on printing

( See also Catalogue: Colorful Impressions: The Printmaking Revolution in Eighteenth Century France, by Margaret Morgan Grasselli et al. Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art, 2003.

• During the second half of the 18th century in France, newly invented engraving and etching techniques were combined with new ways of printing a single image from multiple plates.

• Thus, for the first time, full-color prints could be created from just four basic colors: red, yellow, blue, and black. Within a matter of decades, thousands of images were produced, including some of the most complex and beautiful color prints ever made.

• Color was in fact a regular ingredient in prints from their invention in the early 1400s, but at that time color was always applied by hand.

• The breakthrough came in the 1720s when the German artist Jakob Christoffel Le Blon discovered that full-spectrum color prints could be created from only four basic inks--blue, red, yellow, and black--printed one on top of the other from separate copperplates.

• Le Blon's intention was to produce affordable, full-color reproductions of paintings

• The names of the printmakers who pioneered these techniques--Bonnet, Demarteau, Janinet, Descourtis, and Debucourt, to name a few--are not well known today, but the artists whose compositions they engraved rank among the most famous of the 18th century--Boucher, Watteau, Fragonard, among others.

• Then, artists like Hogarth took on the technique for an entirely different message.

• The new color prints enjoyed an enormous commercial success. Advertised as "printed paintings" and "engraved drawings," they allowed the middle classes to show their taste and refinement by hanging on their walls replicas of the works of art that hung in the mansions of aristocrats and members of the royal court.

• Skilled printmakers catered to this new market, turning out thousands of different images over a period of just a few decades.

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

- Hogarth believed that art should contribute to the moral good of society, especially as England was on the cusp of the industrial revolution and class boundaries were shifting. A good example needed to be set.

- The middle class in mid-18th century England could afford to buy smaller painted scenes, and also prints, which Hogarth saw as a market niche and capitalized on.

- The print allowed Hogarth to maximize his profits and reach as many people with his moralizing message as possible.

- Hogarth’s Marriage a la Mode consisted of a sequence of six pictures inspired by john Addison’s 1712 essay in the Spectator promoting marriage based on love rather than on aristocratic machinations. Seems a suitable subject matter for an age of “reason” rather than antiquated traditions of older class systems.

- The Marriage Contract portrays the farcical handing over of an aristocratic son by his gouty father to a new wealthy breed of merchant and the daughter he wants to marry off into good society.

- Hogarth wanted to create a style of art that was straightforward and easy to read, one that would make social prpgress, shun the old-fashioed and decadent ideals of the aristocratic classes, and effect instruction of audiences through dry humor.

- Young aristocratic son on the far left, merchant’s daughter unhappy about the exchange, wealthy merchant dressed brashly in red, and the aristocratic father pointing to his family tress on the right.

The sequence progresses to show the effects of an arranged marriage – affairs, sexually transmitted diseases, murder, social disgrace and, finally, death when the woman poisons herself. Drama played out in easy-to-read scenes so the public would be able to understand the narrative.

The last scene, the Death of the Countess:

• The only people showing any sorrow for her death are her daughter and old maidservant.

• The child's legs are fitted with calipers, indicating she has rickets (a disorder that contemporary commentators associated with over-indulgence — similar to the old Earl's gout in the first scene — rather than deprivation).

• The child has a black patch on her neck indicating that she has contracted syphilis from her parents. The patch could also indicate scrofula; in either case a possible indication that the child will not live long after her mother.

• The congenital handicaps visited upon the child by her parents are compounded by the final irony that as a female, she will not inherit her family titles. The family tree that the old Earl so proudly displays in the first scene has come to an end, totally destroyed by those who were charged with its preservation.

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

A similar spirit of rationality pervades Joseph Wright of Derby’s work, An Experiment on a Bird in the Pump.

- the Industrial Age, a sense of proto-Romantic drama and Enlightenment interest in science all comes together in this work

- Wright belonged to the Lunar Society, a group of progressive industrial, Enlightenment men who met monthly in Birmingham, England, to exchange ideas about science and technology.

- In the same manner Hogarth tired to popularize his moral agenda through prints, Wright painted a series of scenes to get people excited about science.

- A traveling scientist is shown demonstrating the formation of a vacuum by withdrawing air from a flask containing a white cockatoo, though common birds like sparrows would normally have been used. Air pumps were developed in the 17th century and were relatively familiar by Wright's day. The artist's subject is not only scientific invention, but a human drama in a night-time setting.

- The bird will die if the demonstrator continues to deprive it of oxygen, and Wright leaves us in doubt as to whether or not the cockatoo will be reprieved. The painting reveals a wide range of individual reactions, from the frightened children, through the reflective philosopher, the excited interest of the youth on the left, to the indifferent young lovers concerned only with each other.

- The figures are dramatically lit by a single candle, while in the window the moon appears. On the table in front of the candle is a glass containing a skull, a reference to the mortality of both the subject, the bird, and the viewer. MORAL RESONANCE.

Neoclassicism in Britain – the Classical revival

During the 18th century in England, poet Alexander Pope translated work by the Ancient Greek epic poet Homer into English; Pope wrote his own poetry in iambic pentameter, the rhythm of Classical poetry; and aristocratic women started to wear white muslin gowns to look “classical”. The craze for classical aesthetics was in full force.

( See Wright’s Corinthian Maid

SLIDE: Richard Boyle (Lord Burlington), Chiswick House, West London, England. 1724-29. CARRIED ON IN VIDEO WITH STOURHEAD ESTATE IN WILTSHIRE, GARDEN LADSCAPED BY A PROTÉGÉ OF BURLINGTON.

COMAPRISON SLIDE: Palladio, Villa Rotunda, Vicenza. Begun 1560s

- Architect Lord Burlington was studying Palladio’s plans. Palladio was a Venetian architect heavily influenced by classical architecture and Alberti’s principles of proportion who built in Venice in the 16th century, almost 200 years before the neoclassical revival in England.

- In 1715 C. Campbell’s publication ‘Vitruvius Britannicus’ and G. Leoni’s edition of Palladio’s ‘Four Books’ were fundamental influences for English and later European architecture forever.

- Palladio’s ideas were reflected in works of architects like Lord Burlington, especially Villa Rotunda, Palladio’s masterpiece

- The VR’s symmetrical plan, domed central hall, four porticos entrances with pediments supported by ionic columns can be recognised in works like Chiswick House where the main principles were harmony and classical proportion, lightness of facades and symmetry.

- Lord Burlinton engaged William Kent (1685-1748) to decorate the interior of the house, and to design the gardens in a manner that radically moved away from the highly manicured style of the French court at Versailles or Baroque formality to a style which begun at Chiswick, the English landscape garden.

- ELG – designed to look deliberately wild, often featuring a “folly” or miniature architecture in the idealized, idyllic landscape.

18th Century France Reacts against Rococo, and Neoclassicism becomes the style of the Revolution

• The threat of Revolution was made good on both sides of the Atlantic.

• Both the French Revolution (1789) and the American Revolution (1776-77) changed daily life immeasurably. The aesthetic style that became associated with the new democratic approach to shaping a nation was the Classical style, admired by Enlightenment thinkers, and posited as a rational way to arrange space and decoration – harking back to the classical style of the democratic ancent Greeks.

• There was a strong reaction against Rococo tendencies in France from the 1760s, and although the style doesn’t die out by any means, the Neoclassical style is bolstered by philosophers of the Enlightenment Age calling for an art aesthetic that will reflect reason.

What was the spark for the Revolution?

• Louis XVI wanted to raise taxes. He wanted a committee of high-ranking clergy and aristocrats to back him, but they were unwilling to become the target of public criticism.

• They advised the king to summon the Estates General, a political body composed of 300 elected representatives of the aristocracy, an equal number of the clergy and 600 members of the Third Estate. This was unexpected, for although it has been in existence since the 14th c, the Estates General had not been summoned since 1614.

• The Estates. First-clergy. Second-nobility. Third-middle class and peasants

• Advisory body only, No real legislative power.

• They first met in May, 1789. The aristocrats and clergy, not surprisingly, sided with the king. The Third Estate not only opposed the tax increase, they called for reform of the tax system and the government.

• They were convinced they could never be heard within the system of the Estates General and they formed a new government entity, the National Assembly.

At a meeting at an indoor tennis court (because they were locked out, barred from the official meeting room), they swore they would not disperse until they had given France a new constitution.

SLIDE: David, Oath of the Horatii, 1784

MANIFESTATION OF STATE LOYALTY; MANIFESTO FOR NEOCLASSICAL STYLE

Jacques Louis David’s painting was made just before the French Revolution hit.

- David chose an episode in Roman history for his first royal commission in 1784. A Prix de Rome laureate in 1776 and a member of the Académie, he wanted to launch his public career by creating a stir with a radically innovative picture.

- HORATII VS. CURATII - DEFEAT OR DIE FOR COUNTRY In the 7th century BC, to put an end to the bloody war between Rome and Alba, both cities designated champions: the former chose the Horatii, the latter the Curiatii. The two families were linked by marriage. Jacques-Louis David depicts the Horatii swearing to defeat their enemies or die for their country. On the right, the grief-stricken women of the family already fear the worst: Sabina, the sister of the Curiatii and wife of the eldest of the Horatii, and Camilla, the sister of the Horatii and betrothed to one of the Curiatii, hang their heads in sorrow, while behind them, the mother of the Horatii hugs her grandchildren.

- LEAVE ROCOCO: He forsook the amorous and mythological subject matter of his first teacher, Boucher, for the Roman historians. He presented the finished canvas in his studio in Rome in 1785, then at the Paris Salon later that year, on both occasions to acclaim.

- NEW STYLE OF NEOCLASSICISM The composition is broad and simple, with the life-size figures arranged in a frieze in the foreground, as on Roman sarcophagi and Greek vases.

- The figures are separated by large empty spaces in a stage-like area shown head-on. David emphasizes the room's geometry. The harsh, slanting light gives the figures their relief, and their contrasting characters are conveyed using different forms.

- He gives the men energetic bodies constructed out of straight lines and dresses them in vivid colors, while the women are all sinous curves and muted colors. GENDER DIFFERENCE The painting became the model throughout Europe for the new style of painting that is art historically now termed neoclassicism.

SLIDE: David, The Death of Marat, 1793

On 13 July 1793, David's friend Marat was assassinated by Charlotte Corday with a knife she had hidden in her clothing. It was the execution of Louis XVI under pressure and a fixed trial by the Jacobins that lead to the death of Marat

What do we see here? How would we describe this?

▪ Jean-Paul Marat (May 24, 1743 – July 13, 1793), was a Swiss-born French scientist and physician who made much of his career in the United Kingdom, but is best known as an activist in the French Revolution. Radical Jacobin, part of the reign of terror

▪ He was a journalist, exerting power through his newspaper, The Friend of the People, L'Ami du peuple.

▪ He advocated the September Massacres in which thousands of political prisoners were murdered, and established the Committee of Surveillance, whose declared role was to root out counter-Revolutionaries (Marat composed the death lists from which those suspected of political crimes).

▪ One of his victims may have been the chemist Antoine Lavoisier (portrait hangs at the Met)

▪ In 1789, when Marat had 22 Girondists arrested, Charlotte Corday began to consider killing him.

▪ The execution of King Louis XVI, January 21, 1793, and the denunciation of Marat by Jacques Pierre Brissot, a leading Girondist, helped her finally decide to do so.

Who was Charlotte Corday?

▪ She travelled from Caen to Paris on July 9, 1793.

▪ She bought a dinner knife at the Palais-Royal, and wrote her Speech to the French who are Friends of Law and Peace, explaining her actions.

▪ She went to Marat offering to inform him about a planned Girondist uprising in Caen.

▪ She was initially turned away, but on a second attempt on July 13, Marat admitted her into his presence.

▪ He conducted most of his affairs from a bathtub because of a debilitating skin condition.

▪ Marat copied down the names of the Girondists as Corday dictated them to him. She pulled the knife from her scarf and plunged it into his chest.

▪ Corday was a Girondin, and her action provoked reprisals in which thousands of the Jacobins' adversaries – both royalists and Girondins – were executed on supposed charges of treason.

▪ The entire National Convention attended Marat's funeral.

▪ The assassination did not stop the Jacobins or the Terror: Marat became a martyr, and busts of Marat replaced crucifixes and religious statues that were no longer welcome under the new regime.

▪ At trial, Corday testified that she had carried out the assassination alone, saying "I killed one man to save 100,000." It was likely a reference to Maximilien Robespierre's words before the execution of King Louis XVI.

▪ Four days after Marat was killed, Corday was executed under the guillotine.

▪ The anti-female stance of many revolutionary leaders was increased by Corday's actions. The Revolution now turned with full force on Marie Antoinette, the king's imprisoned widow.

Traditional interpretation = we are left to compare Marat’s death with that of Christ – to see it as a martyr’s death for the “salvation of the people.”

- Is this a history painting or a portrait?

- Secular or religious?

- Tony Halliday argues for secular - both public monument and private focus of grief, two tropes active in this period in France.

- Ancient roman death mask rather than martyr portrait. Secular, not religious. Classical, not Christian.

- The Death of Marat, 1793, became the leading image of the Terror and immortalized both Marat, and David in the world of the revolution. This piece stands today as “a moving testimony to what can be achieved when an artist’s political convictions are directly manifested in his work".

- A political martyr was instantly created as David portrayed Marat with all the marks of the real murder, in a fashion that greatly resembles that of Christ or his disciples. The subject although realistically depicted remains lifeless in a rather supernatural composition. With the surrogate tombstone placed in front of him and the almost holy light cast upon the whole scene; alluding to an out of this world existence.

- “Atheists though they were, David and Marat, like so many other fervent social reformers of the modern world, seem to have created a new kind of religion.” At the very center of these beliefs, there stood the republic.

SLIDE: MONITCELLO, 1769-1809, Virginia

The Classical Style was also used in the 18th century in America to denote qualities of independence, new democracy, and Enlightenment.

- Perhaps the most famous architect working in the Neoclassical style was Thomas Jefferson, third president of the USA and author of the Declaration of Independence.

- He designed the University Of Virginia main campus (1817-26) and Monicello, his home, (1769-1809)

- He taught himself Italian so he could read palladio, the 16th century architect who had inspired british architects.

- He looked to Ancient Greece and Roman architectural styles as these epitomized progress and democracy to him.

- His house was also full of gadgets, and his farm used progressive methods of famring. He collected and displayed artworks from all over the world. Connection tot hepast.

- Contrary to this, however, was the fact that Monticello was built on the labor of enslaved African-Americans who were not part of this new democracy.

See video (to at least 7 min 15)

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