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Neoclassicism - II 

Jacques-Louis David
1748 - 1825

Jacques-Louis David (30 August 1748 – 29 December 1825) was a French painter in the Neoclassical style, considered to be the preeminent painter of the era. In the 1780s, his cerebral brand of history painting marked a change in taste away from Rococo frivolity toward classical austerity, severity, and heightened feeling, which harmonized with the moral climate of the final years of the Ancien Régime.

David later became an active supporter of the French Revolution and friend of Maximilien Robespierre (1758–1794), and was effectively a dictator of the arts under the French Republic. Imprisoned after Robespierre's fall from power, he aligned himself with yet another political regime upon his release: that of Napoleon, the First Consul of France. At this time he developed his Empire style, notable for its use of warm Venetian colours. After Napoleon's fall from Imperial power and the Bourbon revival, David exiled himself to Brussels, then in the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, where he remained until his death. David had many pupils, making him the strongest influence in French art of the early 19th century, especially academic Salon painting.


 

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Self-Portrait
1794

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Portrait of Marie-Françoise Buron
c. 1769

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The Combat of Mars and Minerva
1771

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The Death of Seneca
1773

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Hector
1778

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Patroclus
1780

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Belisarius Receiving Alms
1781

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Andromache Mourning Hector
1783

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The Oath of the Horatii
1784

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The Loves of Paris and Helen
1788

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The Death of Socrates
1787

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Anne-Marie-Louise Thélusson, Comtesse de Sorcy
1790

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Madame Trudaine
c. 1792

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The Death of Marat
1793

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Jacobus Blauw
1795

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Portrait of Emilie Sériziat and her Son
1795

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Portrait of Pierre Sériziat
1795

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Portrait of General Bonaparte
1797

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Madame Raymond de Verninac
1798-99

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The Intervention of the Sabine Women
1799

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Madame Récamier
1800

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Bonaparte, Calm on a Fiery Steed, Crossing the Alps
1801

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Sappho and Phaon
1809

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Napoleon in his Study
1812

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Portrait of Marguerite-Charlotte David
1813

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Portrait of the Comtesse Vilain XIIII and her Daughter
1816

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Cupid and Psyche
1817

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The Farewell of Telemachus and Eucharis
1818

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The Anger of Achilles, or Sacrifice of Iphigénie
1825

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Mars Disarmed by Venus and the Three Graces
1824






 

François Gérard
1770 - 1837

François Pascal Simon Gérard (4 May 1770 – 11 January 1837), titled as Baron Gérard in 1809, was a prominent French painter. He was born in Rome, where his father occupied a post in the house of the French ambassador, and his mother was Italian. After he was made a baron of the Empire in 1809 by Emperor Napoleon, he was known formally as Baron Gérard.



 

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Francois Gérard aged 54,
by Sir Thomas Lawrence

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Napoleon Bonaparte as First Consul
1803

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Portrait of Joachim Murat, king of Naples and of the Two Sicilies
1811–1812

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Portrait of Emperor Napoleon I

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Portrait of Juliette Récamier

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Portrait of Empress Joséphine

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Portrait of Désirée Clary

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Portrait of Hortense de Beauharnais

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Portrait of Hortense de Beauharnais

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Cupid and Psyche

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Napoleon at the Battle of Austerlitz

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Caroline Bonaparte, Queen of Naples, and Her Children

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Teresa of Ávila





 

Antoine-Jean Gros
1771 - 1835

Antoine-Jean Gros (16 March 1771 – 25 June 1835) was a French painter of historical subjects. He was granted the title of Baron Gros in 1824.

Gros studied under Jacques-Louis David in Paris and began an independent artistic career during the French Revolution. Forced to leave France, Gros moved to Genoa. His portrait of French commander Napoleon Bonaparte at the Battle of Arcole in 1796 brought Gros to public attention and gained the patronage of Napoleon. After traveling with Napoleon's army for several years, he returned to Paris in 1799. In addition to producing several large paintings of battles and other events in Napoleon's life, Gros was a successful portraitist.


 

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Gros at age 20; portrait by François Gérard
c. 1791

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Bonaparte at the pont d'Arcole
1796

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The Battle of Abukir
1806

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Napoleon Bonaparte on the Battlefield of Eylau, 1807
1808

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Napoleon Visiting the Plague Victims of Jaffa
1804

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Napoleon at the Pyramids in 1798
1810

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Sappho at Leucate

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First Consul Bonaparte

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Empress Josephine

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Capitulation de Madrid, le 4 décembre 1808

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Portrait of Françoise Simonnier and her Daughter

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Madame Pasteur
1795-96






 

Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres
1780 - 1867

Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (29 August 1780 – 14 January 1867) was a French Neoclassical painter. Ingres was profoundly influenced by past artistic traditions and aspired to become the guardian of academic orthodoxy against the ascendant Romantic style. Although he considered himself a painter of history in the tradition of Nicolas Poussin and Jacques-Louis David, it is his portraits, both painted and drawn, that are recognized as his greatest legacy. His expressive distortions of form and space made him an important precursor of modern art, influencing Picasso, Matisse and other modernists.

Born into a modest family in Montauban, he travelled to Paris to study in the studio of David. In 1802 he made his Salon debut, and won the Prix de Rome for his painting The Ambassadors of Agamemnon in the tent of Achilles. By the time he departed in 1806 for his residency in Rome, his style—revealing his close study of Italian and Flemish Renaissance masters—was fully developed, and would change little for the rest of his life. While working in Rome and subsequently Florence from 1806 to 1824, he regularly sent paintings to the Paris Salon, where they were faulted by critics who found his style bizarre and archaic. He received few commissions during this period for the history paintings he aspired to paint, but was able to support himself and his wife as a portrait painter and draughtsman.

He was finally recognized at the Salon in 1824, when his Raphaelesque painting, The Vow of Louis XIII, was met with acclaim, and Ingres was acknowledged as the leader of the Neoclassical school in France. Although the income from commissions for history paintings allowed him to paint fewer portraits, his Portrait of Monsieur Bertin marked his next popular success in 1833. The following year, his indignation at the harsh criticism of his ambitious composition The Martyrdom of Saint Symphorian caused him to return to Italy, where he assumed directorship of the French Academy in Rome in 1835. He returned to Paris for good in 1841. In his later years he painted new versions of many of his earlier compositions, a series of designs for stained glass windows, several important portraits of women, and The Turkish Bath, the last of his several Orientalist paintings of the female nude, which he finished at the age of 83.


 

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Self-Portrait at Seventy-Eight
1858

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The Envoys of Agamemnon
1801

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Portrait of Napoleon Bonaparte, First Consul
1804

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Napoleon I on his Imperial Throne
1806

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The Valpinçon Bather
1808

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Oedipus and the Sphinx
1808

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Romulus' Victory Over Acron
1811

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Virgil reading The Aeneid before Augustus, Livia and Octavia
1812

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Roger Delivrant Angelique
1819

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La Grande Odalisque
1814

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The Vow of Louis XIII
1824

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The Martyrdom of Saint Symphorian
1834

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The Illness of Antiochus
1840

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The Source
1856

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The Turkish Bath
1862–63

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Odalisque with Slave
1842

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Portrait of Marie-Françoise Rivière
1805–06

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Portrait of Monsieur Bertin
1832

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Portrait of Comtesse d'Haussonville
1845

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Portrait of Baronne de Rothschild
1848

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Madame Duvaucey
1807

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The Princesse de Broglie, née Joséphine-Eléonore-Marie-Pauline de Galard de Brassac de Béarn
1853

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Joan of Arc at the Coronation of Charles VII
1854

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The Virgin of the Host
1854

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Mme. Moitessier
1856

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Angelica
1859

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Jupiter and Thetis
1811

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Raphael and La Fornarina
1813-40

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The Death of Leonardo da Vinci or Francis I Receives the Last Breaths of Leonardo da Vinci is an 1818

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Ingres comtessedelarue

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La Baigneuse

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Raffael And Fornarina

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Paolo and Francesca
1819

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