Jacques-Louis David Essay

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    The Swing Essay

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    y frivolous and fancy to the untrained eye, The Swing by Jean-Honoré Fragonard and The Love Of Paris And Helen by Jacques-Louis David are actually from two wildly different artistic eras; the Fragonard is from the Rococo era (1700-1770) and the David is from the Neoclassical era (1750-1860). Some characteristics of Rococo-era painting include a focus on love, sensuality and a refined, park-like view of nature; a dramatic shift from the heavy political and religious themes/imagery of the Baroque era

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    It is generally agreed that the great philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau and the artist Jacques-Louis David had played a great role in serving and supporting the French Revolution, in addition to, showing their devotion to their state and explore the notion of duty to the state each one by his own special way. The great philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau had inspired the revolution by his argument and ideas that was based on Reason. He played a great role in exploring the notion of duty to the

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    The Coronation that Shook the World The Coronation of Napoleon by Jacques-Louis David is imposing in its dimensions. It stands at twenty feet by thirty feet and is displayed in the main gallery of the Louvre museum in Paris. David began this work of art after being orally commissioned by Napoleon in September of 1804. The painting came to its completion November of 1807. The sole fact that the painting took three years to complete demonstrates something about the magnitude and scale of the painting

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    King Louis XVI, by way of guillotine. And, eventually Napoleon Bonaparte became the ruler of France. This was a transforming time in not just France’s history, but European history and World history. The people of France were fed up with the monarchy and the burden of high taxes, as the monarch rulers squandered money away while the people faced famine and poverty. The Revolution was so powerful that artists not only painted about it, but they became revolutionaries themselves, like Jacques-Louis

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    Artistic Revolutionaries: David & Delacroix Many attribute the evolution of the French revolution as the catalyst for redirection of the style of artwork from Baroque and Rococo to Neoclassical and Romanticism. Two leading masterpieces that support this aspect are respectively: Jacques-Louis David, Oath of the Horatii, (c. 1784) and Eugène Delacroix, Liberty Leading the People, (c. 1830). As commented in Essential Humanities (2016), the French revolution “in all its heroic glory and grisly

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    entirely new idea; martyrdom. Both of these pieces can be found at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. The first piece I am focusing on is entitled The Death of Socrates. It is painted with oil on canvas by a French artist named Jacques Louis David in 1787. This image depicts the true story of the trial of Socrates. Socrates was an Athenian philosopher and teacher who constantly challenged the beliefs and politics of his state. He sought to teach the youth of Athens his methods of philosophy

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    This essay will first go through the compare and contrast both of the style with Jacques-Louis David’s The Loves of Paris and Helen, representing the neoclassical style of art, and the painting significant with its romanticism style Liberty Leading the People, painted by Eugène Delacroix. After the reviewing each expression of both of the art, a conclusion will be taken from their variation. Jacques-Louis David was one of the significant figure in neoclassical art in history. One of David’s

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    stray from the traditional perfectly-liner and symmetrical forms in works of art by focusing on the actual perception of the world, which was, perpetually, imperfect. One work of art that exhibits the traditional linear-style of art would be Jacques-Louis David’s painting, Oath of the Horatii, pictured below. The linear characteristics seen in other traditional works of art are also clearly evident in the schematic below of David’s painting as all of the linear aspects of the painting exist to draw

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    through its many artists. Neoclassical and Romanticism are two forms of artwork that were present during the French Revolution; both styles were influenced by the war being fought. The French Revolution affected Neoclassical artist, such as Jacques-Louis David his artwork showed that dying for your country was the noblest thing any man can do, this is perfectly seen in “The Oath of the Horatii.”

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    Bonheur was full of curiosity about the many animals and American Indians that were part of the spectacle, reflecting her enormous enthusiasm in at least seventeen paintings and countless sketches produced during her almost daily visits to the encampment. An important portrait of Buffalo Bill himself, mounted on his favourite white horse, was also completed during the time that Bonheur spent there. It’s a straightforward composition, with the white horse trotting on a somewhat dusty path towards

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