The Academy and the Limits of Painting in Seventeenth-Century France
The Academy and the Limits of Painting in Seventeenth-Century France is the first study in over a century devoted to the creation of one of the most important European institutions of art, the French Académie Royale. Founded in the mid-1660s, the Academy institutionalised the discourse around painting and thus had an immediate impact on the making of art in France, becoming a decisive influence on painting until the close of the nineteenth century. In the process of forging an identity for itself, the Academy redefined almost every aspect of art - the nature of art training, the sources of patronage, the social standing of the artist, and the place of the arts in national life.
- The first study in over a century devoted to the French Académie Royale
- Provides a new historicist approach
- Includes several previously unpublished illustrations
Product details
October 1997Hardback
9780521495011
314 pages
262 × 186 × 24 mm
1.045kg
80 b/w illus.
Unavailable - out of print January 2008
Table of Contents
- 1. Inscribing authority
- 2. Le Brun and history painting
- 3. Discourse
- 4. The Academy and ceiling painting
- 5. Rhetorical transformations.