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Classicism

Antiquity as a standard

Classicism was firmly established in European art of the 17th century, giving ground only in the first third of the following century. The classicists worshipped antiquity, strongly believed in the idea of the order and logic of the universe, as well as in the limitless possibilities of the human mind.
Classicism

The time of origin, the milestones and the artists of classicism

Classicism originated and developed in the 17th century in France, in the heyday of absolute monarchy, and it subsequently spread to Spain, Germany, England, the Netherlands, USA and Russia, emerging in the process of Europeanization during the reign of Catherine II, who made everything French in vogue.

The standard for classicism was the Greco-Roman antiquity, which is reflected in the name of the art movement: the French word classicisme is derived from the Latin adjective classicus, meaning "exemplary", "belonging to the highest class of Roman citizens". The art of ancient Greece and ancient Rome was declared a model of harmony, which can be achieved, guided by reason.

In his famous statement, Cogito, ergo sum ("I think, therefore I exist"), Rene Descartes aptly described the philosophy of classicism. The works of classical art were created according to the strict canons, they sought to become the prototypes of the originally harmonious Universe. The purpose of art was the knowledge of the truth, and its task was fostering morality and decency in people. An important subject of late classicism was the clash of civic duty and personal interests, which used to be sacrificed for the benefit of higher ideals.

Classicism established a hierarchy of genres which had to remain pure, without any mixing: historical, mythological and religious painting belonged to the high genres, while still lifes, landscapes and portraits — to the low ones.

The most famous artists of the classical period: Nicolas Poussin, Claude Lorrain, Jacques-Louis David, Jean-Auguste Dominique Ingres, Karl Bryullov. Sculptors: Antonio Canova, Bertel Thorvaldsen. Architects: Claude Perrault, André Le Nôtre, Christopher Wren, G. Quarenghi, Charles Cameron, Vasily Bazhenov, Matvey Kazakov.

Periods: different countries – different systems

Different countries established different time frames of classicism, which led to a certain confusion in terms.

In France, classicism is the style of the 17th — early 18th century, during the reign of the Sun King Louis XIV. Neoclassicism
Neoclassicism is a complex term. In art history, Neoclassicism is usually called a movement of the second half of the 18th – the first third of the 19th century, coinciding with Jacques-Louis David's era and coming after the early Classicism. Russian art historians consider Neoclassicism to be an artistic phenomena of the last third of the 19th –early 20th century, reinterpreting the canons of the Greek and Roman antiquity, the Renaissance and the Classicism of the 18–19th centuries.


Read more
is the style of the second half of the 18th — the first third of the 19th century.

In Russian art history a different dating is used:
I. Classicism of the 17th century. It appeared in France under Louis XIV in the era of rise of absolute monarchy, which opposed the idea of rationalism, order and system to chaos and feudal fragmentation. Greco-Roman antiquity was considered the standard. Important milestones: Descartes’s rationalism and his scientific program Discourse on Method (1637); Nicolas Boileau’s treatise Poetic Art (1674); the construction of the Versailles Palace — the "temple of harmony", where a strict hierarchy reigns; works of the artists Nicolas Poussin (1594−1665) and Claude Lorrain (1600−1682); the foundation of the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture in Paris (1648); the tragedies of Corneille (1606−1684) and Racine (1639−1699), who were called the new Aeschylus and Euripides.
II. Classicism of the 18th — 19th centuries. Classicism was the main style in France during the Enlightenment, the French revolution and the First Empire
Empire (fr. empire – imperial) is the style of the late classicism in architecture, applied art and painting. It was popular during the first three decades of the 19th century.
It is characterized by the craving for monumentality and greatness: so that it immediately becomes clear to everyone that the emperor’s power is almost limitless! The Empire style arose in France during the reign of Napoleon, later it was replaced by the eclectic art movements currents and then itfound its revival in ... the Soviet Union. Read more
, as well as in other European countries and even in the United States. In the 18th century the interest in antiquity was revived due to three factors: the beginning of the excavations at Pompeii and Herculaneum in 1784, the work of the German art historian and archaeologist of the age of Enlightenment — Johann Joachim Winckelmann, who worshipped the art of Ancient Greece and Rome, and the cult of Raphael, who was glorified by the influential artist Mengs.

In Russia, classicism dominated from the second half of the 18th century till the first third of the 19th century during the reign of the "enlightened Empress" Catherine the Great, who was obsessed with the cult of statehood. In the art of late classicism, the cult of the heroic prevailed. Important milestones: works of the artists Jacques-Louis David, Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, Karl Bryullov and the sculptors Antonio Canova and Bertel Thorvaldsen; the construction of the Arc de Triomphe (1806−1836) and Vendôme Column in Paris, the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin (1788−1791), the foundation of the Russian Academy of Arts (1757), the construction of St. Petersburg — Palmyra of the North, the largest masterpiece of classicism.

In the 19th century, classicism was facing a crisis: from the once progressive style it became a conservative and academic one, constraining the development of art. Classicism was replaced by romanticism.

Classicism of the 17th century: the beginning and gold age

Russian art historian Sergei Daniel calls the classicism of the 17th century the "era of Poussin", since the French artist Nicolas Poussin (1594−1665) is considered one of the founders and prominent representatives of the European classicism.
Nicolas Poussin. Self-portrait
Self-portrait
1650, 74×98 cm
Poussin was a passionate admirer and connoisseur of ancient art, literature and philosophy. He spent half his life in Italy, where he studied ancient Roman sculpture, as well as the works of Renaissance masters, putting Raphael and Titian above all. In Rome, he studied geometry, perspective, anatomy and optics, seeking to comprehend a "rational basis of beauty." Poussin was also familiar with the innovative approach to the training of artists used at the Academy of painting in Bologna, founded by the Carracci brothers and their cousin in 1585. Lodovico, Agostino and Annibale Carracci established the practice of detailed study
A study is an exercise painting that helps the painter better understand the object he or she paints. It is simple and clear, like sample letters in a school student’s copybook. Rough and ready, not detailed, with every stroke being to the point, a study is a proven method of touching the world and making a catalogue of it. However, in art history, the status of the study is vague and open to interpretation. Despite its auxiliary role, a study is sometimes viewed as something far more significant than the finished piece. Then, within an impressive frame, it is placed on a museum wall.
So, when does a study remain a mere drill, and when can we call it an artwork in its own right, full of life and having artistic value? Read more
of the works by the High Renaissance
The Renaissance is the period that began around the 14th century and ended at the late 16th century, traditionally associated primarily with the Italian region. The ideas and images of the Renaissance largely determined the aesthetic ideals of modern man, his sense of harmony, measure and beauty. Read more
masters: their paintings were considered exemplary, as they had been created in accordance with the ancient canons and the universal laws of beauty.

Painting from nature was not allowed: the initially insignificant nature had to be improved, purified and harmonised.
In the 17th century, worshipping antiquity and the beautiful distant Arcadia became a real cult in France. There appeared an unprecedented interest in ancient literature: Homer, Virgil and Ovid were called the greatest authors (the latter’s Metamorphoses became an inexhaustible source of subjects for painters), while the best writers — Corneille and Racine — drew inspiration from the tragedies of Euripides and Aeschylus.

In philosophy, the cult of mind prevailed: Descartes’s rationalism received universal recognition, his ideas were up to scratch: order based on a strict hierarchy was exactly what was needed for the rise of absolute monarchy. By order of the Sun King Louis XIV there was built Versailles — the embodiment of the classic ideas of rationalism, order and system. In 1667−1678, the eastern wing of the Louvre was constructed, for the first time combining the elements of aesthetics of classicism: classical orders and proportions, horizontal and vertical segmentation, symmetry and a facade, located in the center of the building and standing out for its pediment.
The Palace of Versailles. General view.

The construction of the palace began in 1668. Designed for

The Palace of Versailles. General view.

The construction of the palace began in 1668. Designed for the Sun King Louis XIV, Versailles abounded in solar symbols: the palace’s east-west orientation meant that the sun would rise and set in alignment with the palace, the alleys of the park seemed like rays of sunlight, and the fountain at the Palace depicted the Greek sun god Apollo.


The eastern wing of the Louvre, 1667−1678
The eastern wing of the Louvre, 1667−1678
An important part of the cultural life of the 17th century was theater — theatricality became another sign of the era.

And even the artists in the era of classicism considered painting as an action, expressed by the plasticity of gesture and regulated by light and colour. Nicolas Poussin, with his belief that the laws of art were determined by reason and with his passion for antiquity and bright talent, became the exponent of the philosophy of classicism in painting.

Nicolas Poussin. Kingdom Of Flora
Kingdom Of Flora
1631, 181×131 cm
Nicolas Poussin. The Judgement Of Solomon, 1649, Musée du Louvre, Paris.

Poussin considered this pa

Nicolas Poussin. The Judgement Of Solomon, 1649, Musée du Louvre, Paris.

Poussin considered this painting his best work. This is how art historian Sergei Daniel describes it: "The Judgement of Solomon in Poussin’s interpretation is a trial available for public display. It is not the event itself that is essential, but the idea with which it should relate, which it should represent, the idea of supreme justice, impartiality and wisdom. The perfection of Poussin’s composition could be described by the same words that characterize a wise judgment since biblical times -Solomonic decision."

A special role in the culture of classicism was played by the French artist Claude Lorrain (1600−1682): in his work, the idea of Bolognese academicians about the independent importance of landscape and its right to coexist with painting of high genres has found its perfect embodiment. For Lorrain, landscape
The development of the genre from antiquity to the present day: how did religion and the invention of oil painting contribute to the development of the genre in Europe, and why was the Hudson River so important? Read more
is the scene of human history, while the prototype of artistic unity is the original unity of the Universe, the natural Cosmos. Lorraine’s landscapes are perfectly arranged compositions that an attentive viewer can easily "read". His subjects are the Sky, the Earth, the Sea, and the Sun (art historian Sergei Daniel notes that Lorraine’s country is ruled not by the King, considered the Sun, but by the Sun which was a king), and the subjects are their meetings and farewells.

The painter and philosopher introduced the vanitas motive into the idyllic paintings of nature of the classical era: the ruins of ancient palaces and temples in his paintings are the reminders of the frailty of human existence, since only renewing nature is eternal. Moreover, his ruins are an appeal to the memory that connects the past and the present, a tribute to Mnemosyne, the mother of the Muses. The aesthetics of the ruins would be later praised by romanticists in the 19th century.
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Classicism of the 18th – the first third of the 19th century: the second wave

The classicism of the "second wave", or late classicism, began later than the calendar century — in the 20s of the 18th century. And it ended in the first third of the 19th century, becoming a conservative academism
Are academists just a kind of art conventionalists, or is it still a special philosophy? How did they cope with the choice of “mind or feelings”? Why was the Paris Salon so important for artists, what were the Impressionists rebelling against, and where, besides France, were the academic talent pools? Let’s study academism in all its manifestations. Read more
.

In the 18th century there was an important ideological revolution in the European consciousness. Until that time, the Europeans believed that they had been living in a world that God (in ancient Greece and Rome — gods) took care of, and human existence was supported by higher forces. The 18th century was the first century when people began to doubt that support — there appeared the thoughts of rejecting religion, which led to the rise of the first atheistic concepts.

The period from the 1740s till the 1780s has gone down in history named "the Age of Enlightenment": the whole Europe listened to the voice of "King Voltaire" (1694−1778), and the real kings sought to gain favour with the person representing the fearlessly revealing thought of the era. Together with Voltaire, plenty of thinkers, such as Montesquieu, Diderot, Rousseau, and others, made a real intellectual revolution. The human sciences, which had previously been unconditionally subject to theology, were then freed and placed on a par with the natural and mathematical sciences. There were no more infallible authorities, sacred truths, everything in the world had to be questioned and analyzed, and there couldn’t be any prohibitions and restrictions for human thought.

It was the 18th century that opened up modernity — the modern type of culture. In the age of Enlightenment, the first art museums appeared and the first exhibitions were held: people had to be educated so that the world changed for the better. Artists became civic-minded, and art began to react to what was happening there and then. The 18th century is also the century of the French Revolution (July 14, 1789 — November 9, 1799), which completely changed not only France, but the whole Europe.
In 1748, Europe experienced another shock when during the excavations of the ancient cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum, the beautiful works of ancient art were discovered, which rekindled interest for antiquity with renewed vigor and passion. The images of the heroes of ancient Rome caused a desire to follow their examples. The highest values were civic virtues — a sense of duty, volitional self-discipline, the ability to subordinate feelings to reason, but above all — the common good. Rome retained the status of an international school of art, but it was Paris that became the capital of the artistic world.
Jacques-Louis David. Self-portrait
Self-portrait
1794, 80.5×64.1 cm
The French artist Jacques-Louis David (1748−1825) became the exponent of the mood of the era, and art historians call the late classicism "David's era."
David’s classicism is the antithesis of Poussin’s classicism: Poussin was contemplative and philosophical, while David was pragmatic and tendentious. Late classicism became the official style of the French Revolution and Napoleon’s time, since in order to glorify the republican virtues, and later — the splendor of the empire
Empire (fr. empire – imperial) is the style of the late classicism in architecture, applied art and painting. It was popular during the first three decades of the 19th century.
It is characterized by the craving for monumentality and greatness: so that it immediately becomes clear to everyone that the emperor’s power is almost limitless! The Empire style arose in France during the reign of Napoleon, later it was replaced by the eclectic art movements currents and then itfound its revival in ... the Soviet Union. Read more
, new art was required.
Jacques-Louis David. Oath Horatii
Oath Horatii
1784, 330×425 cm
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres (1780−1867) was a convinced classicist. He believed that everything great had already been created, and the artist’s task was to conform to the samples. For example, his Portrait of Mademoiselle Caroline Rivière is a homage to Raphael.
In sculpture of the late classicism, the cult of the heroic was hugely manifested. Using the language of allegory, sculptors glorified great thinkers, generals and their own contemporaries, depicting them wearing ancient chitons, armor and laurel wreaths.
Classicism
Classicism
Classicism
Classicism
Works above: Étienne Maurice Falconet. The Bronze Horseman, 1768; Ivan Martos. The Monument to Minin and Pozharsky on Red Square in Moscow, 1804−1818; Antonio Canova. Paolina Borghese as Venus Victorious, 1805, Galleria Borghese, Rome; Bertel Thorvaldsen. The Nicolaus Copernicus Monument in Warsaw, 1822−1830.

Russian classicism

In Russia, the style of classicism gained a wide scope and manifested itself in all spheres of art: painting, sculpture, architecture, literature and even urban planning. It appeared in the second half of the 18th century under Catherine II, who was imbued with the ideas of the Enlightenment and corresponded with Voltaire himself.
In the history of art, the following periods of Russian classicism are distinguished:
— early classicism (1760s — first half of 1780s)
— mature, or strict classicism (1780 — 1790s)
— high classicism, or Russian Empire
Empire (fr. empire – imperial) is the style of the late classicism in architecture, applied art and painting. It was popular during the first three decades of the 19th century.
It is characterized by the craving for monumentality and greatness: so that it immediately becomes clear to everyone that the emperor’s power is almost limitless! The Empire style arose in France during the reign of Napoleon, later it was replaced by the eclectic art movements currents and then itfound its revival in ... the Soviet Union. Read more
(first third of the 19th century).

The most famous Russian artists of the era of classicism are Karl Bryullov, portrait painters Dmitry Levitsky, Fyodor Rokotov, Vasily Tropinin, Orest Kiprensky, Vladimir Borovikovsky and the artist Anton Losenko. And the most large-scale monument of Russian classicism is the city of St. Petersburg, built by the best architects of the era according to the canons of the great Andrea Palladio.


Karl Bryullov. The last day of Pompeii
The last day of Pompeii
1830-th , 465.5×651 cm
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Sergey Svyatchenko. Successful riddles II
Successful riddles II
1994, 90×110 cm
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Sergei Borisovich Krivonogov. Rome. St. Peter's Basilica
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2019, 24×30 cm
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Sergei Borisovich Krivonogov. Rome. Bridge of St. Angel. September
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Sergei Borisovich Krivonogov. Winter Siberia. Chelyabinsk region, Urals
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Winter Siberia. Chelyabinsk region, Urals
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Natalia Priputnikova. Azure Coast
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Sergei Borisovich Krivonogov. Tarquinia Hills. Italy
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Larisa Wassiljewna Kopylova. Roses in the garden
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Classicism: the crib

You are an expert if you:
— read Ovid’s Metamorphoses and History of Rome by Titus Livius and easily find these subjects in the paintings of the era of classicism.
— can find references to Raphael, deified by the classicists, in The Portrait of Mademoiselle Caroline Rivière by Ingres and The Last Day of Pompeii by Bryullov and can name the sources of the quotations.
— understand that the main thing in the paintings of the era of classicism is not a subject, but the representation of an idea.

You are a layman if you:
— consider the paintings of the classicists boring. You just need to have a meaningful "key" to those paintings and remember that the artists created them for savvy viewers.
— think that Claude Lorrain’s landscapes are just beautiful paintings of nature, and not philosophical allegories.
— wonder why the sculptor of the Monument to Minin and Pozharsky on the Red Square in Moscow "dressed" his characters in ancient chitons.

Author: Anna Pashyna.

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