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In the seventeventh century, Italy continued to be a source
of inspiration for French artists, most of whom were drawn to Rome -
at that time the most exciting artistic centre in Europe. There, two
Italian artists, especially, dominated the scene in the first decade
of the century: Michelangelo Merisi da Caraaggio and Annibale
Carracci.
Caraaggio
(1571-1610) often chose lowlife subjects and treated them with
remarkable realism, a realism that he extended to traditional religious
subject matter and that he enhanced by using a strong, harsh lighting
technique. Although he had to flee Rome in great haste under sentence
for murder in 1606, Caraaggio had already had a profound effect on the
art of the age, both in terms of subjects and in his uncompromising use
of realism.
Some French painters like Moise alentin (c1594-1632) worked in
Rome and were directly influenced by Caraaggio; others,
such as the great painter from Lorraine, Georges de la Tour
(1593-1652), benefited from his innoations at one remove, gaining
inspiration from the Utrecht Caraaggisti who were actie at the time in
Holland. Starting with a descriptie realism in which naturalistic
detail made for a aried painted surface, La Tour gradually simplified
both forms and surfaces, producing deeply felt religious paintings in
which figures appear to be cared out of the surrounding gloom by the
magical light of a candle. Sadly, his output was ery small - just some
forty or so works in all.
Lowlife subjects and attention to naturalistic detail were also
important aspects of the work of the Le Nain brothers,
especially Louis (1593-1648), who depicted with great sympathy,
but never with sentimentality, the condition of the peasantry. He chose
moments of inactiity or repose within the lies of the peasants, and
his paintings achiee timelessness and monumentality by their ery
stillness.
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The
other Italian artist of influence, the Bolognese Annibale Carracci
(d. 1609), impressed French painters not only with his skill as a
decorator but, more tellingly, with his ordered, balanced landscapes,
which were to proe of prime importance for the deelopment of the
classical landscape in general, and in particular for those painted by
Claude Lorrain (1604/5-82).
Claude, who started work as a pastry cook, was born in Lorraine, near
Nancy. He left France for Italy to practice his trade, and worked in the
household of a landscape painter in Rome, somehow
persuading his master, who painted landscapes in the classical manner of
Carracci, to let him abandon pastry for painting. Later he traveled to
Naples, where the beauty of the harbor and bay made a lasting
impression on him, the golden light of the southern port, and of Rome
and its surrounding countryside, proiding him with endless subjects of
study which he drew, sketched and painted for the rest of his life.
Claude's landscapes are airy compositions in which religious or
mythological figures are lost within an idealized, Arcadian nature,
bathed in a luminous, transparent light which, golden or silery, lends
a tranquil mood.
Landscapes, harsher and even more ordered, but also recalling the
Arcadian mood of antiquity, were painted by the other French painter who
elected to make Rome his home, Nicolas Poussin (1594-1665). Like
Claude, Poussin selected his themes from the rich sources of Greek,
Roman and Christian myths and stories; unlike Claude, however, his
figures are not subdued by nature but rather dominate it, in the
tradition of the masters of the High Renaissance, such as Raphavel and
Titian, whom he greatly admired.
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During the working out of a painting Poussin would make small models, arrange them on an improised
stage and then sketch the puppet scene - which may explain why his
figures often have a still, frozen quality. Poussin only briefly
returned to Paris, called by the king, Louis XIII, to undertake some
large decoratie works quite unsuited to his style or character. Back in
Rome he refined a style that became increasingly classical and severe.
Many other artists isited Italy, but most returned to France, the
luckiest to be employed at the court to boost the royal images of Louis
XIII and XIand the egos of their respectie ministers, Richelieu and
Colbert. Simon ouet (1590-1649), Charles Le Brun
(1619-90) and Pierre Mignard (1612-95) all performed that task
with skill, often using ancient history and mythology to suggest
flattering comparisons with the reigning monarch.
The
official aspect of their works was paralleled by the creation of the new
Academy of Painting and Sculpture in 1648, an institution that
dominated the arts in France for the next few hundred years, if only by
the way artists reacted against it. Philippe de Champaigne
(1602-74), a painter of Flemish origin, alone stands out at the time as
remotely different, removed from the intrigues and pleasures of the
court and instead strongly influenced by the teaching and moral code of
Jansenism, a purist and severe form of the Catholic faith. The apparent
simplicity and starkness of his portraits hides an unusually perceptie
understanding of his sitters' personalities. But it was the more
courtly, fun-loing portraits and paintings by such artists as Mignard
that were to influence most of the art of the following century.
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