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L-Accordee de Village Painting ID:: 40588
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Jean Baptiste Greuze L-Accordee de Village mk176
1761
Oil on canvas
92x117cm
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Portrait of Countess Ekaterina Shuvalova Painting ID:: 40589
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Jean Baptiste Greuze Portrait of Countess Ekaterina Shuvalova mk156
c.1770
Oil on canvs
60x50cm
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The benefactress Painting ID:: 42729
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Jean Baptiste Greuze The benefactress MK169
1775 Cloth 114x147cm
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The Verwohnte child Painting ID:: 45691
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Jean Baptiste Greuze The Verwohnte child mk186
1765 St. Peter castles, Eremitage
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the guitar player Painting ID:: 56123
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Jean Baptiste Greuze the guitar player mk247
1755 to 60 oil on canvas,27.75x22 in,71x56 cm,musee des beaux-arts,nantes,france
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Jean Baptiste Greuze
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1725-1805
French
Jean Baptiste Greuze Galleries
French painter and draughtsman. He was named an associate member of the Academie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture, Paris, in 1755 on the strength of a group of paintings that included genre scenes, portraits and studies of expressive heads (t?tes d'expression). These remained the essential subjects of his art for the next 50 years, except for a brief, concentrated and unsuccessful experiment with history painting in the late 1760s, which was to affect his later genre painting deeply. Though his art has often been compared with that of Jean-Simeon Chardin in particular and interpreted within the context of NEO-CLASSICISM in general, it stands so strikingly apart from the currents of its time that Greuze's accomplishments are best described, as they often were by the artist's contemporaries, as unique. He was greatly admired by connoisseurs, critics and the general public throughout most of his life. His pictures were in the collections of such noted connoisseurs as Ange-Laurent de La Live de Jully, Claude-Henri Watelet and Etienne-Francois, Duc de Choiseul. For a long period he was in particular favour with the critic Denis Diderot, who wrote about him in the Salon reviews that he published in Melchior Grimm's privately circulated Correspondance litteraire. His reputation declined towards the end of his life and through the early part of the 19th century, to be revived after 1850, when 18th-century painting returned to favour, by such critics as Th?ophile Thore, Arsene Houssaye and, most notably, Edmond and Jules de Goncourt in their book L'Art du dix-huiti?me siecle. By the end of the century Greuze's work, especially his many variations on the Head of a Girl, fetched record prices, and his Broken Pitcher (Paris, Louvre) was one of the most popular paintings in the Louvre. The advent of modernism in the early decades of the 20th century totally obliterated Greuze's reputation. It was only in the 1970s, with Brookner's monograph, Munhall's first comprehensive exhibition of the artist's work, increased sale prices, important museum acquisitions and fresh analyses of his art by young historians, that Greuze began to regain the important place that he merits in the history of French art of the 18th century. |
Related Artists::. | Maynard Dixon | Frederick Sandys | PATEL, Pierre | |
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