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Academic art

Academic art, or academicism or academism, is a style of painting and sculpture produced under the influence of European academies of art, usually used of work produced in the 19th century, after the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815. In this period the standards of the French Académie des Beaux-Arts were very influential, combining elements of Neoclassicism and Romanticism, with Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres a key figure in the formation of the style in painting. Later painters who tried to continue the synthesis included William-Adolphe Bouguereau, Thomas Couture, and Hans Makart among many others. In this context it is often called "academism", "academicism", "art pompier" (pejoratively), and "eclecticism", and sometimes linked with "historicism" and "syncretism." Academic art is closely related to Beaux-Arts architecture, which developed in the same place and holds to a similar classicizing ideal.

Academic art
The Birth of Venus by William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1879); Phaedra by Alexandre Cabanel (1880); The Roses of Heliogabalus by Lawrence Alma-Tadema (1888)

Although production continued into the 20th century, the style had become vacuous, and was strongly rejected by the artists of set of new art movements, of which Impressionism was one of the first. By World War I it had fallen from favour almost completely with critics and buyers, returning somewhat to favour at the end of the 20th century.

Although smaller works such as portraits, landscapes and still-lifes were often produced (and often sold more easily), the movement and the contemporary public and critics most valued large history paintings showing moments from narratives that were very often taken from old or exotic areas of history, though less often the traditional religious narratives. Orientalist art was a major branch, with many specialist painters, as had scenes from classical antiquity and the Middle Ages.

The academies in history edit

The first academy of art was founded in Florence in Italy by Cosimo I de' Medici, on 13 January 1563, under the influence of the architect Giorgio Vasari who called it the Accademia e Compagnia delle Arti del Disegno (Academy and Company for the Arts of Drawing) as it was divided in two different operative branches. While the company was a kind of corporation which every working artist in Tuscany could join, the academy comprised only the most eminent artistic personalities of Cosimo's court, and had the task of supervising the whole artistic production of the Medicean state. In this Medicean institution students learned the "arti del disegno" (a term coined by Vasari) and heard lectures on anatomy and geometry. Another academy, the Accademia di San Luca (named after the patron saint of painters, St. Luke), was founded about a decade later in Rome. The Accademia di San Luca served an educational function and was more concerned with art theory than the Florentine one. In 1582 Annibale Carracci opened his very influential Academy of Desiderosi in Bologna without official support; in some ways this was more like a traditional artist's workshop, but that he felt the need to label it as an "academy" demonstrates the attraction of the idea at the time.

The Accademia di San Luca later served as the model for the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture founded in France in 1648, and which later became the Académie des Beaux-Arts. The Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture was founded in an effort to distinguish artists "who were gentlemen practicing a liberal art" from craftsmen, who were engaged in manual labor. This emphasis on the intellectual component of artmaking had a considerable impact on the subjects and styles of academic art.

After the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture was reorganized in 1661 by Louis XIV whose aim was to control all the artistic activity in France, a controversy occurred among the members that dominated artistic attitudes for the rest of the century. This "battle of styles" was a conflict over whether Peter Paul Rubens or Nicolas Poussin was a suitable model to follow. Followers of Poussin, called "poussinistes", argued that line (disegno) should dominate art, because of its appeal to the intellect, while followers of Rubens, called "rubenistes", argued that color (colore) should dominate art, because of its appeal to emotion.

The debate was revived in the early 19th century, under the movements of Neoclassicism typified by the art of Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, and Romanticism typified by the artwork of Eugène Delacroix. Debates also occurred over whether it was better to learn art by looking at nature, or to learn by looking at the artistic masters of the past.

Academies using the French model formed throughout Europe, and imitated the teachings and styles of the French Académie. In England, this was the Royal Academy. The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts founded in 1754, may be taken as a successful example in a smaller country, which achieved its aim of producing a national school and reducing the reliance on imported artists. The painters of the Danish Golden Age of roughly 1800-1850 were nearly all trained there, and many returned to teach and the history of the art of Denmark is much less marked by tension between academic art and other styles than is the case in other countries.

Women artists edit

One effect of the move to academies was to make training more difficult for women artists, who were excluded from most academies until the last half of the 19th century (1861 for the Royal Academy).[1][2] This was partly because of concerns over the perceived impropriety presented by nudity.[1] Special arrangements were sometimes made for female students until the 20th century.[3]

Development of the academic style edit

Since the onset of the Poussiniste-Rubeniste debate, many artists worked between the two styles. In the 19th century, in the revived form of the debate, the attention and the aims of the art world became to synthesize the line of Neoclassicism with the color of Romanticism. One artist after another was claimed by critics to have achieved the synthesis, among them Théodore Chassériau, Ary Scheffer, Francesco Hayez, Alexandre-Gabriel Decamps, and Thomas Couture. William-Adolphe Bouguereau, a later academic artist, commented that the trick to being a good painter is seeing "color and line as the same thing." Thomas Couture promoted the same idea in a book he authored on art method—arguing that whenever one said a painting had better color or better line it was nonsense, because whenever color appeared brilliant it depended on line to convey it, and vice versa; and that color was really a way to talk about the "value" of form.

Another development during this period included adopting historical styles in order to show the era in history that the painting depicted, called historicism. This is best seen in the work of Baron Jan August Hendrik Leys, a later influence on James Tissot. It is also seen in the development of the Neo-Grec style. Historicism is also meant to refer to the belief and practice associated with academic art that one should incorporate and conciliate the innovations of different traditions of art from the past.

The art world also grew to give increasing focus on allegory in art. Theories of the importance of both line and color asserted that through these elements an artist exerts control over the medium to create psychological effects, in which themes, emotions, and ideas can be represented. As artists attempted to synthesize these theories in practice, the attention on the artwork as an allegorical or figurative vehicle was emphasized. It was held that the representations in painting and sculpture should evoke Platonic forms, or ideals, where behind ordinary depictions one would glimpse something abstract, some eternal truth. Hence, Keats' famous musing "Beauty is truth, truth beauty." The paintings were desired to be an "idée", a full and complete idea. Bouguereau is known to have said that he would not paint "a war", but would paint "War." Many paintings by academic artists are simple nature allegories with titles like Dawn, Dusk, Seeing, and Tasting, where these ideas are personified by a single nude figure, composed in such a way as to bring out the essence of the idea.

The trend in art was also towards greater idealism, which is contrary to realism, in that the figures depicted were made simpler and more abstract—idealized—in order to be able to represent the ideals they stood in for. This would involve both generalizing forms seen in nature, and subordinating them to the unity and theme of the artwork.

Because history and mythology were considered as plays or dialectics of ideas, a fertile ground for important allegory, using themes from these subjects was considered the most serious form of painting. A hierarchy of genres, originally created in the 17th century, was valued, where history painting—classical, religious, mythological, literary, and allegorical subjects—was placed at the top, next genre painting, then portraiture, still-life, and landscape. History painting was also known as the "grande genre." Paintings of Hans Makart are often larger than life historical dramas, and he combined this with a historicism in decoration to dominate the style of 19th century Vienna culture. Paul Delaroche is a typifying example of French history painting.

All of these trends were influenced by the theories of the philosopher Hegel, who held that history was a dialectic of competing ideas, which eventually resolved in synthesis.

Towards the end of the 19th century, academic art had saturated European society. Exhibitions were held often, with the most popular exhibition being the Paris Salon and beginning in 1903, the Salon d'Automne. These salons were large scale events that attracted crowds of visitors, both native and foreign. As much a social affair as an artistic one, 50,000 people might visit on a single Sunday, and as many as 500,000 could see the exhibition during its two-month run. Thousands of pictures were displayed, hung from just below eye level all the way up to the ceiling in a manner now known as "Salon style." A successful showing at the salon was a seal of approval for an artist, making his work saleable to the growing ranks of private collectors. Bouguereau, Alexandre Cabanel and Jean-Léon Gérôme were leading figures of this art world.

During the reign of academic art, the paintings of the Rococo era, previously held in low favor, were revived to popularity, and themes often used in Rococo art such as Eros and Psyche were popular again. The academic art world also admired Raphael, for the ideality of his work, in fact preferring him over Michelangelo.

Academic art in Poland flourished under Jan Matejko, who established the Kraków Academy of Fine Arts. Many of these works can be seen in the Gallery of 19th-Century Polish Art at Sukiennice in Kraków.

Academic art not only held influence in Western Europe and the United States, but also extended its influence to other countries. The artistic environment of Greece, for instance, was dominated by techniques from Western academies from the 17th century onward: this was first evident in the activities of the Ionian School, and later became especially pronounced with the dawn of the Munich School. This was also true for Latin American nations, which, because their revolutions were modeled on the French Revolution, sought to emulate French culture. An example of a Latin American academic artist is Ángel Zárraga of Mexico.

Academic training edit

 
Students painting "from life" at the École. Photographed late 1800s.

Young artists spent four years in rigorous training. In France, only students who passed an exam and carried a letter of reference from a noted professor of art were accepted at the academy's school, the École des Beaux-Arts. Drawings and paintings of the nude, called "académies", were the basic building blocks of academic art and the procedure for learning to make them was clearly defined. First, students copied prints after classical sculptures, becoming familiar with the principles of contour, light, and shade. The copy was believed crucial to the academic education; from copying works of past artists one would assimilate their methods of art making. To advance to the next step, and every successive one, students presented drawings for evaluation.

 
Demosthenes at the Seashore, a Royal Academy prize winning drawing, 1888.

If approved, they would then draw from plaster casts of famous classical sculptures. Only after acquiring these skills were artists permitted entrance to classes in which a live model posed. Painting was not taught at the École des Beaux-Arts until after 1863. To learn to paint with a brush, the student first had to demonstrate proficiency in drawing, which was considered the foundation of academic painting. Only then could the pupil join the studio of an academician and learn how to paint. Throughout the entire process, competitions with a predetermined subject and a specific allotted period of time measured each student's progress.

The most famous art competition for students was the Prix de Rome. The winner of the Prix de Rome was awarded a fellowship to study at the Académie française's school at the Villa Medici in Rome for up to five years. To compete, an artist had to be of French nationality, male, under 30 years of age, and single. He had to have met the entrance requirements of the École and have the support of a well-known art teacher. The competition was grueling, involving several stages before the final one, in which 10 competitors were sequestered in studios for 72 days to paint their final history paintings. The winner was essentially assured a successful professional career.

As noted, a successful showing at the Salon was a seal of approval for an artist. Artists petitioned the hanging committee for optimal placement "on the line", or at eye level. After the exhibition opened, artists complained if their works were "skyed", or hung too high. The ultimate achievement for the professional artist was election to membership in the Académie française and the right to be known as an academician.

Criticism and legacy edit

 
Caricature (French bourgeoisie): This Year Venuses Again… Always Venuses!. Honoré Daumier, No. 2 from series in Le Charivati, 1864.

Academic art was first criticized for its use of idealism, by Realist artists such as Gustave Courbet, as being based on idealistic clichés and representing mythical and legendary motives while contemporary social concerns were being ignored. Another criticism by Realists was the "false surface" of paintings—the objects depicted looked smooth, slick, and idealized—showing no real texture. The Realist Théodule Ribot worked against this by experimenting with rough, unfinished textures in his painting.

Stylistically, the Impressionists, who advocated quickly painting outdoors exactly what the eye sees and the hand puts down, criticized the finished and idealized painting style. Although academic painters began a painting by first making drawings and then painting oil sketches of their subject, the high polish they gave to their drawings seemed to the Impressionists tantamount to a lie. After the oil sketch, the artist would produce the final painting with the academic "fini", changing the painting to meet stylistic standards and attempting to idealize the images and add perfect detail. Similarly, perspective is constructed geometrically on a flat surface and is not really the product of sight; Impressionists disavowed the devotion to mechanical techniques.

Realists and Impressionists also defied the placement of still-life and landscape at the bottom of the hierarchy of genres. Most Realists and Impressionists and others among the early avant-garde who rebelled against academism were originally students in academic ateliers. Claude Monet, Gustave Courbet, Édouard Manet, and even Henri Matisse were students under academic artists.

As modern art and its avant-garde gained more power, academic art was further denigrated, and seen as sentimental, clichéd, conservative, non-innovative, bourgeois, and "styleless." The French referred derisively to the style of academic art as L'art Pompier (pompier means "fireman") alluding to the paintings of Jacques-Louis David (who was held in esteem by the academy) which often depicted soldiers wearing fireman-like helmets. The paintings were called "grandes machines" which were said to have manufactured false emotion through contrivances and tricks.

This denigration of academic art reached its peak through the writings of art critic Clement Greenberg who stated that all academic art is "kitsch." Other artists, such as the Symbolist painters and some of the Surrealists, were kinder to the tradition[citation needed]. As painters who sought to bring imaginary vistas to life, these artists were more willing to learn from a strongly representational tradition. Once the tradition had come to be looked on as old-fashioned, the allegorical nudes and theatrically posed figures struck some viewers as bizarre and dreamlike.

With the goals of Postmodernism in giving a fuller, more sociological and pluralistic account of history, academic art has been brought back into history books and discussion. Since the early 1990s, academic art has even experienced a limited resurgence through the Classical Realist atelier movement.[4] Additionally, the art is gaining a broader appreciation by the public at large, and whereas academic paintings once would only fetch a few hundreds of dollars in auctions, some now fetch millions.[5]

Major artists edit

Austria edit

Belgium edit

Brazil edit

Canada edit

Croatia edit

Czech Republic edit

Estonia edit

Finland edit

France edit

Germany edit

Hungary edit

India edit

Ireland edit

Italy edit

Latvia edit

Netherlands edit

Peru edit

Poland edit

Russia edit

Serbia edit

Slovenia edit

Spain edit

Sweden edit

Switzerland edit

United Kingdom edit

Uruguay edit

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Myers, Nicole. "Women Artists in Nineteenth–Century France". Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  2. ^ Levin, Kim (November 2007). "Top Ten ARTnews Stories: Exposing the Hidden 'He'". ArtNews.
  3. ^ Nochlin, Linda. "Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists?" (PDF). Department of Art History, University of Concordia.
  4. ^ Panero, James: "The New Old School", The New Criterion, Volume 25, September 2006, p. 104.
  5. ^ Esterow, Milton (1 January 2011). "From 'Riches to Rags to Riches'". ArtNews. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  6. ^ . www.galerijamaticesrpske.rs. Archived from the original on 21 September 2019. Retrieved 15 August 2019.
  7. ^ Bresc-Bautier, Geneviève (2008). The Louvre, a Tale of a Palace. Musée du Louvre Éditions. p. 110. ISBN 978-2-7572-0177-0.
  8. ^ Graham-Nixon, Andrew (2023). art THE DEFINITIVE VISUAL HISTORY. DK. p. 336. ISBN 978-0-2416-2903-1.
  9. ^ Elizabeth, S. (2020). The Art of the Occult - A Visual Sourcebook for the Modern Mystic. White Lion Publishing. p. 73. ISBN 978 0 7112 4883 0.
  10. ^ Cumming, Robert (2020). ART a visual history. DK. p. 218. ISBN 978-0-2414-3741-4.
  11. ^ "pictură. Aman, Theodor. Vlad Țepeș și solii turci". clasate.cimec.ro. Retrieved 11 November 2023.
  12. ^ Christophe, Averty (2020). Orsay. Éditions Place des Victories. p. 40. ISBN 978-2-8099-1770-3.
  13. ^ Christophe, Averty (2020). Orsay. Éditions Place des Victories. p. 68. ISBN 978-2-8099-1770-3.
  14. ^ Cumming, Robert (2020). ART a visual history. DK. p. 218. ISBN 978-0-2414-3741-4.
  15. ^ Christophe, Averty (2020). Orsay. Éditions Place des Victories. p. 41. ISBN 978-2-8099-1770-3.
  16. ^ Christophe, Averty (2020). Orsay. Éditions Place des Victories. p. 41. ISBN 978-2-8099-1770-3.
  17. ^ Elizabeth, S. (2020). The Art of the Occult - A Visual Sourcebook for the Modern Mystic. White Lion Publishing. p. 215. ISBN 978 0 7112 4883 0.
  18. ^ Cumming, Robert (2020). ART a visual history. DK. p. 219. ISBN 978-0-2414-3741-4.
  19. ^ Elizabeth, S. (2022). The Art of Darkness. White Lion Publishing. p. 199. ISBN 978-0 7112-6920-0.
  20. ^ Cumming, Robert (2020). ART a visual history. DK. p. 220. ISBN 978-0-2414-3741-4.
  21. ^ Elizabeth, S. (2020). The Art of the Occult - A Visual Sourcebook for the Modern Mystic. White Lion Publishing. p. 211. ISBN 978 0 7112 4883 0.

Further reading edit

  • Art and the Academy in the Nineteenth Century. (2000). Denis, Rafael Cardoso & Trodd, Colin (Eds). Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0-8135-2795-3
  • L'Art-Pompier (1998). Lécharny, Louis-Marie, Que sais-je? (in French). Presses Universitaires de France. ISBN 2-13-049341-6
  • L'Art pompier: immagini, significati, presenze dell'altro Ottocento francese (1860–1890) (in French). (1997). Luderin, Pierpaolo, Pocket library of studies in art, Olschki. ISBN 88-222-4559-8

External links edit

  •   Media related to Academic art at Wikimedia Commons

academic, academist, redirects, here, confused, with, academicians, academics, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find. Academist redirects here Not to be confused with Academicians or Academics This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Academic art news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Academic art or academicism or academism is a style of painting and sculpture produced under the influence of European academies of art usually used of work produced in the 19th century after the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815 In this period the standards of the French Academie des Beaux Arts were very influential combining elements of Neoclassicism and Romanticism with Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres a key figure in the formation of the style in painting Later painters who tried to continue the synthesis included William Adolphe Bouguereau Thomas Couture and Hans Makart among many others In this context it is often called academism academicism art pompier pejoratively and eclecticism and sometimes linked with historicism and syncretism Academic art is closely related to Beaux Arts architecture which developed in the same place and holds to a similar classicizing ideal Academic artThe Birth of Venus by William Adolphe Bouguereau 1879 Phaedra by Alexandre Cabanel 1880 The Roses of Heliogabalus by Lawrence Alma Tadema 1888 Although production continued into the 20th century the style had become vacuous and was strongly rejected by the artists of set of new art movements of which Impressionism was one of the first By World War I it had fallen from favour almost completely with critics and buyers returning somewhat to favour at the end of the 20th century Although smaller works such as portraits landscapes and still lifes were often produced and often sold more easily the movement and the contemporary public and critics most valued large history paintings showing moments from narratives that were very often taken from old or exotic areas of history though less often the traditional religious narratives Orientalist art was a major branch with many specialist painters as had scenes from classical antiquity and the Middle Ages Contents 1 The academies in history 1 1 Women artists 2 Development of the academic style 3 Academic training 4 Criticism and legacy 5 Major artists 5 1 Austria 5 2 Belgium 5 3 Brazil 5 4 Canada 5 5 Croatia 5 6 Czech Republic 5 7 Estonia 5 8 Finland 5 9 France 5 10 Germany 5 11 Hungary 5 12 India 5 13 Ireland 5 14 Italy 5 15 Latvia 5 16 Netherlands 5 17 Peru 5 18 Poland 5 19 Russia 5 20 Serbia 5 21 Slovenia 5 22 Spain 5 23 Sweden 5 24 Switzerland 5 25 United Kingdom 5 26 Uruguay 6 Gallery 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksThe academies in history editThe first academy of art was founded in Florence in Italy by Cosimo I de Medici on 13 January 1563 under the influence of the architect Giorgio Vasari who called it the Accademia e Compagnia delle Arti del Disegno Academy and Company for the Arts of Drawing as it was divided in two different operative branches While the company was a kind of corporation which every working artist in Tuscany could join the academy comprised only the most eminent artistic personalities of Cosimo s court and had the task of supervising the whole artistic production of the Medicean state In this Medicean institution students learned the arti del disegno a term coined by Vasari and heard lectures on anatomy and geometry Another academy the Accademia di San Luca named after the patron saint of painters St Luke was founded about a decade later in Rome The Accademia di San Luca served an educational function and was more concerned with art theory than the Florentine one In 1582 Annibale Carracci opened his very influential Academy of Desiderosi in Bologna without official support in some ways this was more like a traditional artist s workshop but that he felt the need to label it as an academy demonstrates the attraction of the idea at the time The Accademia di San Luca later served as the model for the Academie royale de peinture et de sculpture founded in France in 1648 and which later became the Academie des Beaux Arts The Academie royale de peinture et de sculpture was founded in an effort to distinguish artists who were gentlemen practicing a liberal art from craftsmen who were engaged in manual labor This emphasis on the intellectual component of artmaking had a considerable impact on the subjects and styles of academic art After the Academie royale de peinture et de sculpture was reorganized in 1661 by Louis XIV whose aim was to control all the artistic activity in France a controversy occurred among the members that dominated artistic attitudes for the rest of the century This battle of styles was a conflict over whether Peter Paul Rubens or Nicolas Poussin was a suitable model to follow Followers of Poussin called poussinistes argued that line disegno should dominate art because of its appeal to the intellect while followers of Rubens called rubenistes argued that color colore should dominate art because of its appeal to emotion The debate was revived in the early 19th century under the movements of Neoclassicism typified by the art of Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres and Romanticism typified by the artwork of Eugene Delacroix Debates also occurred over whether it was better to learn art by looking at nature or to learn by looking at the artistic masters of the past Academies using the French model formed throughout Europe and imitated the teachings and styles of the French Academie In England this was the Royal Academy The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts founded in 1754 may be taken as a successful example in a smaller country which achieved its aim of producing a national school and reducing the reliance on imported artists The painters of the Danish Golden Age of roughly 1800 1850 were nearly all trained there and many returned to teach and the history of the art of Denmark is much less marked by tension between academic art and other styles than is the case in other countries Women artists edit One effect of the move to academies was to make training more difficult for women artists who were excluded from most academies until the last half of the 19th century 1861 for the Royal Academy 1 2 This was partly because of concerns over the perceived impropriety presented by nudity 1 Special arrangements were sometimes made for female students until the 20th century 3 Development of the academic style editSince the onset of the Poussiniste Rubeniste debate many artists worked between the two styles In the 19th century in the revived form of the debate the attention and the aims of the art world became to synthesize the line of Neoclassicism with the color of Romanticism One artist after another was claimed by critics to have achieved the synthesis among them Theodore Chasseriau Ary Scheffer Francesco Hayez Alexandre Gabriel Decamps and Thomas Couture William Adolphe Bouguereau a later academic artist commented that the trick to being a good painter is seeing color and line as the same thing Thomas Couture promoted the same idea in a book he authored on art method arguing that whenever one said a painting had better color or better line it was nonsense because whenever color appeared brilliant it depended on line to convey it and vice versa and that color was really a way to talk about the value of form Another development during this period included adopting historical styles in order to show the era in history that the painting depicted called historicism This is best seen in the work of Baron Jan August Hendrik Leys a later influence on James Tissot It is also seen in the development of the Neo Grec style Historicism is also meant to refer to the belief and practice associated with academic art that one should incorporate and conciliate the innovations of different traditions of art from the past The art world also grew to give increasing focus on allegory in art Theories of the importance of both line and color asserted that through these elements an artist exerts control over the medium to create psychological effects in which themes emotions and ideas can be represented As artists attempted to synthesize these theories in practice the attention on the artwork as an allegorical or figurative vehicle was emphasized It was held that the representations in painting and sculpture should evoke Platonic forms or ideals where behind ordinary depictions one would glimpse something abstract some eternal truth Hence Keats famous musing Beauty is truth truth beauty The paintings were desired to be an idee a full and complete idea Bouguereau is known to have said that he would not paint a war but would paint War Many paintings by academic artists are simple nature allegories with titles like Dawn Dusk Seeing and Tasting where these ideas are personified by a single nude figure composed in such a way as to bring out the essence of the idea The trend in art was also towards greater idealism which is contrary to realism in that the figures depicted were made simpler and more abstract idealized in order to be able to represent the ideals they stood in for This would involve both generalizing forms seen in nature and subordinating them to the unity and theme of the artwork Because history and mythology were considered as plays or dialectics of ideas a fertile ground for important allegory using themes from these subjects was considered the most serious form of painting A hierarchy of genres originally created in the 17th century was valued where history painting classical religious mythological literary and allegorical subjects was placed at the top next genre painting then portraiture still life and landscape History painting was also known as the grande genre Paintings of Hans Makart are often larger than life historical dramas and he combined this with a historicism in decoration to dominate the style of 19th century Vienna culture Paul Delaroche is a typifying example of French history painting All of these trends were influenced by the theories of the philosopher Hegel who held that history was a dialectic of competing ideas which eventually resolved in synthesis Towards the end of the 19th century academic art had saturated European society Exhibitions were held often with the most popular exhibition being the Paris Salon and beginning in 1903 the Salon d Automne These salons were large scale events that attracted crowds of visitors both native and foreign As much a social affair as an artistic one 50 000 people might visit on a single Sunday and as many as 500 000 could see the exhibition during its two month run Thousands of pictures were displayed hung from just below eye level all the way up to the ceiling in a manner now known as Salon style A successful showing at the salon was a seal of approval for an artist making his work saleable to the growing ranks of private collectors Bouguereau Alexandre Cabanel and Jean Leon Gerome were leading figures of this art world During the reign of academic art the paintings of the Rococo era previously held in low favor were revived to popularity and themes often used in Rococo art such as Eros and Psyche were popular again The academic art world also admired Raphael for the ideality of his work in fact preferring him over Michelangelo Academic art in Poland flourished under Jan Matejko who established the Krakow Academy of Fine Arts Many of these works can be seen in the Gallery of 19th Century Polish Art at Sukiennice in Krakow Academic art not only held influence in Western Europe and the United States but also extended its influence to other countries The artistic environment of Greece for instance was dominated by techniques from Western academies from the 17th century onward this was first evident in the activities of the Ionian School and later became especially pronounced with the dawn of the Munich School This was also true for Latin American nations which because their revolutions were modeled on the French Revolution sought to emulate French culture An example of a Latin American academic artist is Angel Zarraga of Mexico Academic training edit nbsp Students painting from life at the Ecole Photographed late 1800s Young artists spent four years in rigorous training In France only students who passed an exam and carried a letter of reference from a noted professor of art were accepted at the academy s school the Ecole des Beaux Arts Drawings and paintings of the nude called academies were the basic building blocks of academic art and the procedure for learning to make them was clearly defined First students copied prints after classical sculptures becoming familiar with the principles of contour light and shade The copy was believed crucial to the academic education from copying works of past artists one would assimilate their methods of art making To advance to the next step and every successive one students presented drawings for evaluation nbsp Demosthenes at the Seashore a Royal Academy prize winning drawing 1888 If approved they would then draw from plaster casts of famous classical sculptures Only after acquiring these skills were artists permitted entrance to classes in which a live model posed Painting was not taught at the Ecole des Beaux Arts until after 1863 To learn to paint with a brush the student first had to demonstrate proficiency in drawing which was considered the foundation of academic painting Only then could the pupil join the studio of an academician and learn how to paint Throughout the entire process competitions with a predetermined subject and a specific allotted period of time measured each student s progress The most famous art competition for students was the Prix de Rome The winner of the Prix de Rome was awarded a fellowship to study at the Academie francaise s school at the Villa Medici in Rome for up to five years To compete an artist had to be of French nationality male under 30 years of age and single He had to have met the entrance requirements of the Ecole and have the support of a well known art teacher The competition was grueling involving several stages before the final one in which 10 competitors were sequestered in studios for 72 days to paint their final history paintings The winner was essentially assured a successful professional career As noted a successful showing at the Salon was a seal of approval for an artist Artists petitioned the hanging committee for optimal placement on the line or at eye level After the exhibition opened artists complained if their works were skyed or hung too high The ultimate achievement for the professional artist was election to membership in the Academie francaise and the right to be known as an academician Criticism and legacy edit nbsp Caricature French bourgeoisie This Year Venuses Again Always Venuses Honore Daumier No 2 from series in Le Charivati 1864 Academic art was first criticized for its use of idealism by Realist artists such as Gustave Courbet as being based on idealistic cliches and representing mythical and legendary motives while contemporary social concerns were being ignored Another criticism by Realists was the false surface of paintings the objects depicted looked smooth slick and idealized showing no real texture The Realist Theodule Ribot worked against this by experimenting with rough unfinished textures in his painting Stylistically the Impressionists who advocated quickly painting outdoors exactly what the eye sees and the hand puts down criticized the finished and idealized painting style Although academic painters began a painting by first making drawings and then painting oil sketches of their subject the high polish they gave to their drawings seemed to the Impressionists tantamount to a lie After the oil sketch the artist would produce the final painting with the academic fini changing the painting to meet stylistic standards and attempting to idealize the images and add perfect detail Similarly perspective is constructed geometrically on a flat surface and is not really the product of sight Impressionists disavowed the devotion to mechanical techniques Realists and Impressionists also defied the placement of still life and landscape at the bottom of the hierarchy of genres Most Realists and Impressionists and others among the early avant garde who rebelled against academism were originally students in academic ateliers Claude Monet Gustave Courbet Edouard Manet and even Henri Matisse were students under academic artists As modern art and its avant garde gained more power academic art was further denigrated and seen as sentimental cliched conservative non innovative bourgeois and styleless The French referred derisively to the style of academic art as L art Pompier pompier means fireman alluding to the paintings of Jacques Louis David who was held in esteem by the academy which often depicted soldiers wearing fireman like helmets The paintings were called grandes machines which were said to have manufactured false emotion through contrivances and tricks This denigration of academic art reached its peak through the writings of art critic Clement Greenberg who stated that all academic art is kitsch Other artists such as the Symbolist painters and some of the Surrealists were kinder to the tradition citation needed As painters who sought to bring imaginary vistas to life these artists were more willing to learn from a strongly representational tradition Once the tradition had come to be looked on as old fashioned the allegorical nudes and theatrically posed figures struck some viewers as bizarre and dreamlike With the goals of Postmodernism in giving a fuller more sociological and pluralistic account of history academic art has been brought back into history books and discussion Since the early 1990s academic art has even experienced a limited resurgence through the Classical Realist atelier movement 4 Additionally the art is gaining a broader appreciation by the public at large and whereas academic paintings once would only fetch a few hundreds of dollars in auctions some now fetch millions 5 Major artists editAustria edit Hans Canon 1829 1885 painter Hans Makart 1840 1884 painter Viktor Tilgner 1844 1896 sculptorBelgium edit Georges Croegaert 1848 1923 painter Jacob Jacobs 1812 1879 painter Jan August Hendrik Leys 1815 1869 painter Karel Ooms 1845 1900 painter Eugene Siberdt 1851 1931 painter Alfred Stevens 1823 1906 painter Gustave Wappers 1803 1874 painterBrazil edit Main article Brazilian academic art Victor Meirelles 1832 1903 painter Pedro Americo 1843 1905 painter Rodolfo Amoedo 1857 1941 painterCanada edit William Brymner 1855 1925 painter Robert Harris 1849 1919 painter Paul Kane 1810 1871 painter Cornelius Krieghoff 1815 1872 painter Paul Peel 1860 1892 painter Suzor Cote 1869 1937 painter and sculptorCroatia edit Vlaho Bukovac 1855 1922 painter Robert Franges Mihanovic 1872 1940 sculptor Oton Ivekovic 1869 1939 painter Mato Celestin Medovic 1857 1920 painter Ivan Mestrovic 1883 1962 sculptor Ivan Rendic 1849 1932 sculptorCzech Republic edit Vaclav Brozik 1851 1901 painter Vojtech Hynais 1854 1925 painterEstonia edit Johann Koler 1826 1899 painter August Weizenberg 1837 1921 sculptor Amandus Adamson 1855 1929 sculptorFinland edit Akseli Gallen Kallela 1865 1931 painterFrance edit Alfred Agache 1843 1915 painter Louis Ernest Barrias 1841 1905 sculptor Paul Baudry 1828 1886 painter Albert Ernest Carrier Belleuse 1824 1887 sculptor Leon Bonnat 1833 1922 painter William Adolphe Bouguereau 1825 1905 painter Gustave Boulanger 1824 1888 painter Louis Rene Boulanger 1860 1917 painter Charles Edward Boutibonne 1816 1897 painter Charles Joshua Chaplin 1825 1891 painter Pierre Auguste Cot 1837 1883 painter Thomas Couture 1815 1879 painter Alexandre Cabanel 1823 1889 painter Alexandre Gabriel Decamps 1803 1860 painter Paul Delaroche 1797 1856 painter Delphin Enjolras 1857 1945 painter Alexandre Falguiere 1831 1900 sculptor Jean Leon Gerome 1824 1904 painter and sculptor Jean Jacques Henner 1829 1905 painter Auguste Alexandre Hirsch 1833 1912 painter and lithographer Paul Jamin 1853 1903 painter Armand Laroche 1826 1903 painter Jean Paul Laurens 1838 1921 painter and sculptor Jules Joseph Lefebvre 1836 1911 painter Marius Jean Antonin Mercie 1845 1916 sculptor Hugues Merle 1822 1881 painter Emile Munier 1840 1895 painter Leon Bazile Perrault 1832 1908 painter Georges Rochegrosse 1859 1938 painter Lionel Noel Royer 1852 1926 painter Louis Frederic Schutzenberger 1825 1903 painter Guillaume Seignac 1870 1924 painter Joseph Noel Sylvestre 1847 1926 painter Auguste Toulmouche 1829 1890 painterSee also Lyon School Germany edit Anselm Feuerbach 1829 1880 painter Wilhelm von Kaulbach 1805 1874 painter Franz von Lenbach 1836 1904 painter Karl von Piloty painter Anton von Werner painterHungary edit Karoly Lotz 1833 1904 painter Gyula Benczur painterIndia edit Raja Ravi Varma painter M V Dhurandhar painter and educator Archibald Herman Muller painter Hemendranath Majumdar 1894 1948 painterIreland edit Albert Power 1881 1945 sculptorItaly edit Eugene de Blaas 1843 1931 painter Francesco Hayez 1791 1882 painter Domenico Morelli 1823 1901 painterLatvia edit Janis Rozentals 1866 1917 painter Vilhelms Purvitis 1872 1945 painterNetherlands edit Ary Scheffer painterPeru edit Carlos Baca Flor 1869 1941 painter Federico del Campo 1837 1923 painter Daniel Hernandez Morillo 1856 1932 painter Francisco Laso 1823 1869 painter Juan Lepiani 1864 1932 painter Albert Lynch 1860 1950 painter Ignacio Merino 1817 1876 painterPoland edit Wladyslaw Czachorski 1850 1911 painter Jan Matejko painter Henryk Siemiradzki painter Pantaleon Szyndler painterRussia edit Karl Briullov painter Fyodor Bruni painter Alexander Ivanov painter Boris Kustodiev painter Konstantin Makovsky painter Carl Timoleon von Neff painterSerbia edit Uros Predic painter Paja Jovanovic 1859 1857 painter 6 Slovenia edit Ivana Kobilca 1861 1926 painterSpain edit Mariano Fortuny y Marsal painter Tomas Povedano painterSweden edit Julius Kronberg painter Georg von Rosen painterSwitzerland edit Charles Gleyre painter Fritz Zuber Buhler 1822 1896 painterUnited Kingdom edit Sir Lawrence Alma Tadema painter Sir Charles Lock Eastlake painter Sir Alfred Gilbert sculptor John William Godward painter Frederick Goodall painter Edwin Henry Landseer painter and sculptor Frederic Leighton 1st Baron Leighton painter and sculptor Albert Moore painter Sir Alfred Munnings painter Sir Edward John Poynter painter Alfred Stevens sculptor George Frederic Watts 1817 1904 painterSee also Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood Uruguay edit Juan Manuel Blanes 1830 1901 painterGallery edit nbsp Egypt Saved by Joseph by Alexandre Denis Abel de Pujol 1827 oil on canvas ceiling of a room in the Louvre Palace Paris 7 nbsp The Assassination of the Duke of Guise at the Chateau de Blois in 1588 by Paul Delaroche 1834 oil on canvas Musee Conde Chantilly France nbsp Conde and Mazarin by Eugene Deveria c 1835 oil on canvas Musee des Beaux Arts d Orleans Orleans France nbsp The Romans in their Decadence by Thomas Couture 1844 1847 oil on canvas Musee d Orsay Paris 8 nbsp Call of the Last Victims of Terror by Charles Louis Muller 1850 oil on canvas Musee des Beaux Arts de Carcassonne Carcassonne France nbsp The Alchemist by William Fettes Douglas 1853 oil on canvas Victoria and Albert Museum London 9 nbsp The Empress Eugenie Surrounded by her Ladies in Waiting by Franz Xaver Winterhalter 1855 oil on canvas Chateau de Compiegne Compiegne France 10 nbsp Rehearsal of The Flute Player and The Woman of Diomede at the home of Prince Napoleon in the atrium of his Pompeian house by Gustave Boulanger 1861 oil on canvas Musee d Orsay nbsp Vlad the Impaler and the Turkish Envoys by Theodor Aman 1862 1863 oil on canvas National Museum of Art of Romania Bucharest 11 nbsp Lost Illusions by Leon Dussart and Charles Gleyre 1865 1867 oil on canvas Walters Art Museum Baltimore US nbsp The Death of Orpheus by Emile Levy 1866 oil on canvas Musee d Orsay 12 nbsp The Discovery of Pulque by Jose Maria Obregon 1869 oil on canvas Museo Nacional de Arte Mexico City nbsp Summary Execution under the Moorish Kings of Granada by Henri Regnault 1870 oil on canvas Musee d Orsay 13 nbsp Pollice Verso Thumbs Down by Jean Leon Gerome 1872 oil on canvas Phoenix Art Museum Phoenix Arizona USA nbsp The Triumph of Beauty Charmed by Music amidst the Muses and the Hours of the Day designed for the ceiling of the auditorium of the Palais Garnier by Jules Eugene Lenepveu 1872 oil on canvas Musee d Orsay nbsp Moonlit Dreams by Gabriel Ferrier 1874 oil on canvas private collection nbsp Gloria Victis by Antonin Mercie 1874 bronze Petit Palais Paris 14 nbsp Remorse by Louis Baader 1875 oil on canvas Musee d Orsay 15 nbsp The Excommunication of Robert the Pious by Jean Paul Laurens 1875 oil on canvas Musee d Orsay 16 nbsp The Babylonian Marriage Market by Edwin Long 1875 oil on canvas Royal Holloway University of London nbsp The Oracle by Camillo Miola 1880 oil on canvas Getty Center Los Angeles US 17 nbsp Cleopatra Testing Poisons on Condemned Prisoners by Alexandre Cabanel 1887 oil on canvas private collection 18 nbsp The Renaissance of Letters by Pierre Victor Galland 1888 oil on canvas Musee departemental de l Oise Beauvais France nbsp Ulysses and the Sirens by John William Waterhouse 1891 oil on canvas National Gallery of Victoria Melbourne Australia 19 nbsp The Garden of the Hesperides by Frederic Leighton c 1892 oil on canvas Lady Lever Art Gallery Wirral the UK 20 nbsp The Fortune Teller by Jehan Georges Vibert late 19th century oil on canvas private collection 21 nbsp Reverie In the Days of Sappho by John William Godward 1904 oil on canvas Getty Center nbsp Prayer to Khonsu by Stefan Bakalowicz 1905 oil on canvas Russian Museum Saint Petersburg RussiaReferences edit a b Myers Nicole Women Artists in Nineteenth Century France Metropolitan Museum of Art Levin Kim November 2007 Top Ten ARTnews Stories Exposing the Hidden He ArtNews Nochlin Linda Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists PDF Department of Art History University of Concordia Panero James The New Old School The New Criterion Volume 25 September 2006 p 104 Esterow Milton 1 January 2011 From Riches to Rags to Riches ArtNews Retrieved 12 September 2021 Academism of the 19th Century www galerijamaticesrpske rs Archived from the original on 21 September 2019 Retrieved 15 August 2019 Bresc Bautier Genevieve 2008 The Louvre a Tale of a Palace Musee du Louvre Editions p 110 ISBN 978 2 7572 0177 0 Graham Nixon Andrew 2023 art THE DEFINITIVE VISUAL HISTORY DK p 336 ISBN 978 0 2416 2903 1 Elizabeth S 2020 The Art of the Occult A Visual Sourcebook for the Modern Mystic White Lion Publishing p 73 ISBN 978 0 7112 4883 0 Cumming Robert 2020 ART a visual history DK p 218 ISBN 978 0 2414 3741 4 pictură Aman Theodor Vlad Țepeș și solii turci clasate cimec ro Retrieved 11 November 2023 Christophe Averty 2020 Orsay Editions Place des Victories p 40 ISBN 978 2 8099 1770 3 Christophe Averty 2020 Orsay Editions Place des Victories p 68 ISBN 978 2 8099 1770 3 Cumming Robert 2020 ART a visual history DK p 218 ISBN 978 0 2414 3741 4 Christophe Averty 2020 Orsay Editions Place des Victories p 41 ISBN 978 2 8099 1770 3 Christophe Averty 2020 Orsay Editions Place des Victories p 41 ISBN 978 2 8099 1770 3 Elizabeth S 2020 The Art of the Occult A Visual Sourcebook for the Modern Mystic White Lion Publishing p 215 ISBN 978 0 7112 4883 0 Cumming Robert 2020 ART a visual history DK p 219 ISBN 978 0 2414 3741 4 Elizabeth S 2022 The Art of Darkness White Lion Publishing p 199 ISBN 978 0 7112 6920 0 Cumming Robert 2020 ART a visual history DK p 220 ISBN 978 0 2414 3741 4 Elizabeth S 2020 The Art of the Occult A Visual Sourcebook for the Modern Mystic White Lion Publishing p 211 ISBN 978 0 7112 4883 0 Further reading editArt and the Academy in the Nineteenth Century 2000 Denis Rafael Cardoso amp Trodd Colin Eds Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 2795 3 L Art Pompier 1998 Lecharny Louis Marie Que sais je in French Presses Universitaires de France ISBN 2 13 049341 6 L Art pompier immagini significati presenze dell altro Ottocento francese 1860 1890 in French 1997 Luderin Pierpaolo Pocket library of studies in art Olschki ISBN 88 222 4559 8External links edit nbsp Media related to Academic art at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Academic art amp oldid 1208846764, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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