The French Revolution began in 1789, when citizens stormed the Bastille prison in Paris. Within a few years, France had adopted and overthrown several constitutions and executed its former king. It found itself at war with most of the Continent and endured horrible violence at home during the Reign of Terror. Finally, in 1799, the successful young general Napoleon Bonaparte seized control and, in 1804, proclaimed himself emperor. Though he made important administrative reforms, he was preoccupied by constant warfare and his heroic but failed attempt to unite all of Europe by conquest. After being defeated at Waterloo in 1815, Napoleon was exiled and the Bourbon monarchy was restored in the person of Louis XVIII.
With the revolution, French painting resumed its moral and political purpose and embraced the style known as neoclassicism. Even before 1789, popular taste had begun to turn away from the disarming, lighthearted subjects of rococo; as revolution neared, artists increasingly sought noble themes of public virtue and personal sacrifice from the history of ancient Greece or Rome. They painted with restraint and discipline, using the austere clarity of the neoclassical style to stamp their subjects with certitude and moral truth.
Neoclassicism triumphed¡ªand became inseparably linked to the revolution¡ªin the work of Jacques-Louis David, a painter who also played an active role in politics. As virtual artistic dictator, he served the propaganda programs first of radical revolutionary factions and later of Napoleon. As a young man David had worked in the delicate style of his teacher François Boucher, but in Italy he was influenced by ancient sculpture and by the seventeenth-century artists Caravaggio and Poussin, adopting their strong contrasts of color, clear tones, and firm contours. David gave his heroic figures sculptural mass and arranged them friezelike in emphatic compositions that were meant to inspire his fellow citizens to noble action.
Among the many artists who studied in David''''s large studio was Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres. Unlike his teacher, Ingres did not involve himself in politics and spent most of his youth in Italy, returning to France only after the restoration of the monarchy. During his long life, he came to be regarded as the high priest of neoclassicism, pursuing its perfection after younger artists had become enthralled with romanticism. A superb draftsman, Ingres insisted on the importance of line though he nevertheless was a brilliant master of color. A mathematical precision pushes his work toward formal abstraction despite the meticulous realism of its surfaces.
Chronology
1789 French Revolution begins
1793 Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette executed. Reign of Terror
1796 Jenner introduces smallpox vaccine
1798 Napoleon campaigns in Egypt. Wordsworth and Coleridge publish Lyrical Ballads
1799 Napoleon elected consul
1801 Chateaubriand publishes Atala. Lamarck studies role of acquired characteristics in evolution
1803 U.S. buys territory from France in Lousiana Purchase
1804 Napoleon crowns himself emperor. Beethoven completes Eroica Symphony
1808 Goethe publishes Faust, Part I
1812 Byron publishes Childe Harold''''s Pilgrimage
1815 Napleon defeated at Waterloo. Louis XVIII assumes crown
1818 Mary Shelley publishes Frankenstein
1823 death of Prud''''hon
1825 death of David
1828 death of Houdon
1830 Louis Philippe proclaimed French "Citizen King"
1832 Berlioz completes Symphonie Fantastique
1842 death of Vig¨¦e-Lebrun
1848 Louis Philippe abdicates. Louis Napoleon elected French president
1852 Second Empire begins, Louis Napoleon proclaimed Napoleon III
1857 Pasteur studies fermentation, leading to pasteurization process
1862 Hugo publishes Les Mis¨¦rables
1867 death of Ingres
