The 18th Century Background and the French Revolution

When:
September 23, 2015 @ 10:45 am – 12:45 pm
2015-09-23T10:45:00+01:00
2015-09-23T12:45:00+01:00
Where:
The Course at The University Women's Club
2 Audley Square
Mayfair, London W1K
UK
Cost:
£49
Contact:
The Course
020 7266 7815

If you are fascinated by art, history, literature and opera join us at THE COURSE. Founded in 1994, we offer stimulating lecture programmes taught by well-known lecturers and subject specialists. With small, informal and friendly groups you will have the opportunity to socialise and exchange ideas with like-minded people.

Europe of the Empires: The Arts of the Nineteenth Century

In this series we will examine the decades between the collapse of the ‘Ancien Regime’ and the ravages of a 25 year war, the “Long 19th Century” which took us to the outbreak of a very different war in 1914, in a very different world. The course will examine the expression of change in the arts – from Goya in Spain, Blake in England and the Impressionists in France. As Empires expanded we will look at the impact of trade and new materials and of new and exotic influences on artists from Delacroix to Picasso.

The 18th Century Background and the French Revolution

This lecture will focus on the 18th century – the age of moderation and philosophy, the “Age of Reason” and of classical discipline in the arts. As events darkened in France, heralding a war which would engulf the Continent, the mood changed radically to reflect a world in which the security of the past disappeared and art became the instrument by which the French, the English and the Spanish broadcast propaganda to the elite and to the people. Through the cutting, satiric caricature of English artists like Gillray and Rowlandson and the semi-deification of Napoleon by his own painters, the arts proclaimed their allegiance.