7 research outputs found

    Classicism, nationalism and history: The Prix decennaux of 1810 and the politics of art under post-revolutionary empire.

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    Designed by Napoleon to reward the best cultural achievements of the past decade, the Prix decennaux competition represented the state's unprecedented attempt retrospectively to define French culture in the aftermath of the Revolution. However, concours and juries had engendered controversy since 1789. Not surprisingly, the decennial competition's art exhibition and published jury report created opportunities for critics to resist the notion of an uncontested, coherent official culture. Institutional and personal histories led to the Institut jury's decision to nominate prize-winners directly at odds with the Emperor's wishes. In the end. David's Intervention of the Sabines (1799) and Coronation (1807), and Gros's Plague-Stricken of Jaffa (1804) were overshadowed by Girodet's A Scene of a Deluge (1806). Bifurcating ambitious painting into history painting and painting honorable to the national character, the Prix decennaux raised uneasy questions about the relation between the inherited French classical tradition and a modern national identity. Even in 1799, classicism had been compromised by David's attempt to appeal to a commercial audience in his Sabines. At the center of the scandal was the nudity of the painting's male protagonists. Depicting a colonial encounter in the Orient, Gros's Jaffa exploited the crisis in the residual authority of the classical nude in order to vitalize an emergent nationalist iconography in service of the Napoleonic regime. Girodet's Deluge represents an ambitious attempt to resurrect peinture d'histoire and the sacrificed heroic nude in a tableau that distanced itself, however, from historical commemoration. Likened to melodrama, this histrionic image catalyzed anxieties about cultural decline and post-Revolutionary society's taste for violence. However, Royalists championed the Deluge because it resisted Napoleon's subordination of art to mere instrumentality. While these complex paintings exceeded the roles the Institut and Napoleon intended them to play, their interpretation was significantly modified by the structure of the decennial prizes. The Deluge dominated debate in ways that not only overrode the raison d'etre of traditional history painting but also subordinated the national subjects.Ph.D.Art historyCommunication and the ArtsEuropean historySocial SciencesUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/130182/2/9716062.pd

    Still Thinking about Olympia's Maid

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    A África carioca em lentes européias: corpos, sinais e expressões

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    A proposta deste artigo é examinar as maneiras pelas quais alguns viajantes europeus que estiveram no Rio de Janeiro durante a primeira metade do século XIX diferenciaram os africanos na experiência da escravidão, tratando de um viés temático específico: os registros produzidos pela literatura de viagem oitocentista a respeito de suas belezas físicas, sinais corporais e expressões de cantos e danças. A convergência temática e valorativa desses relatos permite-nos observar a reiteração de certas tópicas que cristalizaram os significados mais comuns atribuídos pelos olhares estrangeiros aos africanismos com que depararam na cidade que continha, à época, a maior população escrava das Américas.<br>The proposal of this article is to investigate the ways some European travellers, who have came to the city of Rio de Janeiro during the first half of the 19th century, registered Africans in the slavery experience. Foreigners who visited Brazilian Court until 1850 faced the biggest African slave population of the Americas, and the set of their literature, which describes such cultural and social counterpose, reveals conceptual reiterations of a whole lot of physical and behavioural characteristics given to Africans in captivity
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