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Neoclassicist 

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Neoclassicist

Mid-18th Century to Early-19th Century

Neoclassical Art is a severe, unemotional form of art harkening back to the style of ancient Greece and Rome. Its rigidity was a reaction to the overbred Rococo style and the emotional Baroque style. The rise of Neoclassical Art was part of a general revival of classical thought, which was of some importance in the American and French revolutions. Important Neoclassicists include the sculptors Antonio Canova, Bertel Thorvaldsen, and Jean-Antoine Houdon, and painters Anton Raphael Mengs, Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, and Jacques-Louis David. Around 1800, Romanticism emerged as a reaction to Neoclassicism. It did not really replace the Neoclassical style so much as act as a counterbalancing influence, and many artists were influenced by both styles to some degree. Neoclassical Art was also a substantial direct influence on 19th-century Academic Art.

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  Neoclassicist

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8 Galleries
       Canova, Antonio [Italian, 1757-1822] (6 Images)
       David, Jacques Louis [French, 1748-1825] (7 Images)
       Feuerbach, Anselm [German, 1829-1880] (2 Images)
       Gérard, Baron François Pascal [French, 1770-1837] (6 Images)
       Ingres, Jean-Auguste-Dominique [French, 1780-1867] (35 Images)
       Mengs, Anton Raphael [German, 1738-1779] (9 Images)
       Miscellaneous Neoclassicist Art (No Images or Galleries Found)
       Vigée-Lebrun, Élisabeth-Louise [French, 1755-1842] (28 Images)
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