"Life Drawing and the Crisis of Historia in French Eighteenth-Century Painting", Art History, Volume 39, Issue 1, pages 40–69, February 2016. (original) (raw)
By the 1730s a new generation of French painters had developed a renewed understanding of history painting. This reconceptualization undermined the foundations of Albertian historia and the underpinnings it had for so long provided for the practice and theory of French grand genre. Representing figures defined by dramatic actions and narrative relationships between them was replaced by a mode of presenting figures in quieter states of bodily and psychological introspection. This naturally recalls Michael Fried’s notion of ‘absorption’, used to define a pictorial aesthetic that emerged in the mid-eighteenth century. This essay maps the earlier appearance of such ‘absorptive states’, where the valorization of inner mental activities coincided with a growing singularization of the figures within a composition. This phenomenon, it is argued, was the result of an evolution in the academic practice of life drawing. This led to an even-greater attention to the figuration of the human body in painting as the manifestation of an interior state, becoming the central organizing principle of history painting.
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