Short Courses

Rococo to Revolution: French Art and its Geographical Contexts, 1700-1789

On Campus

i Nicholas-Jean-Baptiste Raguenet, A View of Paris with the Île de la Cité, 1763, oil on canvas, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles. Image: getty.edu/art

Course 18 – Summer School on campus

Monday 8 – Friday 12 July 2024
Harvey Shepherd
£645

Course description

This course will examine the ever-changing roles of French art during the turbulent eighteenth century, from the later years and death of Louis XIV to the Revolution of 1789. Students will consider the role that French art played in forming identities and tastes across the world; from shaping desirable aristocratic luxury to envisaging radical futures.

French art and taste of the eighteenth century will be encountered through a series of ever-widening geographical contexts. The opening classes will examine the political and economic centres of France, looking at the Château de Versailles, as well as the artistic culture of Paris and its society during the Enlightenment and the early years of the French Revolution. Alongside the court and the capital, we will consider France’s periphery and its neighbours, examining interactions with cities like Lyon and Marseille, and both peacetime connections and wartime rivalries with European states such as Great Britain, The Netherlands, and the Holy Roman Empire. Lastly, the course considers the wider global contexts of French art as it was both collected and sent abroad, examining the colonial and imperial interactions of France in an increasingly connected world, from the court of Qing China to Senegal, India, and the Caribbean.

This event has passed.

Monday 8 – Friday 12 July 2024

10:00-16:30

£645

Vernon Square 

Citations