enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Rococo painting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rococo_Painting

    Rococo painting also illustrates, in its first version, the social schism that would lead to the French Revolution, and represents the last symbolic bastion of resistance of an elite distant from the problems and interests of the common people, and that was increasingly threatened by the rise of the middle class, which was educated and began to ...

  3. Rococo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rococo

    Rococo, less commonly Roccoco (/ r ə ˈ k oʊ k oʊ / rə-KOH-koh, US also / ˌ r oʊ k ə ˈ k oʊ / ROH-kə-KOH; French: or ⓘ), also known as Late Baroque, is an exceptionally ornamental and dramatic style of architecture, art and decoration which combines asymmetry, scrolling curves, gilding, white and pastel colours, sculpted moulding, and trompe-l'œil frescoes to create surprise and ...

  4. Night in paintings (Western art) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Night_in_paintings...

    Archip Kuindshi, Moonlit Night on the Dnieper 1882 James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Nocturne in Black and Gold – The Falling Rocket, 1874 [1] [2] The depiction of night in paintings is common in Western art. Paintings that feature a night scene as the theme may be religious or history paintings, genre scenes, portraits, landscapes, or

  5. Italian Rococo art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Rococo_art

    Italian Rococo was mainly inspired by the rocaille or French Rococo, since France was the founding nation of that particular style. The styles of the Italian Rococo were very similar to those of France. The style in Italy was usually lighter and more feminine than Italian Baroque art, and became the more popular art form of the settecento.

  6. Rococo Revival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rococo_Revival

    For the increasing bourgeois audience, the rococo-revival paintings presented an optimistic outlook on life and were appropriate to the new Parisian ‘nobility’ of the late Second Empire. Ingra notes that, "The vogue for rococo imagery [during the Second Empire] however, represented more than a shift in patronage and, consequently, taste.

  7. 18th-century French art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/18th-century_French_art

    Painting turned toward "fêtes galantes", theater settings and the female nude. Painters from this period include Antoine Watteau , Nicolas Lancret and François Boucher . The Louis XV style of decoration (although already apparent at the end of the last reign) was lighter: pastels and wood panels, smaller rooms, less gilding and fewer brocades ...

  8. Night in paintings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Night_in_paintings

    Night in paintings may refer to: Night in paintings (Western art) Night in paintings (Eastern art) This page was last edited on 29 December 2019, at 14:32 (UTC). ...

  9. Blind Man's Bluff (Fragonard, 1750) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blind_Man's_Bluff...

    Blind Man's Bluff (French: Le collin maillard) is a painting by the French Rococo painter Jean-Honoré Fragonard, produced around 1750 in oil on canvas.It is held by the Toledo Museum of Art in Toledo, Ohio, United States, which purchased it with funds from the Libbey Endowment, a gift of the glass manufacturer Edward Libbey who founded the museum in 1901.