Baroque and Rococo

 

Baroque and Rococo Art Map



 




Jean-Antoine Watteau



 


 

Jean-Antoine Watteau

(b Valenciennes, bapt 10 Oct 1684; d Nogent-sur-Marne, nr Paris, 18 July 1721).

He is best known for his invention of a new genre, the fête galante, a small easel painting in which elegant people are depicted in conversation or music-making in a secluded parkland setting. His particular originality lies in the generally restrained nature of the amorous exchanges of his characters, which are conveyed as much by glance as by gesture, and in his mingling of figures in contemporary dress with others in theatrical costume, thus blurring references to both time and place.

Watteau’s work was widely collected during his lifetime and influenced a number of other painters in the decades following his death, especially in France and England. His drawings were particularly admired. Documented facts about Watteau’s life are notoriously few, though several friends wrote about him after his death (see Champion). Of over two hundred paintings generally accepted as his work—of which many of the compositions survive only in the form of reproductive prints by others—only the Pilgrimage to the Isle of Cythera (1717; Paris, Louvre), his morceau de réception for admission to the Académie Royale, and a handful of others can be dated with reasonable certainty. Moreover, most of the titles by which his works are known were not recorded until after his death, when prints of them were published.

 


The Judgement of Paris

Oil on wood, 47 x 31 cm
Musée du Louvre, Paris

 
 


Mezzetin

1717-19
Oil on canvas, 55,2 x 43,2 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York


 


"La gamme d'amour" (The Love Song)

c. 1717
Oil on canvas, 51,3 x 59,4 cm
National Gallery, London


 

Les Champs Elysees

1717-18
Oil on wood, 31 x 42 cm
Wallace Collection, London


 

Diana Bathing
1721
Oil on canvas
Musée du Louvre, Paris


 

Merry Company in the Open Air

1716-19
Oil on canvas, 60 x 75 cm
Gemaldegalerie, Dresden


 

Portrait of a Gentleman

1715-20
Oil on canvas, 130 x 97 cm
Musée du Louvre, Paris


 


Le Flutiste