Fragonard
Art and Eroticism
253 pages
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8 color plates, 41 halftones
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7 x 10
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© 1990
In the aftermath of the French Revolution, Jean Honoré Fragonard, perhaps the most significant French painter of the eighteenth century, was condemned first as a purveyor of luxury items and later as an artist who abandoned noble subjects for the erotic genre. In this revisionist, art-historical study, Mary D. Sheriff challenges such pejorative views of Fragonard by arguing that he is better understood as an artist whose unsurpassed technical skill and witty manipulation of academic standards established a dynamic relation with the audience his art both courted and created.
Sheriff begins her inquiry with an appraisal of Fragonard criticism, followed by an extensive and thoroughly original reading of selected works by Fragonard and of the eroticism encoded in them. Art and eroticism converge in a discussion of execution, in which Sheriff explores the changing conception of execution and elucidates its complex rhetorical and cultural underpinnings. Drawing on analytic methods from contemporary critical theory and an understanding of each work's cultural milieu, Sheriff pays particular attention throughout to the relation between beholder and work of art, which she views as manifest in the artist's preoccupation with the play between the real and the fictive. Scholars and students of art history, eighteenth-century culture and history, critical theory, literary criticism, and all those drawn to the work of this great French painter will find this work essential reading.
Sheriff begins her inquiry with an appraisal of Fragonard criticism, followed by an extensive and thoroughly original reading of selected works by Fragonard and of the eroticism encoded in them. Art and eroticism converge in a discussion of execution, in which Sheriff explores the changing conception of execution and elucidates its complex rhetorical and cultural underpinnings. Drawing on analytic methods from contemporary critical theory and an understanding of each work's cultural milieu, Sheriff pays particular attention throughout to the relation between beholder and work of art, which she views as manifest in the artist's preoccupation with the play between the real and the fictive. Scholars and students of art history, eighteenth-century culture and history, critical theory, literary criticism, and all those drawn to the work of this great French painter will find this work essential reading.
Contents
Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction: Presenting Fragonard
1. The Academic Ideal Represented
2. The Dynamics of Decoration
3. The Erotics of Decoration
4. Easel Painting and the Aesthetics of Brushwork
5. Representing Genius: Fragonard's Portraits de fantaisie
6. Art and Eroticism
Epilogue
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction: Presenting Fragonard
1. The Academic Ideal Represented
2. The Dynamics of Decoration
3. The Erotics of Decoration
4. Easel Painting and the Aesthetics of Brushwork
5. Representing Genius: Fragonard's Portraits de fantaisie
6. Art and Eroticism
Epilogue
Notes
Index
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