Le Boudoir de Marie-Antoinette

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 Exhibition| Salon Style: French Portraits

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Maria Cosway

Maria Cosway


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Date d'inscription : 05/07/2015

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MessageSujet: Exhibition| Salon Style: French Portraits   Exhibition| Salon Style: French Portraits Icon_minitimeMar 22 Déc - 0:16

Exhibition| Salon Style: French Portraits

From 29 January to 22 May 2016, the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, D.C., will present French Portraits from the Collection,  in the Teresa Lozano Long Gallery. Beautiful paintings such as this one will be on view...  Exhibition| Salon Style: French Portraits 405462

Exhibition| Salon Style: French Portraits 2-2-2-10
Elisabeth Louise Vigée-LeBrun, Portrait of Princess Belozersky, 1798 (National Museum of Women in the Arts)

The biennial Salon of the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture in Paris was the preeminent exhibition venue for artists in the 18th century. In order to exhibit their work, artists had to be members of the Academy. Artists were voted in by other members after being presented formally by a current academician. For women, this was doubly challenging: their work had to be found as worthy as that of their male peers despite not having equal access to artistic training, and the total number of female members allowed at any one time was limited to four.

Élisabeth Louise Vigée-LeBrun and Adélaïde Labille-Guiard made history on May 31, 1783, when they were both admitted into the Academy. However, while Labille-Guiard was accepted via the standard application process, Vigée-LeBrun’s acceptance came about under different circumstances. The Academy was compelled to admit her under an edict from King Louis XVI, whose wife, Marie Antoinette, employed Vigée-LeBrun as a portraitist. With the admission of Labille-Guiard and Vigée-LeBrun in 1783, the Academy reached its quota for women artists, together with the portrait and still-life painter Anne Vallayer-Coster and miniaturist Marie-Thérèse Reboul Vien.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, works by women who exhibited in the Salon were compared and judged against one another, as were their characters. By placing themselves in the public sphere, Vigée-LeBrun, Labille-Guiard, and other women artists risked upsetting societal expectations, which held that virtuous women belonged solely to the private, domestic sphere. Despite this risk, these artists persisted in exhibiting in the Salon throughout the rest of the 18th century. This focus exhibition examines these women and their art as well as their artistic legacies—particularly that of Élisabeth Louise Vigée-LeBrun.

http://enfilade18thc.com/

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