ANALYSIS OF ANGELICA KAUFFMAN ‘TELEMACHUS ON HIS RETURN TO HIS MOTHER’ 1770-1780 OIL ON CANVAS

1334 Words3 Pages

The 18th century is well known for its complex artistic movements such as Romantism and Neo-classical. The leading style Rococo thrived from 1700-1775 and was originated from the French words rocaille and coquille which meant “rock” and “shell”; used to decorate the Baroque gardens1. Identified as the age of “Enlightenment”, philosophers would ignite their ideas into political movements1. Associated with this movement is England’s John Locke who advanced the concept of “empiricism”. This denotes that accepting knowledge of matters of fact descends from experience and personal involvement1. Locke’s concept assisted the improvements of microscopes and telescopes allowing art students in the French academy to observe real life1. Science and experience influenced painting more so in Neo-Classicalism. Locke fought for people’s rights and the power or “contract” between the ruler and the ruled. Reasoning that “the Light in Enlightenment referred to the primacy of reason and intellect…and a belief in progress and in the human ability to control nature”1. Hence, the commence of experimental paintings such as Joseph Wright’s (1734-1797) oil on canvas painting: Fig.1 An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump. This image was developed through science by placing a bird in glass container and pumping air to see the effects it would have on the bird (White cockatoo)1. Throughout the late 18th and early 19th century in Western Europe, Neo-Classical art became the “true Style” and was accepted by the French Revolution under Louis XIV. Neo-Classical art was a reaction to Rococo’s light hearted, humour and emotion filled pieces.

Angelica Kauffman was one of the most prominent female artists in the 18th century along Rosalba Carriera and Elisab...

... middle of paper ...

...): 1, http://www.jstor.org/pss/1358031

3. “Against great odds: Angelica Kauffmann’s artistic triumph”, 2011. http://www.neoclassic.com/angelica-kauffmanns-artistic-triumph.html

4. Regina Haggo, “Let joy be confined,” Hamilton Spectator, September 29, 2011

5. “Odyssey by Ancient Greek Poet Homer”. University Press Inc. 2008. http://www.ancientgreece.com/s/Odyssey/

6. Whitney Chadwick, Women, Art, and Society 3rd ed. (NY: Thames & Hudson world of art, 2002), 153-160.

Illustrations/Figures

Angelica Kauffman, Telemachus on His Return to His Mother, 1770-1780, Oil on Canvas painting McMaster Museum of Art, Ontario.

1. Antoine Watteau, Gilles, undated. Louvre, Paris. Oil on Canvas

2. Jacques-Louis David, Oath of the Horatii, 1784-1785. Lourve, Paris. Oil on Canvas

3. Joseph Wright, An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump, 1768. Oil on Canvas.

More about ANALYSIS OF ANGELICA KAUFFMAN ‘TELEMACHUS ON HIS RETURN TO HIS MOTHER’ 1770-1780 OIL ON CANVAS

Open Document