18th-century French art  

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The visual arts of the 18th century were highly decorative and oriented toward giving pleasure, as exemplified by the [[Regency Style]] and [[Louis XV Style]], and the paintings of [[François Boucher]], [[Jean-Honoré Fragonard]], [[Antoine Watteau|Watteau]] and [[Jean Siméon Chardin|Chardin]], and portrait painters [[Quentin de La Tour]], [[Jean-Marc Nattier|Nattier]] and [[Charles André van Loo|Van Loo]]. Toward the end of the century, a more sober style appeared, aimed at illustrating scenery, work, and moral values exemplified by [[Jean-Baptiste Greuze|Greuze]], [[Hubert Robert]] and [[Claude Joseph Vernet]]. The visual arts of the 18th century were highly decorative and oriented toward giving pleasure, as exemplified by the [[Regency Style]] and [[Louis XV Style]], and the paintings of [[François Boucher]], [[Jean-Honoré Fragonard]], [[Antoine Watteau|Watteau]] and [[Jean Siméon Chardin|Chardin]], and portrait painters [[Quentin de La Tour]], [[Jean-Marc Nattier|Nattier]] and [[Charles André van Loo|Van Loo]]. Toward the end of the century, a more sober style appeared, aimed at illustrating scenery, work, and moral values exemplified by [[Jean-Baptiste Greuze|Greuze]], [[Hubert Robert]] and [[Claude Joseph Vernet]].
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French Rococo and Neoclassicism (

The visual arts of the 18th century were highly decorative and oriented toward giving pleasure, as exemplified by the Regency Style and Louis XV Style, and the paintings of François Boucher, Jean-Honoré Fragonard, Watteau and Chardin, and portrait painters Quentin de La Tour, Nattier and Van Loo. Toward the end of the century, a more sober style appeared, aimed at illustrating scenery, work, and moral values exemplified by Greuze, Hubert Robert and Claude Joseph Vernet.



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