Paris Salon of 1846
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[[Paris Salon]] of [[1846]] was held from .... to ..... | [[Paris Salon]] of [[1846]] was held from .... to ..... | ||
- | [[Baudelaire]] considered [[Delacroix]] as the originator of [[modern art]] and he wrote in his review of the [[Paris Salon of 1846]] (published in ''[[Curiosités esthétiques]]''): "The majority of the public have long since, indeed from his very first work, dubbed him leader of the modern school." (Le romantisme et la couleur me conduisent droit à Eugène Delacroix. J’ignore s’il est fier de sa qualité de romantique ; mais sa place est ici, parce que la majorité du public l’a depuis longtemps, et même dès sa première œuvre, constitué le chef de l’école moderne.) [http://fr.wikisource.org/wiki/Salon_de_1846_(Curiosit%C3%A9s_esth%C3%A9tiques). | + | [[Baudelaire]] considered [[Delacroix]] as the originator of [[modern art]] and he wrote in his review of the [[Paris Salon of 1846]] (published in ''[[Curiosités esthétiques]]''): "The majority of the public have long since, indeed from his very first work, dubbed him leader of the modern school." (Le romantisme et la couleur me conduisent droit à Eugène Delacroix. J’ignore s’il est fier de sa qualité de romantique ; mais sa place est ici, parce que la majorité du public l’a depuis longtemps, et même dès sa première œuvre, constitué le chef de l’école moderne.) [http://fr.wikisource.org/wiki/Salon_de_1846_(Curiosit%C3%A9s_esth%C3%A9tiques)]. |
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Baudelaire considered Delacroix as the originator of modern art and he wrote in his review of the Paris Salon of 1846 (published in Curiosités esthétiques): "The majority of the public have long since, indeed from his very first work, dubbed him leader of the modern school." (Le romantisme et la couleur me conduisent droit à Eugène Delacroix. J’ignore s’il est fier de sa qualité de romantique ; mais sa place est ici, parce que la majorité du public l’a depuis longtemps, et même dès sa première œuvre, constitué le chef de l’école moderne.) [1].
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