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A week ago, I decided to try it again, now determined to go on with reading, even when I didn't understand everyting. And with every chapter I read, I saw that this book wasn't just an attempt to write an objective and dull survey of some forgotten and uninteresting age, but a very subjective and 'involved' pursuit to show the reader that it can indeed be an interesting age when one tries to understand it better and that it certainly shouldn't be a forgotten age, because of some very interesting inner dynamics and some very interesting artists, who even now keep on puzzling and fascinating us.
Indeed, the inner dynamics of the age are the ones who are responsible for the seemingly contradictory statements of the writer. But when one finishes the book and reads the introduction over, like I did, he understands better what the writer really wants to show: that this isn't an easy to understand, 'one-layered' age, but an age of "violent collision of opposing forces"(p. 9). In the arts mainly the collision between rococo and neo-classicism.
But the writer doesn't stop there: there is also a chapter about painters who had purely scientific goals in their paintings, influenced by the new scientific findings, like those of Darwin. There is a painting by Goerge Stubbs, an artist I didn't know till now, called 'Leopards': it is one of the most beautiful paintings of animals I've ever seen.
And then there are two chapters dealing with two artists: a chapter about Watteau and a chapter about Goya. The first following the chapter about rococo and the second following the chapter about neo-classicism. This is a very good choice, cause when one reads about 40 pages about a considerable amount of artists and paintings, one tends to lose the thread. But when one reads a chapter after that about just one artist and how this artist exemplifies the age and the movement he was 'part of' in an outstanding way, one can pick up the thread again and enjoy the complex developments of the age.
And this is what the book is all about: though rococo and neo-classicism existed next to each other, simultaniously, for some time, there was also a real development from the passive rococo to the revoulutionary art of around 1789, and the reaction of art to the revoultion and to the wars that spread from it, especially in some paintings of Goya.
When I finished the book, I was so fascinated about this last artist, that I went straight to all the bookshops in my town and bought all the books I could find about him.
After all I can say I have a new hobby added to my hobbies: reading about the 18th century, especially when it is written so well.
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