Tomeki

Watteau's soldiers

Watteau's soldiers

scenes of military life in eighteenth-century France

By Aaron Wile

0 (0 Ratings)
0 Want to read0 Currently reading0 Have read

Publish Date

2016

Publisher

Frick Collection

Language

eng

Pages

112

Description:

Celebrated for his dreamlike paintings of amorous aristocrats and melancholy actors, Antoine Watteau also produced a number of captivating works with military subjectspaintings and drawingsearly in his career. They were executed when France was engaged in the costly and ultimately disastrous War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714), but they look past the turbulence of battle and the heroic deeds of generals and kings to depict the more prosaic aspects of warmarches, halts, encampments, and bivouacs. They focus on the quiet moments between the fighting, outside of military discipline, when soldiers could rest and daydream and smoke pipes and play cards. Although they owe a debt to seventeenth-century Dutch and Flemish precedents, they put forward a new, thoroughly modern vision of war in which the soldier s inner life, his experience of war, is brought to the fore. Offers a new interpretation of Watteau s military works. Includes a catalogue raisonne of all Watteau works related to military subjects, and a lively and accessible essay by Aaron Wile that explores Watteau's engagement with the cultural history of war, and the ordinary soldier s experience of it.