Documents found

  1. 631.

    Article published in Les Cahiers des dix (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 43, 1983

    Digital publication year: 2013

  2. 632.

    Article published in RACAR : Revue d'art canadienne (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 27, Issue 1-2, 2000

    Digital publication year: 2020

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    Thomas Crow (1985) has established that the Academy's Salon was the theatre of an art crisis in the France of Louis XV. This has inspired a comparison between the tempests and shipwrecks of Claude-Joseph Vernet (1714–1789) and his series Les Ports de France (1754–1765), commissioned on behalf of the King by Marigny. In the first part of the article, we examine the popularity of the former paintings. After analysing the enthusiastic response of Diderot in his Salons, directly inspired by Burke's treatise on the sublime, we show that the success of these paintings was in their power to produce strong emotions in the spectator's mind. We then describe the perception of the sea in the eighteenth century in order to anchor Diderot's critique in a body of non-artistic representations. The popularity of Vernet's tempests and shipwrecks rests on a lack of social symbolism. This gives them a universal character with which, unlike the more aristocratie history painting, spectators of ail origins can identify. The last section deals with Les Ports de France. We begin by discussing the choice of landscape for such a prestigious work, which can be explained by the necessity to renew the image of the state. The choice of the seaport motif answered both the need of propaganda by imposing a unitary vision of France and the wish to recall Colbert's heritage. Finally we analyse how the King and the Salon received the series by concluding that it was ultimately a failure for political and aesthetic reasons.

  3. 634.

    Article published in Vie des arts (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Volume 26, Issue 103, 1981

    Digital publication year: 2010

  4. 635.

    Article published in Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique française (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 76, Issue 1-2, 2022

    Digital publication year: 2023

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    Between 1705 and 1713, in the midst of the War of the Spanish Succession, the Mercure galant published a series of 11 “Relations de Canada” in which anecdotal discourse predominated, which distinguished them from other travel reports published in the same periodical during the previous decade. The anecdote changed the very genre of the travel report by relying on curiosity as the driving force behind its production and by proposing a history of the present time in which colonial current events take pride of place. Moreover, the anecdotal account is subject to political recuperation and places the travelogue in the field of propaganda. The various figures portrayed in the “Relations de Canada” thus contribute to the promotion of Louis-Quatorzian ventures in America, by showing the superiority of the French over the British.

  5. 636.

    Article published in Report of the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Historical Association (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 11, Issue 1, 1932

    Digital publication year: 2006

  6. 637.

    Other published in Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique française (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 18, Issue 4, 1965

    Digital publication year: 2008

  7. 638.

    Gaucher, M., Delafosse, M. and Debien, G.

    Les engagés pour le Canada au XVIIIe siècle (suite)

    Article published in Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique française (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 14, Issue 3, 1960

    Digital publication year: 2008

  8. 639.

    Article published in Meta (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 22, Issue 1, 1977

    Digital publication year: 2002