Absolutism And Fashion Essay

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During the beginning of the 18th century, a period of cultural awareness took place in France, known as the Enlightenment. The Rococo theme not only affected arts, paintings, interior design, and architecture but fashion as well. The Rococo style was graceful yet playful, ornate, gold, asymmetrical designs with floral motifs, S-curves, and pastel colors. Whereas Baroque was exaggerated with grandeur and religious themes, giving an impression of authoritative rule, power, as well as control of the people.
The fashion capital of France moved to Paris from Versailles away from the politics and authority. The education class of the bourgeoisie valued reason and art over the strict regulations of the Baroque period. This is when the Rococo period …show more content…

Madame de Pompadour love for art and culture also prompted her to sponsored artists like Francois Boucher to paint portraits of her. At the time she was the most powerful woman in France who influenced politics, art, culture, and fashion with her elegant yet spirited style. Around the end of the Rococo period, Marie Antoinette not only was Queen of France but the leader of French fashion with the help of her dressmaker Rose Bertin. Her extravagance may have been her trademark but it added fuel to the French Revolution that caused the downfall of the French monarchy. The bourgeoisie were not the only ones who wanted the freedom to express themselves and now what was in current style, the lower class enjoyed the illustrations of fashion magazine that developed during the Rococo era. The Baroque art and architecture were decorated with murals or religious scenes that showcased an authoritative rule blessed from the heavens while the Rococo art showcased especially in castles or châteaux the freedom, extravagance, as well as landscape paintings that depicted picnics with the innocence of family near frolicking lovers to erotic scenes of women. The art from the Baroque as

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