Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Louis XVI style, also called Louis Seize, is a style of architecture, furniture, decoration and art which developed in France during the 19-year reign of Louis XVI (1774–1792), just before the French Revolution. It saw the final phase of the Baroque style as well as the birth of French Neoclassicism. The style was a reaction against the ...

    • France
    • 1774–1789
  2. Louis XVI style, visual arts produced in France during the reign (1774–93) of Louis XVI, which was actually both a last phase of Rococo and a first phase of Neoclassicism. The predominant style in architecture, painting, sculpture, and the decorative arts was Neoclassicism, a style that had come.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Louis XVI style, also called Louis Seize, is a style of architecture, furniture, decoration and art which developed in France during the 19-year reign of Louis XVI (1774–1793), just before the French Revolution. It saw the final phase of the Baroque style as well as the birth of French Neoclassicism.

  4. France. The Neoclassical style, sometimes called Louis Seize, or Louis XVI, began in the 1750s. Tiring of the Rococo style, craftsmen of the 18th century turned for inspiration to Classical art. The movement was stimulated by archaeological discoveries, by travel in Italy, Greece, and the Middle East, and by the publication all over Europe of ...

  5. Louis XVI furniture is characterized by elegance and neoclassicism, a return to ancient Greek and Roman models. Much of it was designed and made for Queen Marie Antoinette for the new apartments she created in the Palace of Versailles, Palace of Fontainebleau, the Tuileries Palace, and other royal residences.

  6. Learn about the Louis XVI style, a neoclassical movement inspired by Greek and Roman antiquity and nature. Discover its features, motifs, furniture, decorations and examples from the French royalty and the marchands-merciers.

  7. Louis XVI is dressed in the same way as his illustrious ancestors, as attested to by the portrait of Louis XIV by Hyacinthe Rigaud and the one of Louis XV by Louis-Michel Van Loo. The blue...

  1. People also search for