
Jean-Baptiste Greuze
Cultural Positioning
- • Rococo
Selected Institutional Exhibitions
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Jean-Baptiste Greuze was an eighteenth-century French painter known for domestic interior scenes and sentimental narrative works that bridged Rococo elegance and emerging Neoclassical moral earnestness. His compositions typically featured young women and children in moments of virtue, melancholy, or domestic virtue, rendered with soft color harmonies and refined brushwork. Working in Paris during the latter half of the century, Greuze achieved considerable success among the bourgeoisie and salon audiences, though academic critics remained divided on whether his moralizing genre scenes merited admission to the history painting hierarchy. His influence on the development of narrative painting in the late eighteenth century was substantial.
Source: Wikidata · Trust score: 40% · Updated 7d ago
























