Inglorious Artists: Art World Satire and the Emergence of a Capitalist Art Market in Paris, 1750-1850
Inglorious Artists: Art World Satire and the Emergence of a Capitalist Art Market in Paris, 1750-1850
by Kathryn Desplanque
University of Delaware Press, 2025 Cloth: 978-1-64453-364-2 | Paper: 978-1-64453-363-5 | eISBN: 978-1-64453-365-9 (ePub) | eISBN: 978-1-64453-366-6 (PDF) Library of Congress Classification NC1493.D47 2025 Dewey Decimal Classification 709.4436109033
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Inglorious Artists traces the origins of the image of the starving artist to late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century France, where practicing and aspiring visual artists mobilized the emerging genre of graphic satire to publish hundreds of satirical images that satirized the Paris art world. By examining many of these images, which have never before been studied or published, this book provides a new social history of the status of the artist, revealing the ways in which the starving artist trope was used to protest the emergence of an early capitalist art market and to distinguish artists and their work from an increasingly commercial world. During this period, a series of political revolutions brought the possibility of radical change in the French art world. Parisian artists struggled to keep pace with the emergence of modern financial speculative capitalism, transitioning away from an art system dominated by guild and corporate interest. We have neglected the complaints visual artists made about these changes, expressed in the medium most accessible to them: the graphic image. In examining this imagery for the first time, Inglorious Artists reveals that the emergence of our modern conception of the artist is far more conflicted than has been considered.
This book is also freely available online as an open access digital edition.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Kathryn Desplanque is an assistant professor of eighteenth- and nineteenth-Century European art in the Department of Art and Art History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her work specializes in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century European visual culture, particularly French and English imagery. She has authored numerous book chapters and has published articles in such journals as Eighteenth-Century Studies, Biblio 17: Voyages, rencontres, échanges au XVIIe siècle, and The Art Bulletin. Her current book project, Papermania, charts the growing popularity of scrap sheets and scrapbooking across France, England, and North America during the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
REVIEWS
Kathryn Desplanque’s Inglorious Artists: Art-World Satire and the Emergence of a Capitalist Art Market in Paris, 1750-1850 marks a new stage in our understanding not just of caricature, but also of art market studies and even of modern art. Immensely readable and profusely illustrated, her study takes a broad view of the economic and political changes in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries that affected the very definition of an artist. Through her insight into their work, we understand how the artists themselves attempted to navigate the new social and economic currents that precipitated modern definitions of the artist as an outcast from society, starving and impoverished, but nonetheless an independent and prophetic genius.— Patricia Mainardi, CUNY Graduate Center
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
List of Figures and Tables
Introduction
Chapter One: The Artiste Libre in the Ancien Régime
Chapter Two: Revolutionary Instabilities of Liberty and Autonomy
Chapter Three: The Starving Artist in the Salon System
Chapter Four: The Apotheosis of Bohemia