Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Neoclassical

Louis Chéron
Classical Warriors under Shields
before 1725
drawing
British Museum


Gaspare Diziani
Roman Cavalry Battle
before 1767
drawing
British Museum

Johann Rudolf Holzhalb
Lucretia
ca. 1780
etching and engraving
Graphische Sammlung, ETH Zürich

Simon Fokke
Classical Soldiers burning their Camp
before 1784
etching
Philadelphia Museum of Art

Giovanni Battista Cipriani
Youth at Altar with Libation
before 1785
drawing
British Museum

Pietro Fancelli
Birth of Asclepius
ca. 1795
drawing
Rhode Island School of Design, Providence

Johann Heinrich Lips
Woman with Lyre
ca. 1797
drawing
British Museum

Jean-Jacques François Lebarbier
Hippolytus departing from Troizen
1798
drawing
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Joseph Anton Koch
Les Argonautes
1799
engraving (portfolio of illustrations)
British Museum

Étienne-Barthélemy Garnier
The Minyades with the dead Hippasus
ca. 1800
drawing
private collection
(sold by Nicolas Schwed, Paris, 2022)

Carl Wilhelm Kolbe the Elder
Mounted Antique Couple
ca. 1800-1810
etching
British Museum

Louis Lafitte
Hercules crowned with Victory over Antaeus
ca. 1810-1812
drawing (design for medallion)
British Museum

Sigmund Ferdinand von Perger
Bellerophon and Pegasus slaying a Lion
1809
drawing
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Alfred Edward Chalon
Thyrsis in Landscape
1809
drawing (illustration to Milton's Comus)
British Museum

Samuel De Wilde
Daniel Egerton as Clytus
in The Rival Queens by Nathaniel Lee

1816
watercolor on paper
British Museum

Bartolomeo Pinelli
Mercury protecting Paris in Battle
1827
drawing
British Museum

Edmond Aimé Florentin Geffroy
Electra in Oreste
ca. 1840
hand-colored engraving
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

from A Letter to a Friend upon the Occasion of the Death of his Intimate Friend

     His willingness to leave this World about that Age when most Men think they may best enjoy it, tho paradoxical unto worldly Ears, was not strange unto mine, who have so often observed, that many, the old, oft stick fast unto the World, and seem to be drawn like Cacus's Oxen, backward with great struggling and reluctancy unto the Grave. The long habit of Living makes meer Men more hardly to part with Life, and all to be nothing, but what is to come. To live at the rate of the old World, when some could scarce remember themselves young, may afford no better digested Death than a more moderate period. Many would have thought it an Happiness to have had their lot of Life in some notable Conjunctures of Ages past; but the uncertainty of future Times hath tempted few to make a part in Ages to come. And surely he that hath taken the true Altitude of Things, and rightly calculated the degenerate state of this Age, is not like to envy those that shall live in the next, much less three or four hundred Years hence, when no Man can comfortably imagine what Face this World will carry: and therefore since every Age makes a step unto the end of all things, and the Scripture affords so hard a Character of the Last Times; quiet Minds will be content with their Generations, and rather bless Ages past than be ambitious of those to come. 

– Sir Thomas Browne (1656)

Browne, writing in the middle of the seventeenth century, continued to believe what nearly all educated Europeans of the past thousand years had believed – that the world they lived in had been in continuous and ongoing decline since Classical and Biblical times.  The future would necessarily be worse than the present, and was only to be dreaded.  This view would soon itself go extinct – once the novelty of Capitalism had generated an equally novel faith in Progress.