The Royal Academy in France (as well as its counterpart in Great Britain) essentially set the standards of taste and style in art from the mid-1600s through the 1800s.
The Royal Academy in France was founded under King Louis XIV in France as the
Académie Royale de Peinture et de sculpture. The Royal Academy in England was founded under
the patronage of King George III, as a breakaway group from the Society of Artists in 1768.
These Academy’s including those of Accademia dell'Arte del Disegno (Florence) founded in
1562 and Accademia di San Luca (Rome) founded in 1583 all strove to enhance the principal,
technique, style, education, and teaching of art (Art Encyclopedia, n.d.).
Subsequently, the Académie Royale de peinture et de Sculpture merged with the “Académie
de Musique (founded in 1669) and the Académie d'Architecture (founded in 1671) to form the
Académie des Beaux-Arts (French Academy of Fine Arts)” (Gersch-Nesic, 2017). The French
Academy as it became (casually) known, decided upon the authoritative and bona fide art of
France. The French Academy juried what was defined as good or bad art, and protected France
from the malfeasance of art. The Academy became a national institution that set the standards for training, artistic requirements, style, and the genre of art, even opening its own fine arts school - École des Beaux-Arts (Gersch-Nesic, 2017). The Academy was the patron of an annual
exhibition where artists could submit their creative work called the Salon (Art Encyclopedia,
n.d.). Rejection from the Salon meant that an artist would have to wait an entire year before
being allowed to resubmit their work (Gersch-Nesic, 2017).
The Impressionist movement steered away from the Salon and effectively opened the door
for a new generation of artists to display their work in galleries and markets that accepted a new
type of art. The Impressionist movement also opened the door for Post-Impressionism, and
Fauvism, and expressive use of form, light, and color in abstract interpretations. Later expressive
and intellectual genres of art brought Cubism, Dada, and Surrealism (The Art Story, n.d.) through
to contemporary art.
In answer to the question – the question is too big to answer. As an artist myself, I dapple in
the abstract, portraiture, and design. My styles are mixed, just as my emotions are. I, like many
other artists, do not subscribe to any particular genre but rather a mix of them. As individuals’
artists are allowed free expression and to be uninhibited by any formal structures. Museums and
galleries such as MOMA or the Guggenheim all have important roles in art today but in my
opinion, I see Saatchi and Basel as two important influencers of contemporary art on a broader
scale. Also, I see individual artists such as Bansky, Daniel Arsham, Michael Graves, and Antony
Gormley as influencers of art today. And, because art is so subjective at an individual level, I
posit that the individual in society is the authority, not any one defined institution
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