
Title: Fishing
Author: Francois Boucher
Year: 1752
Style: Rococo
Media: oil, canvas
Location: Grand Trianon, Paris, France

Title: Fishing
Author: Francois Boucher
Year: 1752
Style: Rococo
Media: oil, canvas
Location: Grand Trianon, Paris, France

Title: Paris and Helen
Author: Jacques-Louis David
Year: 1788
Style: Neoclassicism
Genre: mythological painting
Media: oil, canvas
Location: Louvre, Paris, France

Title: The Triumph of Amphitrite
Author: Hugues Taraval
Year: 1780
Medium: oil on canvas
Location: Mead Art Museum

Title: Olympus: The Fall of the Giants
Author: Francisco Bayeu y Subías
Genre: mythological painting
Date: 1764
Medium: oil on canvas
Location: Museo del Prado

Title: Colonel Acland and Lord Sydney: The Archers
Author: Joshua Reynolds
Year: 1769
Style: Rococo
Media: oil, canvas

Title: Diana and Apollo Killing Niobe’s Children
Author: Jacques-Louis David
Year: 1772
Style: Neoclassicism
Media: oil, canvas
Location: Dallas Museum of Art

Title: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Author: Barbara Krafft
Year: 1819
“Music is my life and my life is music. Anyone who does not understand this is not worthy of God.”
– Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
Mozart Biography
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (27 January 1756–5 December 1791) was one of the most influential, popular and prolific composers of the classical period.
Mozart was born in Salzburg to a musical family. From an early age, the young Mozart showed all the signs of a prodigious musical talent. By the age of five, he could read and write music, and he would entertain people with his talents on the keyboard. By the age of six, he was writing his first compositions. Mozart was generally considered to be a rare musical genius, although he was also diligent in studying other great composers such as Haydn and Bach. During his childhood, he would frequently tour various palaces around Europe playing for distinguished guests.
He created twenty-four operas including such famous works as “The Magic Flute”, “Don Giovanni” and “The Marriage of Figaro”, seventeen masses and over fifty symphonies. Mozart’s work, however, extended to all styles and types of music. He knew how to blend traditional and contemporary elements to create his own distinctive style, which is characterized by thematic and tonal variety, melded with a high degree of formal discipline. Mozart’s compositions live from their melodic, rhythmic and dynamic contrasts.
In 1791, on the 5th of December, Mozart died at the age of 35. However, the cause of his death still remains vague and researchers have listed at least 118 probable causes of his death. Legacy Though Mozart lived only for 35 years, Mozart’s legacy is unparalleled. With almost 600 musical pieces, Mozart’s influence reigns supreme in all the genres of music ranging from symphonies, concertos, operas, chamber music to piano solo. He is undoubtedly one of the greatest musicians ever, if not the greatest.
Source: biographyonline.net