Conclusion
The eighteenth  century was poised  between centuries   of  artistic    production  in  which   courtdictated   and
churchdominated priorities  and hierarchies had prevailed,  and the nineteenth  century,    which   witnessed
the height  of  the fashion for Romanticism,    when    individual  creativity  and the breaking    of  conventions
came    to  the fore.   The beginnings  and endings of  centuries   present crude   units   for analysis.   It  would   be
misleading  to  “read   back”   into    the eighteenth  century the seeds   of  later   developments,   as  cause   and effect
rarely  occur   in  such    neatly  linear  ways.   It  was certainly,  however,    a   century in  which   the production  and
reception   of  art underwent   many    changes.    It  is  sometimes   characterized   as  the period  in  which   modernity
first   came    into    focus,  as  an  expanding   art market  and art public  stole   some    of  the momentum    previously
guarded by  an  elite   and shaped  changes to  the old order.  By  the end of  the century,    academies   of  fine    art
remained    important   in  Europe, as  did specialization  in  specific    genres  and media.  Yet the established
statuses    of  art and artists began   to  change, particularly    as  the “lower” genres  challenged  more
significantly   the primacy of  grand   history painting.
Subjectivity,   the awareness   of  viewers of  their   own role    in  the interpretation  and assessment  of  art,    was
nourished   by  a   burgeoning  literature  in  art criticism   and aesthetics. Many    became  conscious   of  the ways
in  which   art reflected   back    to  them    their   own values, ideals  and desires,    although    such    insights    had not yet
attained    the sophistication  arising from    later   developments    in  psychology  and psychoanalysis.
Enlightenment   writers and artists applied a   critical    eye to  the workings    of  taste.  Ultimately, this    led to
unprecedented   scrutiny    of  the moral   implications    of  the act of  looking itself.