In
painting, the Neoclassical style continued to be taught in the
Académie des Beaux-Arts, inculcating crisp outlines, pellucid atmosphere, and a clear, clean palette. However, a formal Neo-Grec group of artists was created in the mid 19th century after growing interest in
Ancient Greece and
Rome, and especially the later excavations at
Pompeii. The
Paris Salon of 1847, revealed the
academic painter Jean-Léon Gérôme, who in
The Cock Fight depicted a composition in which, in a scene of antiquity, a young boy and a girl attend the combat of two
cocks. Gérôme gained fame from this exhibition, and in the next year formed the Neo-Grec group with
Jean-Louis Hamon and
Henri-Pierre Picou—all three pupils in the same
atelier under
Charles Gleyre. Gleyre himself adopted the tenets of neo-classicism more strictly than others at the time, adopting the classical style and aesthetic, but almost exclusively applying it to myths and motifs from antiquity, recalling both characters from Greek myth, and antique emblems such as bacchantes and putti. The Neo-Grec group took Gleyre's style and interests, but adapted it from use in
history painting as in Gleyre's work, into
genre painting. Because they were inspired by discoveries at Pompeii, they were also called
néo-pompéiens.
Louis Hector Leroux was also identified as a Neo-Grec. The paintings of the Neo-Grecs sought to capture everyday, anecdotal trivialities of
ancient Greek life, in a manner of whimsy, grace, and charm, and were often realistic, sensual, and erotic. For this reason they were also called "anacreontic" after the Greek poet
Anacreon, who wrote sprightly verses in praise of love and wine. Alfred de Tanouarn describes one of Hamon's paintings as "clear, simple and natural, the idea, the attitudes and the aspects. It leads the lips a soft smile; it causes us an inexpressible feeling of pleasure in which one is happy to stop and view the painting". It can perhaps be said the motto of this group was "the goal of art is to charm". Most Neo-Grec paintings were also done in a horizontal layout as in a
frieze decoration or Greek vases, with the composition simplified. The Neo-Grec school was criticized in many respects; for its attention to historical detail it was said by
Charles Baudelaire "the scholarship is to disguise the absence of imagination", and the subject matter was considered by many as trivial. The painters were also charged with selectively adopting the ancient Greek style, in that they left out noble themes and only focused on trivial daily life—leading to the accusation that they were creating art that supported the ideologies of the
bourgeoisie, or comfortable middle class. The discovery in Pompeii also inspired history paintings based on the event, not necessarily strictly in a Neo-Grec style, such as
The Last Day of Pompeii by
Karl Briullov. File:Jean-Léon Gérôme - Jeunes Grecs faisant battre des coqs, 1846.jpg|
The Cock Fight by
Jean-Léon Gérôme, 1846 File:Hamon Jean-Louis-Old China Shop (Pompeii).jpg|
The Old China Shop (Pompeii) by
Jean-Louis Hamon, 1860. Hamon was one of the original members of the Neo-Grec group and one of the longest running adapters of the style. Here, Hamon specifically references Pompeii. File:Toulmouche Auguste-Maternal Love.jpg|
Maternal Love by
Auguste Toulmouche. Toulmouche often associated with the Neo-Grec group and many of his paintings, though not depicting antique subjects, adapted the style to a context that was contemporary, using subjects considered 'bourgeois' in reflecting the daily life of the French middle class. ==Music==