French painting timeline
Rhinoceroses, lions and mammoth feature on the walls of the Chauvet cave, in southern France
The three Limburg brothers illustrate for the duke of Berry the Très Riches Heures, one of the masterpieces of International Gothic
Étienne Chevalier commissions from Jean Fouquet a series of illustrations for his Book of Hours
Leonardo da Vinci moves to France, on the invitation of Francis I
Rubens completes a great narrative sequence of twenty-one paintings to celebrate the achievements of Marie de Médicis
Jean-Antoine Watteau paints the most splendid shop sign in history, for his friend Gersaint
French painter Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin returns to the subject matter that first took his interest, still life
French painter Jean-Honoré Fragonard wins the cherished Prix de Rome at the age of 20
15-year-old Elisabeth-Louise Vigée-Lebrun earns enough from painting portraits to support the rest of her family
Jacques-Louis David, establishing a reputation with his severe classical paintings, is elected to the French academy
The painter Jacques-Louis David sketches the events in the Versailles tennis court
Bonaparte Crossing the Alps (in 1800) is the first of several paintings by Jacques-Louis David celebrating the future emperor
French painter Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres moves to Rome and lives there for 18 years
Jacques-Louis David, unmistakably identified as Napoleon's painter, is banished from France after the fall of the emperor and moves to Brussels
French painter Théodore Géricault begins a two-year visit to Britain
The French painter Gustave Courbet moves from his native town of Ornans to Paris
Young French artists Claude Monet and Pierre-Auguste Renoir paint together in the open air at La Grenouillère, developing the Impressionist style
French part-time painter Henri Rousseau becomes known as Douanier ('customs officer') Rousseau because of his paid employment
French artist Claude Monet, fleeing from the Franco-Prussian War, arrives in London
French painter Edgar Degas finds inspiration in the onstage and backstage world of ballet dancers
A group of French artists, including Renoir, Monet and Degas, exhibit their work independently in the Paris studio of the photographer Nadar
French critic Louis Leroy uses the term 'impressionism' to ridicule Monet's Impression, Sunrise, and unwittingly names a movement
French artist Claude Monet moves to Giverny, where he creates and paints a famous lily pond
Leaving his family in Copenhagen, French artist Paul Gauguin returns to Paris to paint full-time
French painter Georges Seurat develops the dotted style of impressionism that becomes known as Pointillism