Johann Joachim Quantz Quantz is the first professional flute player in Europe in the 18th century. In 1708 he learned to train music under the guidance of his uncle and learned to play not only the oboe and the trumpet but also the majority of the string instrument families. After joining the Town Band in Dresden, Quantz was nominated for Opoist in Poland's Augustus II, the Saxony constituency, and the church of Poland. As an oboe player, Quantz was unable to find an opportunity to advance in 1719 and turned to flute. French flute player P. G. Buffardin is his first teacher.
In the mid 18th century, four prominent authors and performance writers (Alexander Agricola, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Leopold Mozart, Johann Joachim Quantz) and Leopold Mozart represented several anomalies. Unlike Agricola, Bach, Quantz, they jumped to the media in the exam and Leopold Mozart began his violin lesson, a historical debate about the origins of stringed instruments. Judging from the atmosphere of the knowledge of the enlightenment philosophy, the starting point of Mozart 's deliberations, along with the issue of the origins of ancient music, apparently continued the medieval academic philosophy and served to rekindle the interest in music history . To discuss the background of the classical advantage over contemporary literature - this discussion gradually expanded to other arts since 1750.
For centuries Western European residents have linked their culture to Rome and Christianity. However, in the 18th century, famous German art historian John Joachim Winkman created a modern paradigm that inherited only Roman Greek culture, Athens is the true origin of Western civilization. This new idea succeeded and in the early 19th century people fully accepted the belief that Athens is the cradle of free and reasonable European civilization. Philosophers believe that freedom is free to marathon under the defense of Athenian people. Marathon is an important fight. Their victory urges other Greeks to resist Xerxes: In the marathon the foundation of Western civilization was established. British philosopher John Stuart Miller says "The war in the marathon is more important than the fighting in Hastings, even in events in British history."
The work of Johann-Joachim Winkelman "History of ancient art" is one of the main inspirations of the rise of the neoclassical movement. Simplicity and symmetry are outstanding features of work done by sports. Some famous artists include Panini, Benjamin West and Jack Louis David. The design remains simple and straight, more accurate when depicting the ancient. This is also the result of the recent excavation of Herculaneum and Pompeii by Winkleman. Winkelman himself is a worshiper of ancient civilization and encourages artists to follow the artist's style saying "it includes noble simplicity and quiet solemnity." This form is deprived of short-lived and individual aspects as it is close to the idealized natural shape depiction