Initially, Poussin's genius was recognized only by small circles of collectors. It appears from the record that he failed to please
Louis XIV, being, it appears, unfit for Court intrigue. At the same time, after his death, it was recognized that he had contributed a new theme of "classical severity" to French art.
Benjamin West, an American painter of the 18th century who worked in Britain, based his canvas of the death of
General Wolfe at
Quebec on Poussin's example. As a result, the image is one in which each character gazes with appropriate seriousness on Wolfe's death after securing British domination of North America. Subsequently many military painters of the 19th century followed Poussin's compositional examples in order to make sure the strategic situation, or role of the favored individual, was highlighted properly in an era when people learned facts from paintings.
Jacques-Louis David resurrected a style already known as "Poussinesque" during the
French Revolution in part because the leaders of the Revolution, following the American example, looked to replace the frivolity and oppression of the court with Republican severity and civic-mindedness, most obvious in David's dramatic canvas of
Brutus receiving the bodies of his sons, sacrificed to his own principles, and the famous death of
Marat.
Throughout the 19th century, Poussin, available to the ordinary person's gaze because the Revolution had opened the collections of the Louvre, was inspirational for thoughtful and self-reflexive artists who pondered their own work methods, notably Cézanne, who strove to "recreate Poussin after nature", and the Post-Impressionists. The less thoughtful enjoyed the eroticism of some Poussin's classicizing subjects (
illustration, left).
In the twentieth century art critics have suggested that the "analytic Cubist" experiments of
Pablo Picasso and
Georges Braque were founded upon Poussin's example.
The most famous 20th-century scholar of Poussin was the Englishman
Anthony Blunt, Keeper of the Queen's Pictures, who in 1979 was disgraced by revelations of his complicity with Soviet intelligence.
Today, Poussin's paintings at the
Louvre reside in a gallery dedicated to him.