170 likes | 571 Views
Neoclassicism & Romanticism art and literary movements. Thursday, November 12, 2009. Review: Rococo. Popular from ~1715-1760 Lush colours and dreamlike images Soft edges. Antoine Watteau, The Embarkation of Cythera, 1717 . Neoclassicism. Dominant from 1760-1800
E N D
Neoclassicism&Romanticism art and literary movements Thursday, November 12, 2009
Review: Rococo • Popular from ~1715-1760 • Lush colours and dreamlike images • Soft edges Antoine Watteau, The Embarkation of Cythera, 1717
Neoclassicism • Dominant from 1760-1800 • Resurgence of classic (Ancient Greek or Roman) traditions in art, music, and architecture • Organized and symmetrical • Depicted Greek or Roman imagery
Medici Vase, St. Petersburg, ca. 1830 *Pompeian style
Romanticism • Emerged in the early 19th century • This was a philosophical, literary, and artistic movement • Completely encompassed society (art, writing, politics, and revolutions) • *A rejection ofEnlightenment rationalism – not all things can be understood through reason • Nature and imagination is beautiful – encompasses movement and change
Enlightenment vs Romanticism • The countryside • Religion • The Middle Ages • Mysticism • Imagination
Problem of Defining Romanticism • Romanticism rejects the idea that things can be fully understood. • Sometimes the ideas may seem contradictory: respected old institutions while it was seen as liberal and encouraged change
Romantic Art • Criticized the past • Emphasized women and children as pure • Isolationism of the hero or narrator • Pure reality of nature
^ J.M.W. Turner, The Fighting Temeraire tugged to her last Berth to be broken up, 1838