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ROMANTICISM Art isn’t just for decoration. The Spirit of the Age (1790-1850). A sense of a shared vision among the Romantics . Early support of the French Revolution. Reflected liberal ideas – rights of man, abolition of slavery, dignity of the working class
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ROMANTICISM Art isn’t just for decoration
The Spirit of the Age (1790-1850) • A sense of a shared vision among the Romantics. • Early support of the French Revolution. • Reflected liberal ideas – rights of man, abolition of slavery, dignity of the working class • Rise of the individual alienation. • Dehumanization of industrialization. • Radical poetics / politics an obsessionwith violent change.
A Growing Distrust of Reason Early19c Enlightenment Romanticism Society is good, curbing violent impulses, keep order Civilization corrupts! • The essence of human experience is subjective and emotional. • Human knowledge is a puny thing compared to other great historical forces. • “Individual rights” are dangerous efforts at selfishness the community is more important – the individual with rights needs to help support the collective good.
“Romantic” does not mean love • First, there were those who looked back on the past as a romantic period before people were commoditized and nature destroyed. • Second, there was a growing reaction against the Enlightenment, which emphasized science, empirical evidence, and rational thought above all. • Romantics challenged the idea that reason was the one path to truth. The mysteries of life could be uncovered with emotion, imagination, and intuition. • Nature was especially celebrated • Emphasized a life filled with deep feeling & spirituality the virtues to fight the dehumanizing effects of industrialization • Extolled the value of human beings, believed to have infinite, godlike potential.
The Romantic Movement • Began in the 1790s and peaked in the 1820s. • Mostly in Northern Europe, especially in Britain and Germany. • A reaction against classicism. • The “Romantic Hero:” • Greatest example was Lord Byron • Tremendously popular among the European reading public. • Youth imitated his haughtiness and rebelliousness.
Romanticism… The Engaged & Enraged Artist: • The artist apart from society. • The artist as social critic/revolutionary. The Individual/ The Dreamer: • Individuals have unique, endless potential.
The Supernatural: The romantics rejected materialism in pursuit of spiritual self-awareness. They yearned for the unknown and the unknowable - Ghosts, fairies, witches, demons. Revival of Past Styles: Gothic and Roman revival Medieval ruins were a favourite theme for art and poetry
Glorification of Nature: • Peaceful, restorative qualities [an escape from industrialization and the dehumanization it creates]. • Awesome, powerful, horrifying aspects of nature. • Indifferent to the fate of humans. • Overwhelming power of nature. Next … The themes with examples
1. Emotion! Passion! The rugged individual! Lady Macbeth - Henry Fuseli, 1794
2. Return to Christian Mysteries… God as the Architect - William Blake, 1794
3. The Power and Fury of Nature … An Avalanche in the AlpsPhilip James de Loutherbourg1803
4. Science can be dangerous and dehumanizing … Rain, Steam, and SpeedJoseph Mallord William Turner, 1844
5. Romanticizing Country Life… Flatford Mill – John Constable, 1817
6. The Gothic: Romanticizing the Middle Ages… Eldena RuinGaspar David Friedrich, 1825
Salisbury Cathedral from the Bishop’s GroundJohn Constable, 1825
7. The Exotic, the occult and the macabre! Stonehenge - John Constable, 1836
Mad Woman With a Mania of Envy TheodoreGericault, 1822-1823
8. Nationalism… Liberty Leading the People EugèneDelacroix, 1830
Napoleonat theSt. BernardPass David,1803
9. Interest in Exotic Foreign Lands … The Sultan of Morocco and His EntourageEugène Delacroix, 1845
The Great Age of the Novel • Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte (1847)Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte (1847)Ivanhoe - Sir Walter Scott (1819)Les Miserables - Victor Hugo (1862)The Three Musketeers – Alexander Dumas (1844) Frankenstein - Mary Shelley (1817)Dracula – Bram Stoker (1897)Hugh Trevar- Thomas Holcroft (1794)
Other Romantic Writers Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm - Grimm’s Fairy Tales(1814-1816) The brothers Grimm gathered folk tales that forged German identity. JohannWolfgang von Goethe- Faust (1806-1832)
The Romantic Poets • Percy Bysshe Shelley • Lord Byron (George Gordon) • Samuel Taylor Coleridge • William Wordsworth • John Keats • William Blake
The Political Implications • Romanticism could reinforce the greatest themes of political liberalism or political conservatism. • Contributed to growing nationalist movements. • The concepts of the Volk and the Volkgeist. • The uniqueness of cultures was emphasized.
So WHO CARES?? • Culture was no longer just aesthetic but also a means by which political views could be expressed and artists could take risks • Art was no longer just a reflection of society but also served as an agent for change in society.
The Romantic movement found a home in Germany…German nationalism, or Volkgeist, celebrated the accomplishments of early Germans. This helped to re-enforce a feeling of German Nationalism.
And most of these “nationalists” were young men, students, searching for a better world and wanting to make a difference.
An example - Gericault’s painting, Raft of the Medusa, 1819 depicted a group of passengers who were left on a raft by the crew of a sinking ship. This Romantic painting was meant to depict the government deserting the needs of the people. But the people will prevail
Bibliographic Sources • CGFA: A Virtual Art Museum.http://cgfa.sunsite.dk/fineart.htm • “Romanticism” on Artchive.http://artchive.com/artchive/romanticism.html