Science and romanticism in art

Post on 06-May-2015

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Presentation for sixth form (or lower) for Frankenstein week. Please much around with as you wish.

Transcript of Science and romanticism in art

Science and Romanticism in Art

How did representations of nature go from this:

…to this:

1. The artist

• Look at these three images. What do each of them tell you?

• By the time we get to the last picture, the artist is seen as a romantic figure – someone along in the wilderness, seeking something, whether beauty, knowledge or spiritual enlightenment

2. Science

• Artists were the first anatomists. Leonardo Da Vinci dissected bodies and made detailed drawings that became the basis for much medical knowledge

• From then on, the scientist was someone who, like great artists, pushed the boundaries of knowledge and perception.

• What do you notice about these two representations of scientific investigations?

• How do they compare to this medieval picture?

• …and to this nineteenth century painting?

…or this?

• The idea of an artificial human that began with Frankenstein took a different turn, again prompted by artistic ideas:

• Jacob Epstein’s Rock Drill was considered so shocking that eventually the artist dismantled it

• He said he did this because after the mechanised slaughter of WW1 he himself was frightened by his own vision

• It is still influential today!

• Other artists who fought in the first world was noticed how men became like machines. David Bomburg produced two versions of the same picture:

• And film makers have picked up on this theme of the mechanised soldiers, and how they, like the monster in Frankenstein, might rebel against their creators

• …although for some artists, mechanisation was simply the way of the world now, and a source of beauty. Mondrian based Broadway Boogie Woogie on the grid-like pattern of yellow taxis on the New York streets:

3. Landscape

• The Garden of Eden was a common subject for paintings. The word Paradise, another way of describing Eden, means Walled Garden in Persian. In the earliest representations, we can see this literally – paradise is a safe, walled garden, where everything is ordered and controlled.

• But soon the walls disappear – in this painting by Rubens, the garden is human, safe and abundant, but no longer so controlled.

• The romantic Eden is a different place- grand, rugged, where the humans are tiny in comparison to the grandness of nature:

• This is the romantic vision of nature – grander than man, and sublime

4. Composition

• The last element of the transformation into a Romantic visual language was composition. The classical ideals of composition in a picture were geometrical – lines, squares, circles, equal divisions

• …whereas Romantic painters used natural shapes reminiscent of mountains and waves…

• So, to return to the two paintings we started with, see if you can identify the ways the romantic world view transformed the visual language. As a clue, both are about time and death – the first is called ‘A Dance to the Music of Time’, and the second is a vision of Judgement Day.