19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

23
19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes

Transcript of 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Page 1: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

19th Century Artfor Mrs. Fasano’s

World History Classes

Page 2: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Neo-classicism A French art style and movement that originated as a reaction to the Baroque in the mid-eighteenth century, and continued into the middle

of the nineteenth century. It sought to revive the ideals of ancient Greek and Roman art. Neoclassic artists used classical forms to

express their ideas about courage, sacrifice, and love of country.

www.artlex.com

 

Page 3: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Jacques-Louis David, The Death of Marat, Oil on Canvas, 1793

Page 4: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Jacques-Louis David (French, 1748-1825), The Death of Socrates, 1787, oil on canvas, 51 x 77 1/4 inches (129.5 x 196.2 cm), Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY.

Page 5: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres 1808. Gustave Moreau 1864

Page 6: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Romanticism       

An art movement and style that flourished in the early nineteenth century. It emphasized the emotions painted in a bold, dramatic manner. Romantic artists rejected the cool reasoning of classicism — the established art of the times — to paint pictures of nature in its untamed state, or other exotic settings filled with dramatic action, often with an emphasis on the past. Classicism was nostalgic too, but Romantics were more emotional, usually melancholic, even melodramatically tragic.Paintings by members of the French Romantic school include those by Théodore Géricault (French, 1791-1824) and Eugène Delacroix (French, 1798-1863), filled with rich color, energetic brushwork, and dramatic and emotive subject matter. In England the Romantic tradition began with Henry Fuseli (Swiss-English, 1741-1825) and William Blake (1757-1827), and culminated with Joseph M. W. Turner (1775-1851) and John Constable (1776-1837). The German landscape painter Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840) produced images of solitary figures placed in lonely settings amidst ruins, cemetaries, frozen, watery, or rocky wastes. And in Spain, Francisco Goya (1746-1828) depicted the horrors of war along with aristocratic portraits. www.artlex.com

Page 8: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Francisco Goya: The Third of May, 1808

Page 9: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

The Fighting "Temeraire" tugged to her last berth to be broken up 1838;

Page 10: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

A group of English artists which formed an association in 1848 to recapture the beauty and simplicity of the medieval world. Their painting style and

art movement reacted to the sterility of English art, along with the materialism resulting from England's industrialization. They identified

Raphael (Italian, 1483-1520) with the scientific interests of Renaissance art, which they felt had led to modern technological development. They aimed to

study nature, to sympathize with what is direct, serious and heartfelt in earlier art, and to infuse their works with literary symbolism, bright colors,

and attention to detail.

 

Pre-raphaelites

Page 11: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Edward Burne-Jones - The Garden of the Hesperides

Page 12: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

William Holman Hunt - The Awakening Conscience1853

Page 13: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

John Everett Millais – Ophelia (c) 1851

Page 14: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

The Lady of Shalott, JW Waterhouse 1888 – based of the poem by Tennyson

Page 15: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

I am half sick of shadows, said the Lady of ShalottJW Waterhouse1916

Page 16: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Realism (with an upper case "R"), also known as the Realist school, denotes a mid-nineteenth century art movement and style in which artists discarded the formulas of Neoclassicism and the theatrical drama of Romanticism to paint familiar scenes and events as they actually looked. Typically it involved some sort of sociopolitical or moral message, in the depiction of ugly or commonplace subjects.

Realism sought to portray real and typical contemporary people and situations with truth and accuracy, and not avoiding unpleasant or sordid aspects of life. Realist works depicted people of all classes in situations that arise in ordinary life, and often reflected the changes wrought by the Industrial and Commercial Revolutions.

Realism

Page 17: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Gustave Courbet , The Desperate Man – Self Portrait, 1844-45

Page 18: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Gustave Caillebotte, Planing the Floor 1875

Page 19: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Third Class Carriage 1863-65 Honore Daumier

Page 20: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Jean-François Millet – Gleaners, 1857

Page 21: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Impressionism

An art movement and style of painting that started in France during the 1860s. Impressionist artists tried to paint candid glimpses of their subjects showing the

effects of sunlight on things at different times of day. The leaders of this movement were: Claude Monet, Pierre Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro, Alfred

Sisley, Berthe Morisot, and Frederic BazilleMary Cassatt, Edgar Degas, Edouard Manet, Paul Cezanne,

Page 22: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

Claude Monet

Page 23: 19 th Century Art for Mrs. Fasano’s World History Classes.

A Woman Ironing Edgar Degas