Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a...

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Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements

Transcript of Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a...

Page 1: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Nineteenth Century Artistic

Movements

Page 2: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Romanticism• Roughly 1750 – 1850• Art designed to provoke a

strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature of warm emotions rather than of cold logic

• A rejection of the new science and reason of the Industrial Revolution

• Often promoted patriotic sentiments or celebrated the awesomeness of nature

Page 3: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Romantic Literature

Page 4: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

The Brothers Grimm• Jacob & Wilhelm• German• Gathered anthologies of

Germanic folk tales• Published Grimms’ Fairy

Tales beginning in 1812, with regularly updated editions every few years as they gathered more stories

Page 5: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Lord Byron• 1788 – 1824• British noble & poet• Developed the “Byronic

hero” which would become a hallmark of Romantic literature – a dark, brooding, and often violent hero who still has the ability for doing good and loving deeply

Page 6: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Mary Shelley• 1797 – 1851• English novelist• Student of Lord Byron• Wrote Frankenstein• Had a child out of wedlock with

the already married Percy Bysshe Shelley, the two later married after his first wife committed suicide!

• 3 of their 4 children would die very young

• Husband drowned at age 29• Died of a brain tumor at 53

Page 7: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

The Brontë Sisters • Charlotte: 1816 – 1855• Wrote Jane Eyre• Died at 38 from

tuberculosis• Emily: 1818 – 1848• Wrote Wuthering Heights• Died of tuberculosis at

age 30• Anne: 1820 – 1849• Wrote Agnes Grey • Died of tuberculosis at

age 29

Page 8: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Victor Hugo• 1802 – 1885• French• Wrote Les Miserables

and The Hunchback of Notre Dame

• Highly successful within his own lifetime

• Forced into exile by Napoleon III over his political views

Page 9: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Alexandre Dumas• 1802 – 1870• French• Wrote The Three

Musketeers, The Man in the Iron Mask, and The Count of Monte Cristo

• Being ¼ African, Dumas was never fully accepted into French high society

Page 10: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Washington Irving• 1783 – 1859• American• Wrote The Legend of

Sleepy Hollow, Rip van Winkle

• Perfected the short story as a serious genre

Page 11: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Nathaniel Hawthorne• 1804 – 1864• American• Wrote The Scarlet

Letter• Wrote largely on

man’s tendency to sin, resulting in his work being called “dark romanticism”

Page 12: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Herman Melville• 1819 – 1891• American • Wrote Moby Dick• Focus was primarily on

sea yarns• Melville’s work was not

well reviewed in his own lifetime

Page 13: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Edgar Allan Poe• 1809 – 1849• American• Wrote many poems and short-

stories in the horror genre: The Raven, The Black Cat, The Cask of Amontillado, The Fall of the House of Usher, The Pit and the Pendulum, The Murders in the Rue Morgue, The Tell-Tale Heart

• Married his 13 year-old cousin (he was 26) but she died of tuberculosis at 15

• Poe died of unknown causes, but known to have been a heavy drinker

Page 14: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Romantic Music

Page 15: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Ludwig van Beethoven• 1770 – 1827• German• Composer of 9 full

symphonies as well as various other pieces

• Highly experimental in his music, defying established classical conventions

• Continued to compose music even after he had gone completely deaf

Page 16: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Frederic Chopin• 1810 – 1849• Polish• Began composing music

at age 7• Most of his works are

etudes for the piano• Much of his work

celebrated his Polish heritage

• Died of tuberculosis

Page 17: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Richard Wagner• 1813 – 1883• German• Wrote mainly operas,

most of which celebrated German history or folklore

• Openly racist and anti-Semitic, his works would be repopularized under the Nazi regime

Page 18: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Romantic Art

Page 19: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Francisco Goya

The Third of May, 1808

1814oil on canvas8 ft. 8 in. x 11 ft. 3 in.

Page 20: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Francisco Goya

Saturn Devouring His Children

1819-1823fresco on canvas4 ft. 9 in. x 2 ft. 8 in.

Page 21: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Eugène Delacroix

Death of Sardanapalus

1826oil on canvas12 ft. 1 in. x 16 ft. 3 in.

Page 22: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Eugène Delacroix

Liberty Leading the People

1830oil on canvas8 ft. 6 in. x 10 ft. 8 in.

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Caspar David Friedrich

Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog

1818oil on canvas

Page 24: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Caspar David Friedrich

Abbey in the Oak Forest

1810oil on canvas3 ft. 7 1/2 in. x 5 ft. 7 1/4 in.

Page 25: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Théodore Géricault

Raft of the Medusa

1818-1819oil on canvas16 x 23 ft.

Page 26: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Thomas Cole

The Oxbow

1836oil on canvas4 ft. 3 1/2 in. x 6 ft. 4 in.

Page 27: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Albert Bierstadt

Among the Sierra Nevada Mountains, California

1868oil on canvas6 ft. x 10 ft.

Page 28: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

John Everett Millais

Ophelia

1852oil on canvas2 ft. 6 in. x 3 ft. 8 in.

Her clothes spread wide,And mermaidlike awhile they bore her up-Which time she chanted snatches of old tunes,As one incapable of her own distress.

Page 29: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Realism• Roughly 1850 – 1900• Art designed to show

the world as it really is• Artists often sought to

improve the situation of the poor by exposing the conditions in which they lived and worked

Page 30: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Realist Literature

Page 31: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Charles Dickens• 1812 – 1870• English• Wrote Oliver Twist, A

Tale of Two Cities, Great Expectations, A Christmas Carol

• Much of his work focused on the suffering of the poor in London

Page 32: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Mark Twain• 1835 – 1910• American• Wrote Tom Sawyer,

Huckleberry Finn• Real name – Samuel

Clemens• Worked as a riverboat

pilot, confederate soldier, journalist

Page 33: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Stephen Crane• 1871 – 1900• American• Wrote The Red Badge

of Courage• Worked as a war

correspondent during the Spanish-American War

• Died at age 28 from tuberculosis

Page 34: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Realist Art

Page 35: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Gustave Courbet

The Stone Breakers

1849oil on canvas5 ft. 3 in. x 8 ft. 6 in.

Page 36: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Jean-François Millet

The Gleaners

1857oil on canvas2 ft. 9 in. x 3 ft. 8 in.

Page 37: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Édouard Manet

Olympia

1863oil on canvas4 ft. 3 in. x 6 ft. 3 in.

Page 38: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Winslow Homer

The Veteran in a New Field

1865oil on canvas2 ft. 1/8 in. x 3 ft. 2 1/8 in.

Page 39: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Thomas Eakins

The Gross Clinic

1875oil on canvas8 ft. x 6 ft. 6 in.

Page 40: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

John Singer Sargent

The Daughters of Edward Darley Boit

1882oil on canvas7 ft. 3 3/8 in. x 7 ft. 3 5/8 in.

Page 41: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Henry Ossawa Tanner

The Thankful Poor

1894oil on canvas2 ft. 11 1/2 in. x 3 ft. 8 1/4 in.

Page 42: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Jean-Léon Gérôme

Police Verso

1872oil on canvas100.5 x 148.8 cm

Page 43: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre

Still Life in Studio

1837Daguerreotype

Page 44: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Eugène Durieu & Eugène Delacroix

Draped Model (back view)

ca. 1854albumen print7 5/16 x 5 1/8 in.

Page 45: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Hippolyte Jouvin

The Point Neuf, Paris

ca. 1860-1865albumen stereograph

Page 46: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Eadweard Muybridge

Horse Galloping

1878collotype print

Page 47: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Impressionism• Roughly 1870 - 1900• Art designed to show

only the impression of things, not the full details of realism

• Art is characterized by rough brushstrokes, unfinished look

Page 48: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Impressionist Art

Page 49: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Claude Monet• 1840 – 1926• French• Considered the master

of the Impressionist movement

• Winning the lottery afforded him the luxury of honing his art; very successful artist in his lifetime

Page 50: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Claude Monet

Impression: Sunrise

1872oil on canvas1 ft. 7 1/2 in. x 2 ft. 1 1/2 in.

Page 51: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Claude Monet

Saint-LazareTrain Station

1877oil on canvas2 ft. 5 3/4 in. x 3 ft. 5 in.

Page 52: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Claude Monet

Rouen Cathedral: The Portal

1892-95oil on canvaseach approximately 3 ft. 3 1/4 in. x 2 ft. 1 7/8 in.

Page 53: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Edgar Degas• 1834 – 1917• French• Unlike others, born into

wealth, formally trained as an artist

• Never married• Spent his last years

nearly blind

Page 54: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Edgar Degas

Ballet Rehearsal

1874oil on canvas1 ft. 11 in. x 2 ft. 9 in.

Page 55: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Edgar Degas

Little Fourteen-Year-Old Dancer

1879-81bronze, paint, tulle, satin, wood

Page 56: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Edgar Degas

L’absinthe

1876oil on canvas

36 1/4 x 26 3/4 in.

Page 57: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Edgar Degas

The Tub

1886pastel1 ft. 11 1/2 in. x 2 ft. 8 3/8 in.

Page 58: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Edouard Manet• 1832 – 1883• French• Married his father’s

mistress (and his half-brother’s mother!)

• Had to have a foot amputated due to gangrene caused by untreated syphilis and died several days later

Page 59: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Édouard Manet

A Bar at the Folies-Bergère

1882oil on canvas3 ft. 1 in. x 4 ft. 3 in.

Page 60: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Pierre Auguste Renoir• 1841 – 1919• French• Painter and sculptor• Married one of his

models• Developed severe

arthritis later in life, which kept him from painting

Page 61: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Pierre-Auguste Renoir

Le Moulin de la Galette

1876oil on canvas4 ft. 3 in. x 5 ft. 8 in.

Page 62: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Post-Impressionism• Roughly 1890 –

1920• Art has a variety of

styles, usually using sharp lines, bright colors

Page 63: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Post-Impressionist Art

Page 64: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Vincent van Gogh• 1853 – 1890• Dutch• Considered the master of

the Post-Impressionist era• Produced over 2000

pieces• Cut off his own ear due to

depression, later committed suicide by shooting himself in the chest

Page 65: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Vincent van Gogh

The Night Café

1888oil on canvas2 ft. 4 1/2 in. x 3 ft.

Page 66: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Vincent van Gogh

Starry Night

1889oil on canvas2 ft. 5 in. x 3 ft. 1/4 in.

Page 67: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Vincent van Gogh

Starry Night

1889oil on canvas2 ft. 5 in. x 3 ft. 1/4 in.

Page 68: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.
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Page 70: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Henri Toulouse-Lautrec • 1864 – 1901• French• Born into nobility• Parents were first cousins,

Henri suffered from inbreeding

• Legs stopped growing at age 15 – only stood 5’ tall

• Also suffered from hypertrophy

• Died from effects of alcoholism and syphilis

Page 71: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

At the Moulin Rouge

1892-1895oil in canvas4 ft. x 4 ft. 7 in.

Page 72: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.
Page 73: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.
Page 74: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Georges Seurat• 1859 – 1891• French• Born wealthy• Died at 31 from

meningitis – both of his children died within days of him from the same disease

Page 75: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Georges Seurat

A Sunday on La Grande Jatte

1884-1886oil on canvas6 ft. 9 in. x 10 ft.

Page 76: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Georges Seurat

A Sunday on La Grande Jatte

1884-1886oil on canvas6 ft. 9 in. x 10 ft.

Page 77: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Paul Gauguin• 1848 – 1903• French• 1891: left Europe for

Tahiti• Sentenced to prison for

a conflict with the church, he died from syphilis and alcohol abuse before he could begin his sentence

Page 78: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Paul Gauguin

The Vision after the Sermon

1888oil on canvas2 ft. 4 3/4 in. x 3 ft. 1/2 in.

Page 79: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Paul Gauguin

Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going?

1897oil on canvas4 ft. 6 13/16 in. x 12 ft. 3 in.

Page 80: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Edvard Munch• 1863 – 1944• Norwegian• Developed a new form

of Post-Impressionism called Expressionism

• His work was denounced by the Nazis as “degenerate” and banned in the 1930s

Page 81: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Edvard Munch

The Dance of Life

1900oil on canvas

49 1/2 x 75 1/2 in.

Page 82: Nineteenth Century Artistic Movements. Romanticism Roughly 1750 – 1850 Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature.

Edvard Munch

The Scream

1893oil, pastel and casein on cardboard2 ft. 11 3/4 in. x 2 ft. 5 in.