Romanticismo Europeo

97
By: Susan M. Pojer By: Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY Chappaqua, NY
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Pintura sobre el Romanticismo en Europa.

Transcript of Romanticismo Europeo

Page 1: Romanticismo Europeo

By: Susan M. PojerBy: Susan M. PojerHorace Greeley HS Horace Greeley HS

Chappaqua, NY Chappaqua, NY

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The Spirit of the Age (1790-1850) A sense of a shared vision among the

Romantics.

Early support of the French Revolution.

Rise of the individual alienation.

Dehumanization of industrialization.

Radical poetics / politics an obsessionwith violent change.

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EnlightenmentSociety is good, curbing

violent impulses!Civilization corrupts!

Romanticism

Early19c

A Growing Distrust of Reason

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.

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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.

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Characteristics of Romanticism

The Engaged & Enraged Artist: The artist apart from society.

The artist as social critic/revolutionary.

The artist as genius.

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Wandering Above the Sea of Fog

Caspar David Friedrich,

1818

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Lady Macbeth - Henry Fuseli, 1794

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Characteristics of Romanticism

The Individual/ The Dreamer: Individuals have unique, endless

potential.

Self-realization comes through art Artists are the true philosophers.

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The Dreamer Gaspar David Friedrich, 1835

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Solitary Tree Caspar David Friedrich, 1823

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Characteristics of Romanticism

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.

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An Avalanche in the AlpsPhilip James de Loutherbourg,

1803

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Sunset After a Storm On the Coast of Sicily – Andreas

Achenbach, 1853

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The DelugeFrancis Danby, 1840

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Tree of CrowsCaspar David Friedrich, 1822

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The Wreck of the Hope (aka The Sea of Ice)

Caspar David Friedrich, 1821

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Shipwreck – Joseph Turner, 1805

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The Raft of the MedusaThéodore Géricault, 1819

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The Eruption of Vesuvius - John Martin

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Isaac Newton – William Blake, 1795

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Dr. Frankenstein’s Adam & Eve??

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Rain, Steam, and SpeedJoseph Mallord William Turner,

1844

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Rain, Steam,

& Speed

(details)

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The Slave ShipJoseph Mallord William Turner,

1842

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The Slave Ship

(details)

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Flatford Mill – John Constable, 1817

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The Corn Field

John Constable,

1826

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The Hay Wain - John Constable, 1821

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Characteristics of Romanticism

Revival of Past Styles: Gothic & Romanesque revival.

“Neo-Gothic” architectural style.

Medieval ruins were a favorite theme for art and poetry.

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Salisbury Cathedral from the Bishop’s Ground

John Constable, 1825

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Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows

John Constable, 1831

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Hadleigh Castle - John Constable, 1829

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Eldena RuinGaspar David Friedrich, 1825

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Winter Landscape with ChurchGaspar David Friedrich, 1811

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British Houses of Parliament1840-1865

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Characteristics of RomanticismThe Supernatural:

Ghosts, fairies, witches, demons.

The shadows of the mind—dreams & madness.

The romantics rejected materialism in pursuit of spiritual self-awareness.

They yearned for the unknown and the unknowable.

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Cloister Cemetery in the SnowCaspar David Friedrich, 1817-

1819

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Abbey in an Oak ForestCaspar David Friedrich, 1809-

1810

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Mad Woman With a Mania of Envy

TheodoreGericault, 1822-1823

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Pity - William Blake, 1795

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The Great Red

Dragon and the Woman

Clothed with the Sun

William Blake,

1808-1810

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Stonehenge - John Constable, 1836

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Nightmare (The Incubus)Henry Fuseli, 1781

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Manfred and the Witch of the Alps

John Martin - 1837

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Witches Sabbath

Francisco Goya,1798

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Procession of Flagellants on Good Friday

Francisco Goya, 1793

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Saturn DevoursHis Son

Francisco Goya,

1819-1823

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Greece on the Ruins of Missolonghi

Eugène Delacroix,

1827

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Liberty Leading the People Eugène Delacroix, 1830

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Detail of theMusket Bearer

Delacoix, himself

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The Rise of the Cartheginian Empire

Joseph Turner, 1815

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His Majesty’s Ship, “Victory”(Trafalgar) - John Constable, 1806

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An Officer of the Imperial Horse Guard

Théodore Géricault, 1814

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Napoleonat the

St. BernardPass

David,1803

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The Shooting of May 3, 1808Francisco Goya, 1815

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Pandemonium - John Martin, 1841

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Characteristics of Romanticism

Exoticism: The sexy “other.”

A sense of escape from reality.

A psychological/moral justification of imperialism?

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Grand Canal, VeniceJoseph Mallord William Turner,

1835

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Massacre of Chios - Eugène Delacroix, 1824

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The Fanatics of TangiersEugène Delacroix, 1837-1838

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The Sultan of Morocco and His Entourage

Eugène Delacroix, 1845

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Women of Algiers in Their Apartment

Eugène Delacroix, 1834

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The Turkish BathJean Auguste Ingres, 1852-1863

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The Bullfight - Francisco Goya

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Charge of the Mamelukes, May 2nd, 1808

Francisco Goya, 1814

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The Royal Pavillion at BrightonJohn Nash, 1815-1823

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God as the Architect - William Blake, 1794

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Elohim Creating AbrahamWilliam Blake, 1805

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Body of Abel Found by Adam and Eve

William Blake, 1825

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Faust and MephistophelesEugène Delacroix, 1826-1827

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The Seventh Plague of EgyptJohn Martin, 1823

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The Cathedral

Gaspar DavidFriedrich,

1818

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The Cathedral(details)

Gaspar DavidFriedrich,

1818

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The Great Age of the Novel Gothic Novel:

Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte (1847) Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte (1847)

Historical Novel: Ivanhoe - Sir Walter Scott (1819) Les Miserables - Victor Hugo (1862) The Three Musketeers – Alexander Dumas (1844)

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The Great Age of the Novel

Science Fiction Novel: Frankenstein - Mary Shelley (1817) Dracula – Bramm Stoker (1897)

Novel of Purpose: Hugh Trevar - Thomas Holcroft (1794)

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Other Romantic Writers

Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm - Grimm’s Fairy Tales (1814-1816)

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe - Faust (1806-1832)

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The Romantic Poets Percy Byssche Shelley

Lord Byron (George Gordon)

Samuel Taylor Coleridge

William Wordsworth

John Keats

William Blake

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George Gordon’s

(Lord Byron)Poem

ThePrisonerof Chillon

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MaryShelley

Frankenstein

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SirWalterScott

Ivanhoe

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WilliamWordsworth’

sPoem,

TinternAbbey

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SamuelTaylor

Coleridge’sPoem,

The Rimeof the

AncientMariner

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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.

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Bibliographic Sources

CGFA: A Virtual Art Museum. http://cgfa.sunsite.dk/fineart.htm

“Romanticism” on Artchive. http://artchive.com/artchive/romanticism.html