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Art in the Romantic Era
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Art in the Romantic Era

Feb 23, 2016

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Jay Al Badri

Art in the Romantic Era. The Death of Marat by David 1793. David, Napoleon Crossing the Alps , 1800. David, Coronation of Napoleon , 1805-7. detail, Coronation. Arc de Triomphe, Paris 1806-37. Aspects of Romanticism in music & art. The Engaged & Enraged Artist Nature - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Art in the Romantic Era

Art in the Romantic

Era

Page 2: Art in the Romantic Era

The Death of Marat

by David1793

Page 3: Art in the Romantic Era

David, Napoleon Crossing the Alps, 1800

Page 4: Art in the Romantic Era

David, Coronation of Napoleon, 1805-7

Page 5: Art in the Romantic Era

detail, Coronation

Page 6: Art in the Romantic Era

Arc de Triomphe, Paris 1806-37

Page 7: Art in the Romantic Era

Aspects of Romanticism in music & art

• The Engaged & Enraged Artist• Nature • Supernatural, demonic; dreams & madness• exoticism• “ancient” (Medieval –– not Greek)

- rejection of Classicism & Renaissance

Page 8: Art in the Romantic Era

Engaged and enraged

• THE ARTIST APART FROM SOCIETY

• THE ARTIST AS SOCIAL CRITIC/REVOLUTIONARY

• THE ARTIST AS GENIUS

ARE WE NOT STILL IN THE ROMANTIC ERA?

Page 9: Art in the Romantic Era

Delacroix, Liberty Leading the People, 1830

textp. 334

Page 10: Art in the Romantic Era

Goya, Executions of the Third of May, 1808 1814-15

textp. 336

Page 11: Art in the Romantic Era

Goya, Disasters of WarBrave Deeds Against the Dead

Etching

Political communication

Page 12: Art in the Romantic Era
Page 13: Art in the Romantic Era

Nature• peaceful, restorative, an escape;

The Picturesque

• awesome, powerful, horrifying,overwhelming, indifferent to

the fate of humans; The Sublime

• the language of God (edited)

• an inner emotional (subjective) state

Page 14: Art in the Romantic Era

John Constable, The Hay Wain, 1821text

p. 338

Page 15: Art in the Romantic Era

Constable Salisbury Cathedral1826

God as nature, nature as God.

Page 16: Art in the Romantic Era

Caspar David Friedrich,

The Wanderer Above the Mists,

c. 1817-18

textp. 337

Page 17: Art in the Romantic Era

FRIEDRICH, Caspar DavidThe Sea of Ice, c. 1823-25, Oil on canvas, 96.7 x 126.9 cm

Page 18: Art in the Romantic Era

J.M.W. Turner, The Slave Ship, 1842 textp. 340

Page 19: Art in the Romantic Era

detail,The Slave

Ship

Page 20: Art in the Romantic Era

Turner, Joseph Mallord William, Rain, Steam and Speed1844, Oil on canvas, 35 3/4 x 48 in.

textp. 340

Page 21: Art in the Romantic Era

detail

Page 22: Art in the Romantic Era

Constable

Turner

Page 23: Art in the Romantic Era

The Raft of the Medusa by Gericault 1819

Page 24: Art in the Romantic Era
Page 25: Art in the Romantic Era

Church, Frederic EdwinRainy Season in the Tropics1866, Oil on canvas, 56 1/4 x 84 3/16 in. The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco

Page 26: Art in the Romantic Era

Church, Frederic Edwin, The Icebergs1861, Oil on canvas, 64 1/4 x 112 1/4 in

Page 27: Art in the Romantic Era

Bierstadt, AlbertAmong the Sierra Nevada Mountains, California

1868, Oil on canvas, 183 x 305 cm text

p. 341

Page 28: Art in the Romantic Era

The Supernatura

l • ghosts, fairies, witches, demons, etc.

• the shadows of the mind – dreams & madness

• reaction to Rationalism? (1st witch scare during the Renaissance) – the escape from Reason

Page 29: Art in the Romantic Era

DelacroixMéphistophél

ès dans les airs, 1828

No. 2 from the set of 18 lithographs of Goethe's

Faust

Page 30: Art in the Romantic Era

DelacroixFaust dans la

prison de Marguerite,

1828

No. 18 from the set of 18 lithographs of Goethe's

Faust

Page 31: Art in the Romantic Era

Goya,The Sleep of Reason

Brings Forth Monsters1796-8etching

textp. 345

Page 32: Art in the Romantic Era

GoyaKronos devouring his

children

Page 33: Art in the Romantic Era

Goya, Witches’ Sabbath, c. 1819-23

textp. 345

Page 34: Art in the Romantic Era

Theodore GericaultMad Woman with a Mania of Envy1822-23

Study of the insane

Page 35: Art in the Romantic Era

GoyaThe Lunatics

Page 36: Art in the Romantic Era

Exoticism• the sexy Other

• psychological/moral justification of imperialism?

• England is exotic to the Italians, Italy exotic to the English!

• a sense of escape?

Page 37: Art in the Romantic Era

Delacroix, The Death of Sardanapalus, 1826 p. 333

Page 38: Art in the Romantic Era

detail,Sardanapalus

Page 39: Art in the Romantic Era

Ingres, Jean Auguste DominiqueLa Grand Odalisque1814Oil on canvas

Page 40: Art in the Romantic Era

detail

Page 41: Art in the Romantic Era

Jean Auguste Ingres, The Turkish Bath, c1852-63

textp. 344

Page 42: Art in the Romantic Era

detail,Ingres

Page 43: Art in the Romantic Era

Portrait of a NegressMarie Guillemine Benoist, 1800

Political comment on the rights of women?

p. 327

Page 44: Art in the Romantic Era

John Nash Royal Pavilion at Brighton 1815-1823

textp. 343

Page 45: Art in the Romantic Era

John Nash Royal Pavilion at Brighton 1815-1823

textp. 343

Page 46: Art in the Romantic Era

Revival of past styles

• Gothic & Romanesque revival

• free mixture of stylistic elements

• Gothic verticality & asymmetry

Page 47: Art in the Romantic Era

Fonthill Abbey 1823

The most influential collapsed building?aka “Beckford’s folly”

mentioned in textp. 342

Page 48: Art in the Romantic Era
Page 49: Art in the Romantic Era

Fonthill, painting of the interior by the architect, James Wyatt

Page 50: Art in the Romantic Era

Cole, The Architect’s Dream, 1840

Page 51: Art in the Romantic Era

Thomas Cole, The Return, 1837

Page 52: Art in the Romantic Era

Houses of Parliament, London, 1840-65 textp. 343

Page 53: Art in the Romantic Era

Lyndhurst 1838-1842

Page 54: Art in the Romantic Era

Trinity Church, Boston1877Richardson

Page 55: Art in the Romantic Era

An English building in India

Page 56: Art in the Romantic Era

Aspects of Romanticism in music & art

• The Engaged & Enraged Artist• Nature • Supernatural, demonic• exoticism• “ancient” (Medieval or folk –– not Greek)

- rejection of Classicism & Renaissance

Page 57: Art in the Romantic Era

Goya, Executions of the Third of May, 1808 1814-15

textp. 336

Engaged & enraged: political critique

Page 58: Art in the Romantic Era

John Constable, The Hay Wain, 1821text

p. 338

NATURE: The Picturesque

Page 59: Art in the Romantic Era

Caspar David Friedrich,

The Wanderer Above the Mists,

c. 1817-18

p. 337

NATURE: The Sublime

Page 60: Art in the Romantic Era

Goya,The Sleep of Reason

Brings Forth Monsters1796-8etching

p. 345

The escape from REASON

Page 61: Art in the Romantic Era

John Nash Royal Pavilion at Brighton 1815-1823

textp. 343

EXOTICISM: another escape from Reason

Page 62: Art in the Romantic Era

Houses of Parliament, London, 1840-65 textp. 342

The escape from Reason, Part 3:

REVIVAL OF THE PRE-RENAISSANCE PAST

Page 63: Art in the Romantic Era

La Marselliaise by Francois Rude