Romanticism - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Romanticism

Description:

Herman Melville s novel, Moby Dick Herman Melville Captain Ahab Ralph Waldo Emerson s Nature Henry David Thoreau s Walden Walt Whitman s Leaves of Grass And ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:174
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 103
Provided by: SusanM145
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Romanticism


1
ROMANTICISM
The Artistic Expression of Liberalism
2
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
  • Dehumanization due to industrialization.
  • Radical poetics / politics -- an obsessionwith
    violent change.

3
1. Emotions! Passion! Irrationality!
4
A Growing Distrust of Reason
Early19c
Enlightenment
Romanticism
Society is good, curbing violent impulses!
Civilization corrupts!
  • The essence of human experience is subjective and
    emotional.
  • Human knowledge is puny compared to other great
    historical forces.
  • Individual rights are dangerous efforts at
    selfishness -- the community is more important.

5
The Romantic Movement
  • Began in the 1790s and peaked in the 1820s
  • Mostly in Northern Europe, especially in Britain
    and Germany, then followed to America
  • A reaction against classicism/rationalism.
  • The Romantic Hero
  • Greatest example was Lord Byron
  • Tremendously popular among the European reading
    public
  • Youth imitated his haughtiness and
    rebelliousness

6
Characteristics of Romanticism
  • The Engaged Enraged Artist
  • The artist apart from (not a part of) society
  • The artist as social critic/revolutionary
  • The artist as genius

7
Wandering Above the Sea of FogCaspar David
Friedrich,1818
8
Lady Macbeth Henry Fuseli, 1794
9
2. The "Rugged" Individual
10
Characteristics of Romanticism
  • The Individual/ The Dreamer
  • Individuals have unique, endless potential
  • Self-realization comes through art
  • Artists are the true philosophers

11
The Dreamer Gaspar David Friedrich, 1835
12
Solitary Tree Caspar David Friedrich, 1823
13
3. The Power and Fury of Nature
14
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

15
An Avalanche in the AlpsPhilip James de
Loutherbourg, 1803
16
Sunset After a Storm On the Coast of Sicily
Andreas Achenbach, 1853
17
The DelugeFrancis Danby, 1840
18
Tree of CrowsCaspar David Friedrich, 1822
19
The Wreck of the Hope (a.k.a. The Sea of
Ice)Caspar David Friedrich, 1821
20
Shipwreck Joseph Turner, 1805
21
The Raft of the MedusaThéodore Géricault, 1819
22
The Eruption of Vesuvius - John Martin
23
4. Science Can Be Dangerous!
24
Isaac Newton William Blake, 1795
25
Dr. Frankensteins Adam Eve??
26
5. The "New" Technology Is Dehumanizing
27
Rain, Steam, and SpeedJoseph Mallord William
Turner, 1844
28
Rain, Steam, Speed(details)
29
The Slave ShipJoseph Mallord William Turner, 1842
30
The Slave Ship(details)
31
6. Romanticizing Country Life
32
Flatford Mill John Constable, 1817
33
The Corn FieldJohn Constable,1826
34
The Hay Wain - John Constable, 1821
35
7. The Gothic "Romanticizing" the Middle Ages
36
Characteristics of Romanticism
  • Revival of Past Styles
  • Gothic Romanesque revival.
  • Neo-Gothic architectural style.
  • Medieval ruins were a favorite theme for art and
    poetry.

37
Salisbury Cathedral from the Bishops GroundJohn
Constable, 1825
38
Salisbury Cathedral from the MeadowsJohn
Constable, 1831
39
Hadleigh Castle - John Constable, 1829
40
Eldena RuinGaspar David Friedrich, 1825
41
Winter Landscape with ChurchGaspar David
Friedrich, 1811
42
British Houses of Parliament1840-1865
43
8. The Exotic, the Occult, and the Macabre!
44
Characteristics of Romanticism
  • The Supernatural
  • Ghosts, fairies, witches, demons
  • The shadows of the minddreams madness
  • The romantics rejected materialism in pursuit of
    spiritual self-awareness
  • They yearned for the unknown and the unknowable

45
Cloister Cemetery in the SnowCaspar David
Friedrich, 1817-1819
46
Abbey in an Oak ForestCaspar David Friedrich,
1809-1810
47
Mad Woman With a Mania of Envy TheodoreGericaul
t, 1822-1823
48
Pity - William Blake, 1795
49
The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed with
the SunWilliam Blake, 1808-1810
50
Stonehenge - John Constable, 1836
51
Nightmare (The Incubus)Henry Fuseli, 1781
52
Manfred and the Witch of the AlpsJohn Martin -
1837
53
Witches SabbathFrancisco Goya,1798
54
Procession of Flagellants on Good
FridayFrancisco Goya, 1793
55
Saturn DevoursHis SonFrancisco Goya,1819-1823
56
9. Nationalism
57
Greece on the Ruins of MissolonghiEugène
Delacroix, 1827
58
Liberty Leading the People Eugène Delacroix, 1830
59
Detail of theMusket BearerDelacoix, himself
60
The Rise of the Cartheginian EmpireJoseph
Turner, 1815
61
His Majestys Ship, Victory(Trafalgar) - John
Constable, 1806
62
An Officer of the Imperial Horse GuardThéodore
Géricault, 1814
63
Napoleonat theSt. BernardPass Jacques-Louis
David,1803
64
The Shooting of May 3, 1808Francisco Goya, 1815
65
Pandemonium - John Martin, 1841
66
10. Interest in Exotic Foreign Lands
67
Characteristics of Romanticism
  • Exoticism
  • The sexy other
  • A sense of escape from reality
  • A psychological/moral justification of
    imperialism?

68
Grand Canal, VeniceJoseph Mallord William
Turner, 1835
69
Massacre of Chios Eugène Delacroix, 1824
70
The Fanatics of TangiersEugène Delacroix,
1837-1838
71
The Sultan of Morocco and His EntourageEugène
Delacroix, 1845
72
Women of Algiers in Their ApartmentEugène
Delacroix, 1834
73
The Bullfight - Francisco Goya
74
Charge of the Mamelukes, May 2nd, 1808Francisco
Goya, 1814
75
The Royal Pavillion at BrightonJohn Nash,
1815-1823
76
11. Return to Christian Mysteries
77
God as the Architect William Blake, 1794
78
Elohim Creating AbrahamWilliam Blake, 1805
79
Body of Abel Found by Adam and EveWilliam Blake,
1825
80
Faust and MephistophelesEugène Delacroix,
1826-1827
81
The Seventh Plague of EgyptJohn Martin, 1823
82
The CathedralGaspar DavidFriedrich,1818
83
The Cathedral(details)Gaspar
DavidFriedrich,1818
84
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)

85
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)

86
(No Transcript)
87
Other Romantic Writers
Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm - Grimms Fairy
Tales (1814-1816)
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe - Faust
(1806-1832)
88
British Romantic Poets
  • Percy Bysshe Shelley
  • Lord Byron (George Gordon)
  • Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • William Wordsworth
  • John Keats
  • William Blake

89
George Gordon(Lord Byrons)Poem ThePrisonerof
Chillon
90
MaryShelley Frankenstein
91
SirWalterScott Ivanhoe
92
WilliamWordsworthspoem,TinternAbbey
93
Samuel TaylorColeridgesPoem,The Rimeof
theAncientMariner
94
American Romantic Writers
  • Solidified as a nation during the period
  • Intellectual revolution second in importance
    only to the political revolution that brought
    nation into being
  • Placed central importance upon the emotions and
    upon the individual

95
Emily Dickinsons Poetry
96
Edgar Allan Poe
97
Nathaniel Hawthornes novel, The Scarlet Letter
98
Herman Melvillesnovel,Moby Dick
Captain Ahab
Herman Melville
99
Ralph Waldo Emersons Nature
100
Henry David Thoreaus Walden
101
Walt Whitmans Leaves of Grass
102
And finally . . .
  • There is a serene and settled majesty to
    woodland scenery that enters into the soul and
    delights and elevates it, and fills it with noble
    inclinations.
  • --
    Washington Irving
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com