ROMANTICISM, 1800s-1810s
Characteristics:
- shows the height of action
- emotional extremes
- celebrated nature as out of control
- dramatic compositions
- heightened sensation (life and death moments)
ROMANTIC PAINTING (Portraits/Figures)
The paintings of the Romantic period gave more emphasis on emotion.
Artists expressed as much feeling and passion as it could be on a canvas.
JEAN LOUIS THÉODORE GÉRICAULT (1791-1824) France
Géricault was the first French master and the leader of the French realistic school. His masterpieces were energetic, powerful, brilliantly colored, and tightly composed
THE RAFT OF THE MEDUSA
The Raft of the Medusa portrays the victims of a contemporary
shipwreck. The people on this raft were French emigrants en route to West
Africa.
CHARGING CHASSEUR
His first major work revealed the influence of the style of Rubens and
an interest in the depiction of
contemporary subject matter.
INSANE WOMAN
One of several portraits Gericault
made of the mentally disabled that has
a peculiar hypnotic power
EUGÈNE DELACROIX (1798-1863) France
Delacroix was considered the
greatest French Romantic painter of all. He achieved brilliant visual effects using small, adjacent strokes of contrasting color.
He was the most influential to most of Romantic painters and
eventually, his technique was adopted
and extended by the Impressionist artists.
LIBERTY LEADING THE PEOPLE
This painting commemorates the July Revolution of 1830, which toppled King Charles X of France. A woman holding the flag of the French Revolution personifies Liberty and leads the people forward over the bodies
of the fallen,.
FRANCISCO GOYA(1746-1828) Spain
Francisco Goya was a commissioned
Romantic painter by the King of Spain. He was also a printmaker regarded both as the last of the “Old Masters” and the first of the “Moderns”.
THE THIRD OF MAY
The Third of May is Goya’s masterpiece that sought to commemorate
Spanish resistance to Napoleon's armies during the occupation of 1808 in the
Peninsular War.
SATURN DEVOURING HIS SON
This artwork depicts the Greek myth of the Titan Cronus (Saturn), who fears that he would be
overthrown by one of his children, so he ate each one upon their birth
THE BURIAL OF SARDINE
The "Burial of the Sardine" was a Spanish ceremony celebrated on Ash Wednesday and was a symbolical
burial of the past to allow society to be reborn, transformed with new
vigor.
ROMANTIC PAINTING (Landscape Painting)
Landscape painting depicts the physical world that surrounds us and includes features such as mountains, valleys, vegetation, and bodies of water. The sky is another important element shaping the mood of landscape paintings. Landscape art ranges from highly detailed and realistic to impressionistic, romantic and idealized.
Famous landscape artists during the Romantic Period:
1. Théodore Rousseau
2. Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
ROMANTIC SCULPTURE
Romantic sculpture can be divided into works that concern about
the human world and those that concern the natural world. The leading
sculptors of each type were Rude and Barye, respectively.
FRANÇOIS RUDE(1784-1855) France
François Rude was best known for his
social art which aimed to inspire and capture the interest of a broad public. He rejected the classical repose of the late 18th- and early 19th-century French sculpture in favour of a dynamic, emotional style and created many monuments that stirred the public for
generations.
DEPARTURE OF THE VOLUNTEERS
JEANNE D’ARC
ANTOINE-LOUIS BARYE(1796-1875) France
He was the most famous animal
sculptor of all time. He studied the anatomy
of his subjects by sketching residents of
the Paris zoo.
HERCULES SITTING ON A BULL
THESEUS
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ROMANTICISM, 1800s-1810s
Characteristics:
- shows the height of action
- emotional extremes
- celebrated nature as out of control
- dramatic compositions
- heightened sensation (life and death moments)
ROMANTIC PAINTING (Portraits/Figures)
The paintings of the Romantic period gave more emphasis on emotion.
Artists expressed as much feeling and passion as it could be on a canvas.
JEAN LOUIS THÉODORE GÉRICAULT (1791-1824) France
Géricault was the first French master and the leader of the French realistic school. His masterpieces were energetic, powerful, brilliantly colored, and tightly composed
THE RAFT OF THE MEDUSA
The Raft of the Medusa portrays the victims of a contemporary
shipwreck. The people on this raft were French emigrants en route to West
Africa.
CHARGING CHASSEUR
His first major work revealed the influence of the style of Rubens and
an interest in the depiction of
contemporary subject matter.
INSANE WOMAN
One of several portraits Gericault
made of the mentally disabled that has
a peculiar hypnotic power
EUGÈNE DELACROIX (1798-1863) France
Delacroix was considered the
greatest French Romantic painter of all. He achieved brilliant visual effects using small, adjacent strokes of contrasting color.
He was the most influential to most of Romantic painters and
eventually, his technique was adopted
and extended by the Impressionist artists.
LIBERTY LEADING THE PEOPLE
This painting commemorates the July Revolution of 1830, which toppled King Charles X of France. A woman holding the flag of the French Revolution personifies Liberty and leads the people forward over the bodies
of the fallen,.
FRANCISCO GOYA(1746-1828) Spain
Francisco Goya was a commissioned
Romantic painter by the King of Spain. He was also a printmaker regarded both as the last of the “Old Masters” and the first of the “Moderns”.
THE THIRD OF MAY
The Third of May is Goya’s masterpiece that sought to commemorate
Spanish resistance to Napoleon's armies during the occupation of 1808 in the
Peninsular War.
SATURN DEVOURING HIS SON
This artwork depicts the Greek myth of the Titan Cronus (Saturn), who fears that he would be
overthrown by one of his children, so he ate each one upon their birth
THE BURIAL OF SARDINE
The "Burial of the Sardine" was a Spanish ceremony celebrated on Ash Wednesday and was a symbolical
burial of the past to allow society to be reborn, transformed with new
vigor.
ROMANTIC PAINTING (Landscape Painting)
Landscape painting depicts the physical world that surrounds us and includes features such as mountains, valleys, vegetation, and bodies of water. The sky is another important element shaping the mood of landscape paintings. Landscape art ranges from highly detailed and realistic to impressionistic, romantic and idealized.
Famous landscape artists during the Romantic Period:
1. Théodore Rousseau
2. Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
ROMANTIC SCULPTURE
Romantic sculpture can be divided into works that concern about
the human world and those that concern the natural world. The leading
sculptors of each type were Rude and Barye, respectively.
FRANÇOIS RUDE(1784-1855) France
François Rude was best known for his
social art which aimed to inspire and capture the interest of a broad public. He rejected the classical repose of the late 18th- and early 19th-century French sculpture in favour of a dynamic, emotional style and created many monuments that stirred the public for
generations.
DEPARTURE OF THE VOLUNTEERS
JEANNE D’ARC
ANTOINE-LOUIS BARYE(1796-1875) France
He was the most famous animal
sculptor of all time. He studied the anatomy
of his subjects by sketching residents of
the Paris zoo.
HERCULES SITTING ON A BULL
THESEUS
ROMANTICISM, 1800s-1810s
Characteristics:
- shows the height of action
- emotional extremes
- celebrated nature as out of control
- dramatic compositions
- heightened sensation (life and death moments)
ROMANTIC PAINTING (Portraits/Figures)
The paintings of the Romantic period gave more emphasis on emotion.
Artists expressed as much feeling and passion as it could be on a canvas.
JEAN LOUIS THÉODORE GÉRICAULT (1791-1824) France
Géricault was the first French master and the leader of the French realistic school. His masterpieces were energetic, powerful, brilliantly colored, and tightly composed
THE RAFT OF THE MEDUSA
The Raft of the Medusa portrays the victims of a contemporary
shipwreck. The people on this raft were French emigrants en route to West
Africa.
CHARGING CHASSEUR
His first major work revealed the influence of the style of Rubens and
an interest in the depiction of
contemporary subject matter.
INSANE WOMAN
One of several portraits Gericault
made of the mentally disabled that has
a peculiar hypnotic power
EUGÈNE DELACROIX (1798-1863) France
Delacroix was considered the
greatest French Romantic painter of all. He achieved brilliant visual effects using small, adjacent strokes of contrasting color.
He was the most influential to most of Romantic painters and
eventually, his technique was adopted
and extended by the Impressionist artists.
LIBERTY LEADING THE PEOPLE
This painting commemorates the July Revolution of 1830, which toppled King Charles X of France. A woman holding the flag of the French Revolution personifies Liberty and leads the people forward over the bodies
of the fallen,.
FRANCISCO GOYA(1746-1828) Spain
Francisco Goya was a commissioned
Romantic painter by the King of Spain. He was also a printmaker regarded both as the last of the “Old Masters” and the first of the “Moderns”.
THE THIRD OF MAY
The Third of May is Goya’s masterpiece that sought to commemorate
Spanish resistance to Napoleon's armies during the occupation of 1808 in the
Peninsular War.
SATURN DEVOURING HIS SON
This artwork depicts the Greek myth of the Titan Cronus (Saturn), who fears that he would be
overthrown by one of his children, so he ate each one upon their birth
THE BURIAL OF SARDINE
The "Burial of the Sardine" was a Spanish ceremony celebrated on Ash Wednesday and was a symbolical
burial of the past to allow society to be reborn, transformed with new
vigor.
ROMANTIC PAINTING (Landscape Painting)
Landscape painting depicts the physical world that surrounds us and includes features such as mountains, valleys, vegetation, and bodies of water. The sky is another important element shaping the mood of landscape paintings. Landscape art ranges from highly detailed and realistic to impressionistic, romantic and idealized.
Famous landscape artists during the Romantic Period:
1. Théodore Rousseau
2. Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
ROMANTIC SCULPTURE
Romantic sculpture can be divided into works that concern about
the human world and those that concern the natural world. The leading
sculptors of each type were Rude and Barye, respectively.
FRANÇOIS RUDE(1784-1855) France
François Rude was best known for his
social art which aimed to inspire and capture the interest of a broad public. He rejected the classical repose of the late 18th- and early 19th-century French sculpture in favour of a dynamic, emotional style and created many monuments that stirred the public for
generations.
DEPARTURE OF THE VOLUNTEERS
JEANNE D’ARC
ANTOINE-LOUIS BARYE(1796-1875) France
He was the most famous animal
sculptor of all time. He studied the anatomy
of his subjects by sketching residents of
the Paris zoo.
HERCULES SITTING ON A BULL
THESEUS
ROMANTICISM, 1800s-1810s
Characteristics:
- shows the height of action
- emotional extremes
- celebrated nature as out of control
- dramatic compositions
- heightened sensation (life and death moments)
ROMANTIC PAINTING (Portraits/Figures)
The paintings of the Romantic period gave more emphasis on emotion.
Artists expressed as much feeling and passion as it could be on a canvas.
JEAN LOUIS THÉODORE GÉRICAULT (1791-1824) France
Géricault was the first French master and the leader of the French realistic school. His masterpieces were energetic, powerful, brilliantly colored, and tightly composed
THE RAFT OF THE MEDUSA
The Raft of the Medusa portrays the victims of a contemporary
shipwreck. The people on this raft were French emigrants en route to West
Africa.
CHARGING CHASSEUR
His first major work revealed the influence of the style of Rubens and
an interest in the depiction of
contemporary subject matter.
INSANE WOMAN
One of several portraits Gericault
made of the mentally disabled that has
a peculiar hypnotic power
EUGÈNE DELACROIX (1798-1863) France
Delacroix was considered the
greatest French Romantic painter of all. He achieved brilliant visual effects using small, adjacent strokes of contrasting color.
He was the most influential to most of Romantic painters and
eventually, his technique was adopted
and extended by the Impressionist artists.
LIBERTY LEADING THE PEOPLE
This painting commemorates the July Revolution of 1830, which toppled King Charles X of France. A woman holding the flag of the French Revolution personifies Liberty and leads the people forward over the bodies
of the fallen,.
FRANCISCO GOYA(1746-1828) Spain
Francisco Goya was a commissioned
Romantic painter by the King of Spain. He was also a printmaker regarded both as the last of the “Old Masters” and the first of the “Moderns”.
THE THIRD OF MAY
The Third of May is Goya’s masterpiece that sought to commemorate
Spanish resistance to Napoleon's armies during the occupation of 1808 in the
Peninsular War.
SATURN DEVOURING HIS SON
This artwork depicts the Greek myth of the Titan Cronus (Saturn), who fears that he would be
overthrown by one of his children, so he ate each one upon their birth
THE BURIAL OF SARDINE
The "Burial of the Sardine" was a Spanish ceremony celebrated on Ash Wednesday and was a symbolical
burial of the past to allow society to be reborn, transformed with new
vigor.
ROMANTIC PAINTING (Landscape Painting)
Landscape painting depicts the physical world that surrounds us and includes features such as mountains, valleys, vegetation, and bodies of water. The sky is another important element shaping the mood of landscape paintings. Landscape art ranges from highly detailed and realistic to impressionistic, romantic and idealized.
Famous landscape artists during the Romantic Period:
1. Théodore Rousseau
2. Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
ROMANTIC SCULPTURE
Romantic sculpture can be divided into works that concern about
the human world and those that concern the natural world. The leading
sculptors of each type were Rude and Barye, respectively.
FRANÇOIS RUDE(1784-1855) France
François Rude was best known for his
social art which aimed to inspire and capture the interest of a broad public. He rejected the classical repose of the late 18th- and early 19th-century French sculpture in favour of a dynamic, emotional style and created many monuments that stirred the public for
generations.
DEPARTURE OF THE VOLUNTEERS
JEANNE D’ARC
ANTOINE-LOUIS BARYE(1796-1875) France
He was the most famous animal
sculptor of all time. He studied the anatomy
of his subjects by sketching residents of
the Paris zoo.
HERCULES SITTING ON A BULL
THESEUS
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ROMANTICISM, 1800s-1810s
Romanticism was a movement in which the
artists of Neoclassical period sought to break new ground in the expression of emotion, both subtle and stormy. It embraced a number of distinctive themes, such as a longing for history, supernatural elements, social injustices, and nature. Landscape painting also became more popular due to the peoples romantic adoration of nature. Romanticism was a reaction to the classical, contemplative nature of Neoclassical pieces. Characteristics:
- shows the height of action
- emotional extremes - celebrated nature as out of control - dramatic compositions - heightened sensation (life and death moments) ROMANTIC PAINTING (Portraits/Figures)
The paintings of the Romantic
period gave more emphasis on emotion. Artists expressed as much feeling and passion as it could be on a canvas. JEAN LOUIS THODORE GRICAULT (1791-1824) France Gricault was the first French master and the leader of the French realistic school. His masterpieces were energetic, powerful, brilliantly colored, and tightly composed THE RAFT OF THE MEDUSA The Raft of the Medusa portrays the victims of a contemporary shipwreck. The people on this raft were French emigrants en route to West Africa. CHARGING CHASSEUR
His first major
work revealed the influence of the style of Rubens and an interest in the depiction of contemporary subject matter. INSANE WOMAN One of several portraits Gericault made of the mentally disabled that has a peculiar hypnotic power EU G N E D ELACRO IX (1798-1863) France Delacroix was considered the greatest French Romantic painter of all. He achieved brilliant visual effects using small, adjacent strokes of contrasting color. He was the most influential to most of Romantic painters and eventually, his technique was adopted and extended by the Impressionist artists. LIBERTY LEAD IN G TH E PEO PLE This painting commemorates the July Revolution of 1830, which toppled King Charles X of France. A woman holding the flag of the French Revolution personifies Liberty and leads the people forward over the bodies of the fallen,. FRANCISCO GOYA (1746-1828) Francisco Goya Spain was a commissioned Romantic painter by the King of Spain. He was also a printmaker regarded both as the last of the Old Masters and the first of the Moderns. THE THIRD OF MAY The Third of May is Goyas masterpiece that sought to commemorate Spanish resistance to Napoleon's armies during the occupation of 1808 in the Peninsular War. SATURN DEVOURING HIS SON This artwork depicts the Greek myth of the Titan Cronus (Saturn), who fears that he would be overthrown by one of his children, so he ate each one upon their birth THE BURIAL OF SARDINE The "Burial of the Sardine" was a Spanish ceremony celebrated on Ash Wednesday and was a symbolical burial of the past to allow society to be reborn, transformed with new vigor. ROMANTIC PAINTING (Landscape Painting ) Landscape painting depicts the physical world that surrounds us and includes features such as mountains, valleys, vegetation, and bodies of water. The sky is another important element shaping the mood of landscape paintings. Landscape art ranges from highly detailed and realistic to impressionistic, romantic and idealized.
Famous landscape artists during the Romantic
Period: 1. Thodore Rousseau 2. Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot THE CHURCH OF MARISSEL, NEAR BEAUVAIS (J. Corot) LE REPOS SOUS LES SAULES (J. Corot) DER KLEINE FISCHER T. Rousseau LANDSCAPE WITH PLOWMAN (T. Rousseau) ROMANTIC SCULPTURE
Romantic sculpture can be divided into
works that concern about the human world and those that concern the natural world. The leading sculptors of each type were Rude and Barye, respectively. FRANOIS RUDE (1784-1855) France
Franois Rude was
best known for his social art which aimed to inspire and capture the interest of a broad public. He rejected the classical repose of the late 18th- and early 19th-century French sculpture in favour of a dynamic, emotional style and created many monuments that stirred the public for generations. DEPARTURE OF THE VOLUNTEERS JEANNE DARC ANTOINE-LOUIS BARYE (1796-1875) He was the France most famous animal sculptor of all time. He studied the anatomy of his subjects by sketching residents of the Paris zoo. HERCULES SITTING ON A BULL THESEUS SLAYING THE MINOTAUR Thank you for listening..