Objectives Understand what themes shaped romantic art, literature, and music. Explain how realists responded to the industrialized, urban world. Describe.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 12 Section 4: Culture: Romanticism and Realism
Advertisements

T.T. 9-4 pp Setting the Scene Many writers turned away from the harsh realities of industrial life to celebrate the natural world in the 1800s.
A New Culture Chapter 9 Section 4.
Romanticism vs. Realism. Romanticism Rebelled against Enlightenment’s emphasis on reason Wanted to inspire deep emotions An age of passion, rebellion,
Chapter 4 section 4 Romanticism and Realism in the Western World Standard 10.3 #7 Describe the emergence of Romanticism in art and literature, social criticism.
Arts in the Industrial Age
 Review:  What is Industrial Society like?  Cities  Working Life?  Living Conditions?  Art?
Unit 5: Industrialism and a New Global Age (1800 – 1914)
Romanticism 19th century artistic movement that appealed to emotion rather then reason Emphasis on imagination, freedom, and emotion. Eugène Delacroix, Liberty.
JEOPARDY Life in the Industrial Age Categories More.
Romantic Writers Heros were mysterious, melancholoy and felt out of step with society, sometimes hid a guilty secret and faced a grim destiny. Examples:
Chapter 23 Section 5 Literature, Music, and Art in the Industrial Age.
Chapter 23 Section 5 Literature, Music and Art in the Industrial Age Mr. Love World History 3.
Art During the Industrial Revolution. Impressionism - a 19th-century art movement that originated with a group of Paris-based artists. …Was: 1. a reaction.
Revolutions in the Arts
Changing Attitudes and Values
Revolution in the Arts Sec 8.4. Romanticism ’s Reaction against the Enlightenment Shows emotion The supernatural Imagination Heros Horror/ gothic.
23.5 Literature, Music, and Art in the Industrial Age.
Art – Neoclassicism, Romanticism, Realism, Impressionism.
Revolution in the Arts. Romanticism Romantic Music Ludwig van Beethoven Peter Tchaikovsky Frederic Chopin Franz Schubert Antonin Dvorak.
Expression and Creativity Explore New Horizons p.217.
Unit 9 The Industrial Revolution Part 3 (The Second Industrial Revolution)
Romanticism, realism, impressionism, and cubism
6.4 Notes: Arts in the Industrial Age
The Arts during the Industrial Age
Expression and Creativity Explore New Horizons p.217.
Chapter 6 Section 4. Art From the Industrial Era Art is an expression of human emotion that is a response to the outside world. Between the late 1700’s.
Arts in the Industrial Age Ch Romantic Revolt Against Reason  Romanticism  Refers to a sense of style that emphasizes imagination, freedom, &
Revolution: Romanticism to Realism
Romanticism: A Revolution in the Arts How did the arts change during the 19 th century? Grimm BrothersWordsworthRenoir.
Cult of domesticity: idealized women & the home By late 1800s, a successful husband was one who earned enough to keep his wife at home.
 Arts in the Industrial Age Chapter 6 Section 4.
Revolutions in the Arts Section 4 Ch.24. Romanticism ● Enlightenment: ● focused on reason and orderliness in society and nature ● Romanticism ● Turned.
Chapter 6 Sections 3 & 4 Three Social Classes Arise  Upper class - now includes the very rich businessmen not just nobles  Middle class - doctors,
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Industrial Age Arts.
Romanticism and Other Artistic Styles
Arts in the Industrial Age
Revolution in the Arts.
19th Century Art Movements
ARTS IN THE INDUSTRIAL AGE
Art During the Industrial Revolution
Changing Attitudes and Values
Brief Response Why are religious fundamentalists against science in today’s world? Fundamentalists (especially some Christian churches and Muslim sects)
Expression and Creativity Explore New Horizons
Arts in the Industrial Age
Splash Screen.
Revolutions in the Arts
Romanticism: A Revolution in the Arts
Warm-Up Activity Questions:
Revolution in the Arts Chapter 24 Section 4.
Revolutions in the Arts
CHAPTER 21 Section 1 Terms, People, and Places
Arts in the Industrial Age
January 16th Take Out: Key Terms sheet – we have a Key Terms Quiz
Changing Attitudes and Values
Romanticism: A Revolution in the Arts
Romantic art Romantic artist broke from discipline & rules of the Enlightenment Painted the beauty and power of nature Used bold brush strokes and.
Romanticism glorified nature and communicated intense feelings.
Industrial Age Arts.
Revolutions in the Arts
Revolution: Romanticism to Realism
Industrial Age Arts.
Art During the Industrial Revolution
Revolutions in the Arts
Industrial Revolution
Industrial Age Arts.
Revolutions in the Arts
Chapter 8 Section 4 Revolutions in the Arts
Life in the Industrial Age
Revolution in the Arts Chapter 8 Section 4.
Presentation transcript:

Objectives Understand what themes shaped romantic art, literature, and music. Explain how realists responded to the industrialized, urban world. Describe how the visual arts changed.

Terms and People William Wordsworth – a poet, part of the romantic movement William Blake – a poet and writer who contributed to the romantic movement romanticism – 19th-century artistic movement that appealed to emotion rather than reason Lord Byron – a British poet who wrote about moody, isolated, and romantic heroes Victor Hugo – a French novelist who recreated his country’s past in novels such as The Hunchback of Notre Dame

Terms and People (continued) Ludwig van Beethoven – a romantic German composer whose music combined classical forms with a stirring range of sound realism – an attempt to represent the world as it was, without the sentiment associated with romanticism Charles Dickens – an English novelist who portrayed the lives of slum dwellers and factory workers in his books Gustave Courbet – a French realist painter who depicted what he saw in his works

Terms and People (continued) Louis Daguerre – a French inventor who improved on earlier technologies to produce successful photographs by the 1840s impressionism – a style of art in which painters attempted to capture the first fleeting impression made by a scene or object Claude Monet – an impressionist artist who applied colors without combining them, relying on the human eye to blend them Vincent van Gogh – a postimpressionist painter who experimented with sharp lines and bright colors

What artistic movements emerged in reaction to the Industrial Revolution? A cultural movement called romanticism emerged out of the Industrial Revolution and flourished between 1750 and 1850. It emphasized imagination, freedom, and emotion.

Romanticism glorified nature and communicated intense feelings. This artistic style emerged in the mid 1700s and was a reaction to neoclassicism, which focused on reason and restraint.

Romantic writers created a new kind of hero. Lord Byron was known for creating isolated, larger-than-life characters in his poetry. His hero was often mysterious and different from others in society. Two other examples of this sort of character were Goethe’s Faust and Charlotte Brontë’s Rochester in her novel Jane Eyre. 7

Victor Hugo wrote about France’s past in The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Some romantics found inspiration in the past. Architects built new structures in the medieval Gothic style. The buildings of the British Parliament are an example of this.

Romantic composers and artists stirred deep emotions. Ludwig van Beethoven took advantage of all the instruments in the orchestra to produce a stirring range of sound. Landscape painters such as J. M. W. Turner tried to show the power of nature in their work with bold color.

Realists sought to depict life as it really was, and often focused on the harsh side of existence. A new artistic movement called realism emerged in the mid-1800s. Charles Dickens portrayed the lives of slum dwellers and orphans in his popular novels, and Émile Zola wrote of class warfare in his work.

Realism also emerged in drama and in art. Henrick Ibsen produced plays attacking hypocrisy and strict social rules. Gustave Courbet painted rough laborers in his works.

As photography emerged, painters took new directions in their work. Louis Daguerre improved on earlier technology to produce photographs by the 1840s. Since the camera could be used to realistically depict life, painters faced the challenge of what to do next. Impressionism evolved as a result.

Unlike earlier artists, Claude Monet and other impressionists did not attempt to hide their brush strokes. These artists attempted to create a fresh view of the world. Postimpressionists, such as Vincent van Gogh, experimented further with line and color to add a dreamlike quality to images in their work. Impressionist painters sought to capture an “impression” of an object or a scene.

Section Review QuickTake Quiz Know It, Show It Quiz 14