World History: Lesson 34: Nineteenth Century Art
Artist• ROMANTICISM: Roughly 1750 – 1850; Art designed to provoke a strong emotional response and to celebrate man as a creature of warm emotions rather than of cold logic; A rejection of the new science and reason of the Industrial Revolution; Often promoted patriotic sentiments or celebrated the awesomeness of nature / • Gathered anthologies of Germanic folk tales
• Published Grimms’ Fairy Tales beginning in 1812, with regularly updated editions every few years as they gathered more stories
• Developed the “Byronic hero” which would become a hallmark of Romantic literature – a dark, brooding, and often violent hero who still has the ability for doing good and loving deeply
• English novelist
• Student of Lord Byron
• Wrote Frankenstein
• Charlotte: Wrote Jane Eyre
• Emily: Wrote Wuthering Heights
• Anne: Wrote Agnes Grey
• French
• Wrote Les Miserables and The Hunchback of Notre Dame
• French
• Wrote The Three Musketeers, The Man in the Iron Mask, and The Count of Monte Cristo
• American
• Wrote The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, Rip van Winkle
• Perfected the short story as a serious genre
• American
• Wrote The Scarlet Letter
• Wrote largely on man’s tendency to sin, resulting in his work being called “dark romanticism”
• American
• Wrote Moby Dick
• Focus was primarily on sea yarns
• American
• Wrote many poems and short-stories in the horror genre: The Raven, The Black Cat, The Cask of Amontillado, The Fall of the House of Usher, The Pit and the Pendulum, The Murders in the Rue Morgue, The Tell-Tale Heart
• German
• Composer of 9 full symphonies as well as various other pieces
• Highly experimental in his music, defying established classical conventions
• Continued to compose music even after he had gone completely deaf
• Polish
• Most of his works are etudes for the piano
• Much of his work celebrated his Polish heritage
• German
• Wrote mainly operas, most of which celebrated German history or folklore
• Openly racist and anti-Semitic, his works would be re-popularized under the Nazi regime
REALISM: Art designed to show the world as it really is
• Artists often sought to improve the situation of the poor by exposing the conditions in which they lived and worked / • English
• Wrote Oliver Twist, A Tale of Two Cities, Great Expectations, A Christmas Carol
• Much of his work focused on the suffering of the poor in London
• American
• Wrote Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn
• American
• Wrote The Red Badge of Courage
IMPRESSIONISM: Art designed to show only the impression of things, not the full details of realism / • French
• Considered the master of the Impressionist movement
• Masterworks: paintings of Rouen Cathedral and Waterlilies
• French
• Many of his paintings were of ballet dancers
• French
• Many of his paintings were of the working poor
• French
• Painter and sculptor
• Many of his paintings were of Parisian high society
POST-IMPRESSIONISM: Art has a variety of styles, usually using sharp lines, bright colors / • Dutch
• Considered the master of the Post-Impressionist era
• Produced over 2000 pieces
• Cut off his own ear due to depression, later committed suicide by shooting himself in the chest
• Masterworks: Starry Night
• French noble
• Suffered from a growth disease (Toulouse-Lautrec Syndrome)
• Many of his works focused on nightclubs like the Moulin Rouge
• French
• Masterworks: A Sunday on La Grande Jatte
• French
• Much of his later work was completed on the Pacific island of Tahiti
• Norwegian
• Developed a new form of Post-Impressionism called Expressionism
• His work was denounced by the Nazis as “degenerate” and banned in the 1930s
• Masterworks: The Scream