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Romanticism (art)

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I

Introduction

Romanticism (art), in art, European and American movement extending from about 1800 to 1850. Romanticism cannot be identified with a single style, technique, or attitude, but Romantic painting is generally characterized by a highly imaginative and subjective approach, emotional intensity, and a dream-like or visionary quality. Whereas Classical and Neo-Classical art is calm and restrained in feeling and clear and complete in expression, Romantic art characteristically strives to express by suggestion states of feeling too intense, mystical, or elusive to be clearly defined. Thus, the German writer E. T. A. Hoffmann declared “infinite longing” to be the essence of Romanticism. In their choice of subject matter, artists of the Romantic Movement showed an affinity with nature, especially its wild and mysterious aspects, and for exotic, melancholy and melodramatic subjects likely to evoke awe or passion.

II

18th-Century Background

The word “Romantic” first became current in 18th-century English and originally meant “romance-like”, that is, resembling the strange and fanciful character of medieval romances. The word came to be associated with the emerging taste for wild scenery, “sublime” prospects, and ruins, a tendency reflected in the increasing emphasis in aesthetic theory on the sublime as opposed to the beautiful. The British writer and statesman Edmund Burke, for instance, identified beauty with delicacy and harmony and the sublime with vastness, obscurity, and a capacity to inspire terror. Also during the 18th century, feeling began to be considered more important than reason both in literature and in ethics, an attitude epitomized in the work of the French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau. English and German Romantic poetry appeared in the 1790s, and by the end of the century the shift away from reason towards feeling and imagination began to be reflected in the visual arts, for instance in the visionary illustrations of the English poet and painter William Blake, in the brooding, sometimes nightmarish pictures of his friend, the Swiss-English painter Henry Fuseli, and in the sombre etchings of monsters and demons by the Spanish artist Francisco Goya.

III

France

In France the formative stage of Romanticism coincided with the Napoleonic Wars (1799-1815), and the first French Romantic painters found their inspiration in contemporary events. Antoine-Jean Gros began the transition from Neo-Classicism to Romanticism by moving away from the sober style of his teacher, Jacques-Louis David, to a more colourful and emotional style, influenced by the Flemish Baroque painter Peter Paul Rubens, which he developed in a series of battle paintings glorifying Napoleon. The main figure in French Romanticism was Théodore Géricault, who carried further the dramatic, colouristic tendencies of Gros's style and who shifted the emphasis of battle paintings from heroism to suffering and endurance. In his Wounded Cuirassier (1814) a soldier limps off the field as rising smoke and descending clouds seem to impinge on his figure. The powerful brushstrokes and conflicting light and dark tones heighten the sense of his isolation and vulnerability, which for Géricault and many other Romantics constituted the essential human condition.

Géricault's masterpiece, The Raft of the Medusa (1818-1819), portrays on a heroic scale the suffering of ordinary humanity, a theme echoed by the greatest French Romantic painter, Eugène Delacroix, in his Massacre at Chios (1824). Delacroix often took his subjects from literature, but he aimed at transcending literary or didactic significance by using colour to create an effect of pure energy and emotion that he compared to music. Rejecting the Neo-Classical emphasis on form and outline, he used half-tones derived not from darkening a colour but from juxtaposing that colour and its complement. The resulting effect of energetic vibration was intensified by his long, nervous brushstrokes. His Death of Sardanapalus (1827), inspired by a work by the English Romantic poet Lord Byron, is precisely detailed, but the action is so violent and the composition so dynamic that the effect is one of chaos engulfing the immobile and indifferent figure of the dying king.

IV

Germany

German Romantic painting, like German Romantic poetry and philosophy, was inspired by a conception of nature as a manifestation of the divine. This led to a school of symbolic landscape painting, initiated by the mystical and allegorical paintings of Philipp Otto Runge. Its greatest exponent, and the greatest German Romantic painter, was Caspar David Friedrich, whose meditative landscapes, painted in a lucid and meticulous style, hover between a subtle mystical feeling and a sense of melancholy, solitude, and estrangement. His Romantic pessimism is most directly expressed in Polar Sea (1824); the remains of a wrecked ship are barely visible beneath a pyramid of ice slabs that seems a monument to the triumph of nature over human aspiration.

Another school of German Romantic painting was formed by the Nazarenes, a group of artists who attempted to recover the style and spirit of medieval religious art; its leading figure was Johann Friedrich Overbeck. Notable among later artists in the German Romantic tradition was the Austrian Moritz von Schwind, whose subjects were drawn from Germanic mythology and fairy tales.

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