This document provides an overview of artistic styles from the Rococo period to Realism. It discusses how Europe transitioned from a semi-feudal state in the 18th century to an era shaped by the Enlightenment and Industrial Revolution. The Rococo style emphasized delicate colors, curving forms, and playful subjects. The Enlightenment pushed for rational thought and observation of natural laws. The Industrial Revolution profoundly transformed society and the economy. Neoclassicism emerged as a reaction against Rococo, drawing inspiration from Greek/Roman antiquity. The French Revolution influenced artists like Jacques-Louis David to depict political themes. Romanticism valued emotion over reason and nature over intellect. Eugène Delacroix was a
2. The Enlightenment
Europe started the 18th century in a
semi-feudal state
Economic and political power was
centrally-based
Aristocratic class held most of the
power
By the end, industrial manufacturing
would shift the economic paradigm
3. The Enlightenment
The Enlightenment pushed
thinkers, philosophes, to improve the
institutions of mankind
Nature is both rational and good
Observation of natural laws could
theoretically lead to happiness for
mankind
4. Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution was a period
from the 18th to the 19th century
where major changes in
agriculture, manufacturing, mining, tra
nsportation, and technology had a
profound effect on the
socioeconomic, and cultural conditions
of the times. It began in the United
Kingdom , then subsequently spread
throughout Europe, North
America, and eventually the world.
5. Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution marks a
major turning point in human history;
almost every aspect of daily life was
influenced in some way. Most
notably, average income and
population began to exhibit
unprecedented sustained growth. In
the two centuries following 1800, the
world's average per capita income
increased over 10-fold, while the
world's population increased over 6-
fold.
22. Jean-Jacques Rousseau
• Tranquility is found also in
dungeons; but is that enough to
make them desirable places to live
in?
• To say that a man gives himself
gratuitously, is to say what is absurd
and inconceivable; such an act is null
and illegitimate, from the mere fact
that he who does it is out of his mind.
To say the same of a whole people is
to suppose a people of madmen; and
madness creates no right.
• Even if each man could alienate
himself, he could not alienate his
children: they are born men and
free; their liberty belongs to
them, and no one but they has the
right to dispose of it.
27. Jean-Jacques Rousseau
• I know that [civilized men] do nothing
but boast incessantly of the peace
and repose they enjoy in their
chains.... But when I see [barbarous
man] sacrifice
pleasures, repose, wealth, power, an
d life itself for the preservation of this
sole good which is so disdained by
those who have lost it; when I see
animals born free and despising
captivity break their heads against
the bars of their prison; when I see
multitudes of entirely naked savages
scorn European voluptuousness and
endure hunger, fire, the sword, and
death to preserve only their
independence, I feel it does not
behoove slaves to reason about
freedom.
28. Jean-Jacques Rousseau
• In reality, the difference is, that the savage
lives within himself while social man lives
outside himself and can only live in the
opinion of others, so that he seems to
receive the feeling of his own existence only
from the judgement of others concerning
him. It is not to my present purpose to insist
on the indifference to good and evil which
arises from this disposition, in spite of our
many fine works on morality, or to show
how, everything being reduced to
appearances, there is but art and mummery
in even honour, friendship, virtue, and often
vice itself, of which we at length learn the
secret of boasting; to show, in short, how
abject we are, and never daring to ask
ourselves in the midst of so much
philosophy, benevolence, politeness, and of
such sublime codes of morality, we have
nothing to show for ourselves but a frivolous
and deceitful appearance, honour without
virtue, reason without wisdom, and pleasure
without happiness.
29. The Rococo - 1700-1750
• “Rococo” derived from
rocaille, (pebble or shell) and
barocco. Motifs in Rococo art
resemble ornate shell or
pebble work popular in
gardens.
• Refined, fanciful, and often
playful style fashionable in
France at turn of
century, spread thru Europe in
18th century
• Pastel colors, delicately curving
forms, dainty figures, light
hearted
• Reaction against rigidity and
solemnity of 17th century court
The Swing, Fragonard, 1766
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35. Rococo
Though Rococo originated in the
purely decorative arts, the style
showed clearly in painting. These
painters used delicate colors and
curving forms, decorating their
canvases with cherubs and myths of
love. Portraiture was also popular
among Rococo painters. Some works
show a sort of naughtiness or impurity
in the behavior of their
subjects, showing the historical trend
of departing away from the Baroque's
church/state orientation. Landscapes
were pastoral and often depicted the
leisurely outings of aristocratic
couples.
36.
37. GERMAIN BOFFRAND, Salon de la
Princesse, with painting by CHARLES-JOSEPH
NATOIRE and sculpture by J. B.
LEMOINE, Hôtel de
Soubise, Paris, France, 1737–1740. 37
38. FRANÇOIS DE CUVILLIÉS, Hall of Mirrors, the Amalienburg, Nymphenburg Palace
park, Munich, Germany, early 18th century.
38
54. The Drunken Cobbler, Jean-Baptiste Greuze. Oil on canvas, 1785.
“The Natural” : morality painting expressing real sentiment and honest virtue.
Inspired by the writing of Rousseau and Diderot, father of modern art criticism-wrote that art’s
proper function was to improve virtue and purify manners… criticized rococo “immoral” art…
64. Italy and Classical Revival
• The Grand Tour – the
completion of an aristocratic
education was a tour of the major
cultural sites of Europe
• Paris, Venice, Florence, Naples, a
nd Rome
• This heavily inspires the growth
of Neoclassicism during the
Enlightenment
• Pleased the senses and taught
moral lessons
• Was a reaction to frivolity of
Rococo
• Pompeii and Herculaneum
discovered in 1738
66. veduta (Italian for "view"; plural vedute) is a highly detailed, usually large-
scale painting of a cityscape or some other vista.
67. The History of Ancient Art
• Published by Johann
Joachim Winckelmann
• “A noble simplicity and
calm grandeur…”
• Greek art is hailed for its
beauty and moral
character
– Response to Rococo frivolity
• Became the focus and
agenda for Neoclassical
art
68. 1789
French Revolution Causes
• Enlightenment (knowledge
& observation)
• Economic crisis
• Clash between the Third
Estate and the First and
Second Estates
– 3rd =
peasants, workers, bourgeoisi
e
– 1st & 2nd = clergy & nobility
• Fought over issue of
representation in the
legislative body, the Estates-
General
– Convened to discuss taxation
69. Jacques Louis David
• Started as a Rococo
painter (relative of
Boucher)
• Spent time in Italy and
turned to academic
painting
– Declared Rococo “artificial
taste”
– Exalted classical art as the
imitation of nature in the
most beautiful and perfect
form
71. Neoclassicism
• A reaction against both the Baroque
and Rococo styles, and as a desire to
return to the perceived "purity" of the
arts of Rome, the more vague
perception ("ideal") of Ancient Greek
arts (where almost no western artist
had actually been) and, to a lesser
extent, 16th century Renaissance
Classicism.
• Stimulated by widespread interest and
enthusiasm among the literati for the
findings at archaeological excavations at
Herculaneum and Pompeii and by the
interpretative writings of J. J.
Winckelmann, especially his History of
Ancient Art (1764).
72. Neoclassical Art Training
• Tended to continue to dominate
academies
• Teachers stressed the study of
ancient sculpture and great artists
from the past
– Raphael, Michelangelo
• Art was for the universal and the
beautiful, meant to shape public
thinking towards virtue and taste
• Art was for cultural indoctrination
73. • Paris was the center of the
cultural world
• Ecole des Beaux-Arts
renowned academy
• Ateliers – private studios
offering instruction
• Paris Salon was preeminent
place to show art
– Controlled by juries that
stressed conservative views of
art
• Gradually alternatives begin to
appear to meet needs for
different forms of art (see
Impressionists)
76. • Different variations on great slain leaders of the
time
• Grandiose vs. sparse
77. Jacques Louis David and Napoleon
• David’s political agenda was
highly successful through the
influence of his art
• Was imprisoned in 1794 after
supporting a regime which fell
out of favor
• Pulled back from center
stage, painted portraits and
classical events
• Napoleon, upon being
crowned emperor in
1804, sought David’s artistic
abilities
• David enthusiastically
accepted, depicted Napoleon
as an invincible hero
78.
79.
80.
81. Napoleon and Art
• Napoleon used art to help
push his ambitious agenda
• Arc de Triomphe was based
on Arch of Titus
• His political order combined
with the art ushered in the
Romantic era of art
• Created a model for how
modern politicians and
leaders could use the power
of art and images for
political means.
82.
83. Jean Auguste Dominique
Ingres
• Spokesman for the traditional
style of painting
• Intellect and draftsmanship
– Never let the brushstroke
show
• His intricate line work
influenced Picasso, Matisse, and
Degas
89. Edmund Burke
• 18th c. English politician and
philosopher
– wrote A Philosophical Enquiry
into the Origins of Our Ideas of
the Sublime and Beautiful
• Sublime = feelings of awe
mixed with terror
• The most intense human
emotions are evoked by pain
or fear and that when these
emotions are distanced they
can be thrilling
90. Romanticism
Literary, artistic, and philosophical
movement that began in Europe in the
18th century and lasted roughly until
the mid-19th century. In its intense
focus on the individual
consciousness, it was both a
continuation of and a reaction against
the Enlightenment. Romanticism
emphasized the individual, the
subjective, the irrational, the
imaginative, the personal, the
spontaneous, the emotional, the
visionary, and the transcendental.
91. Romanticism
Among its attitudes were a deepened
appreciation of the beauties of nature;
a general exaltation of emotion over
reason and of the senses over
intellect; a turning in upon the self and
a heightened examination of human
personality; a preoccupation with the
genius, the hero, and the exceptional
figure; a new view of the artist as a
supremely individual creator; an
emphasis on imagination as a gateway
to transcendent experience and
spiritual truth; a consuming interest in
folk culture, national and ethnic
cultural origins, and the medieval era;
and a predilection for the exotic, the
remote, the mysterious, the weird, the
occult, the monstrous, the
diseased, and even the satanic.
92. Romanticism:
Emerged from a desire to be free
Desire for freedom in: politics; feelings; thought; action; worship;
speech; taste
Freedom is the right and property of all.
Path to freedom was through imagination, not reason
Freedom functioned through feeling not accepted wisdom
Originated among German literary groups (ironically)
Neoclassicism v. Romanticism
Reasons Feelings
Calculation Intuition
Objective Nature Subjective emotions
Interest in Classical Interest in Medieval
art and literature and sublime
93. Eugène Delacroix
• French Romantic artist
regarded from the outset of
his career as the leader of the
French Romantic school.
Delacroix's use of expressive
brushstrokes and his study of
the optical effects of color
profoundly shaped the work of
the Impressionists, while his
passion for the exotic inspired
the symbolists.
94. Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism
Neoclassicism Romanticism
• Values: Order • Values: Emotion, imagination
• Tone: Rational, calm • Tone: Spontaneous
• Subjects: Greek and Roman • Subjects:
history, myth Legends, exotic, nature, violen
ce
• Technique: Stressed use of
• Technique: Quick
lines, no trace of brushstrokes, chiaroscuro, ten
brushstrokes ebrism
• Role: Morally • Genre: Heroic
uplifting, inspiring struggle, landscape, wild
• Key Artist: David animals
• Key Artists:
Gericault, Delacroix
95. Ingres vs. Delacroix
Ingres Delacroix
• Brushstrokes should be as • “The real man is the
smooth “as the skin of an savage”
onion” • “Passionately in love with
• Intellect and craftsmanship passion”
• Conservative • Exotic images charged with
• Technical skill violence
• Strong, warm colors were • Lush colors, swirling curves
“antihistorical” • Animals and human figures
swirling, knotted in combat
96. Delacroix in Morocco
• Visit to Morocco changed his
life/subject matter, color expression
• Renewed his conviction that beauty
exists in the fierceness of
nature, especially animals
107. William Blake, God Creating the Universe
(Ancient of Days), Frontispiece of Europe: A
Prophecy, 1794, metal relief etching, hand
colored with watercolor and gouache.
111. Francisco de Goya
• Defines Spanish Romantic
movement
• Started off painting
cartoons for Rococo
tapestries
• French Revolution (1789)
inspired his art
• Political enlightenment and
the freedom of the
individual
• Disillusionment sets in as
reforms in France were
short-lived
112.
113.
114.
115. EUGÈNE DELACROIX, Liberty Leading the People, 1830. Oil on canvas, approx. 8’ 6” x 10’ 8”.
Louvre, Paris.
116.
117. Francisco Goya, Sleep of
Reason Produces
Monsters, from Los
Caprichos (The Caprices)
Plate 43, 1798, etching and
aquatint.
121. Romantic Landscapes
• Rather than just
describing the
scene, Romantic artists
colored it by mood and
used nature as allegory
• Artists comment on
spiritual, moral, historical,
or philosophical issues
– Allows the artist to
“naturalize” conditions –
make them appear
normal, acceptable, or
inevitable
128. The Fighting Téméaire, 1838
Sun setting on the past – last days of the sailboat, historical changes
129.
130. Orientalism
• European art patrons wanted
landscapes of more
exotic, unfamiliar places
• The lands of the east tended
to capture the imagination of
Western Europeans
• Romantic fascination with
foreign culture
• Oriental subjects engaged
both Romantic and
Neoclassical artists
• Stressed sex and violence
• Who is depicting whom?
Editor's Notes
Upper right, Giorgione “Sleeping Venus” (the Dresden Venus), c. 1510.Lower half, Goya “The Nude Maja”, c. 1796-1798.
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (French, 1780–1867), Comtessed’Haussonville, dated 1845; Oil on canvas, 51 ⅞ x 36 ¼ inches (131.8 x 92); The Frick Collection, New York. How does Ingres work both acknowledge the existence of photography and displays traditional painting techniques?Compare with Nadar’s portraits (photography). Ingres captures realistic detail – light in the corner of the room, the reflection in the mirror, details of the dress and folds. He used models and photographs to get the human figure right. Ingres was able to color his portrait while photography was not. Which has the advantage?
Mentally ill fascinated Gericault due to their irrational state of mind, a perfect scenario against Enlightenment’s rationalityHe examined the influence of the mental state on human faces and believed that the face accurately revealed the character especailly at the moment of death, What tells you she’s insane? Redness of her eyes, mouth is tense, lines in her face depict her suffering, Not the earlier idealized portraiture
Gouache is watercolor that becomes opaque when it dries.Blake longed to see religion reformed, yet again. He was an engraver, painter and poet but his works weren’t well known until hundred years after his death From 1793-1796 he illustrated the Prophetic Books using biblical themes. What is God doing here? Organizing the universe with a compassWhat mixture of styles and contrast do you see here? Renaissance body, baroque lighting, naturalistic clouds, precise circle and compass,Renaissance colors, Blake, rejected rationalism of the EnlightenmentAcknowledged the beast in humansFigure is Urizen, a pun on “your reason” an evil Enlightenment figure of rational thinking,
Los Caprichos emerged after Goya thought deeply about the proclivity for rationality and order in Neoclassicism.He is asleep, slumped on a table while creatures converge on him . The creatures are Owls, then a symbol of folly and bats a symbol of ignorance; What is romantic about it? Monsters, creatures, imaginative, emotional, nightmarish , fantasy not reason
Romantic transcendental landscape not experienced but knowable; philosophy independent of human experience of phenomena but within the range of knowledgeHis work Demands silence appropriate for sacred placesWhat are all the signs that lead to death? Bare treed, dark shaded forest, sundown, dark sky, casket, gothic ruins, old cemetery, tilted cross,