J.M.W.Turner - Romantic
Art
Romanticism
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.
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.
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 halftones 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.
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.
England- In England, as in
Germany, landscapes suffused with
Romantic feeling became the chief
expression of Romantic painting but the
English artists were more innovative in
style and technique. Samuel Palmer
painted landscapes distinguished by an
innocent simplicity of style and a
visionary religious feeling derived from
Blake. John
Constable, turning away from the wild
natural scenery associated with many
Romantic poets and painters, infused
quiet English landscapes with profound
feeling. The first major artist to work
in the open air, he achieved a freshness
of vision through the use of luminous
colours and bold, thick brushwork. J. M.
W. Turner achieved the most radical
pictorial vision of any Romantic artist.
Beginning with landscapes reminiscent of
the 17th-century French painter Claude Lorrain,
he became, in such later works as
Snow
Storm: Steam Boat Off a Harbour's
Mouth (1842), almost entirely
concerned with atmospheric effects of
light and colour, mixing clouds, mist,
snow, and sea into a vortex in which all
distinct objects are
dissolved.
The United States-
The major manifestation of
American Romantic painting was the Hudson
River School, which found its inspiration
in the rugged wilderness of the
north-east United States. Washington
Allston, the first American landscapist,
introduced Romanticism to the United
States by filling his poetic landscapes
with subjective feeling. The leading
figure of the Hudson River School was the
English-born painter Thomas Cole, whose
depictions of primeval forests and
towering peaks convey a sense of moral
grandeur. Cole's pupil Frederick Church
adapted the Hudson River style to South
American, European, and Palestinian
landscapes.
Late Romanticism-
Towards the middle of the 19th
century, Romantic painting began to move
away from the intensity of the original
movement. Among the outstanding
achievements of late Romanticism are the
quiet, atmospheric landscapes of the
French Barbizon School, which included
Camille Corot and Théodore Rousseau. In
England, after 1850, the Pre-Raphaelites
revived the medievalizing mission of the
German Nazarenes.
Influence- The influence of Romanticism on
subsequent painting has been pervasive. A
line can be traced from Constable through
the Barbizon School to
Impressionism, but a more direct descendant
of Romanticism was the Symbolist Movement,
which in various ways intensified or refined
the Romantic Movement's characteristics of
subjectivity, imagination, and strange,
dream-like imagery. In the 20th century
Expressionism and Surrealism have carried these
tendencies still further. In a sense, however,
virtually all modern art can be said to derive
from Romanticism, for modern assumptions about
the primacy of artistic freedom, originality,
and self-expression in art were originally
conceived by the Romantics in opposition to
traditional classical principles of
art.
Extract from Microsoft
Encarta
|