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The British culture of 19th century

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The British culture of 19th century

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  1. The British culture of 19th century Romanticismand Victorian period Made by Rogacheva Marina

  2. The British culture of 19th century is characterized by two movements: the Romantic movement at the beginning of the century and the Victorian movement during reign of Queen Victoria (1837-1901).

  3. Painting Painting was influenced by the new mood of change. Mainly urban middle class had bought paintings and paid artists and, to please them, artists painted different subjects, such as sentimental scenes of the countryside and paintings, which told a moral story.

  4. James Ward (1769 – 1859) • painted horses within landscapes, very large-scale landscapes • earned money by painting wealthy gentry, their favorite horses, their favorite hunting dogs or their children • the Levett family

  5. The best-known works • Theophilus Levett hunting at Wychnor • The Reverend Thomas Levett and his favourite dogs, cock-shooting • Group Portrait of John, Theophilus and Frances Levett, full-length, the younger two seated on a donkey, in a wooded landscape

  6. John Linnell (1792 – 1882) • firstly painted miniature portraits • is mainly known in connection with paintings of pure landscapes • some scene of typical uneventful English landscape • works are full of true poetic feeling and are rich and glowing in color.

  7. The best-known works • John Varley • Princess Sophia • TheLastLoad • The Harvest Cradle: Noontide • Sunbehindclouds

  8. Samuel Palmer (1805 – 1881) • a key figure in Romanticism in Britain • produced visionary pastoral paintings • his greatest works thought to be produced in 1820-1840 years, when he was influenced by William Blake

  9. The best-known works • Landscape, Twilight • The golden valley • Evening

  10. The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828 – 1882) William Holman Hunt (1827 – 1910) John Everett Millais (1829 – 1896)

  11. Pre-Raphaelite`s works • A Summer Landscape (Hunt) • May Morning on Magdalen Tower (Hunt) • Isabella (Millais) • La Ghirlandata (Rossetti) • The Beloved (Rossetti)

  12. Literature

  13. William Blake (1757-1827) • One of the first Romantic poets • most famous book of poems «Songs of Innocence» • «Songs of Experience» • his work is religious or mystical in expression and romantic in spirit. It is full of movement, flickering or glaring light, medieval symbols, and mannerist musculature and arrangement

  14. The Lake Poets William Wordsworth (1770-1850) Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834) Robert Southey (1774-1843)

  15. George Gordon Byron (1788-1824) • the perfect image of the romantic poet-hero. • «Childe Harold's Pilgrimage» in 1812 • narrative poem «Don Juan»

  16. Walter Scott (1771 – 1832) • one of the most popular novelist of the period • master of grand historical romances • first historical novel was «Waverley» • formed the modern stereotype of Scottish culture • contributed to the image of a Scottish patriot

  17. Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792 – 1822) John Keats (1795 – 1821)

  18. Charles Dickens (1812 – 1870) • the greatest novelist of the Victorian period • the creator of some of the world's most memorable fictional characters

  19. Thomas Hardy (1840 – 1928) • an English novelist and poet, • was highly critical of much in Victorian society • focused more on a declining rural society. • «Far from the Madding Crowd» • «The Mayor of Casterbridge», • «Jude the Obscure»

  20. William Thackeray (1811 – 1863) • an English novelist • famous for his satiricalworks • «Vanity Fair»

  21. The Brontës • Anne (The Tenant of Wildfell Hall) • Emily (Wuthering Heights) • Charlotte (Jane Eyre)

  22. Music 19th century was the period when classical music began to be recognized as an important element of culture. In 1813 the London Philharmonic Society was established. In 1822 of the Royal Academy of Music was created. A royal charter was established in 1830, which attempted to train British musicians to the same standards as those of the continent.

  23. William Sterndale Bennett (1816 – 1875) • an English composer, pianist, conductor and music educator • piano music • orchestral music • vocal music

  24. John Field (1782 – 1837) • the greatest Irish musical figure of the Romantic period • developed a highly influential keyboard style • wrote music that calls for characteristically expressive and sensitive performance rather than virtuosic bravura • is best-known primarily for his nocturnes

  25. Charles Parry (1848 – 1918) • an English composer, teacher and historian of music • the choral song "Jerusalem" • the coronation anthem "I was glad" • hymn tune "Repton"

  26. With the Industrial Revolution the themes of the music of the laboring classes began to change from rural and agrarian life to include industrial work songs. Awareness that older kinds of song were being abandoned interest in collecting folk songs during the 1830s and 1840s was renewed. There were works of William B. Sandys' «Christmas Carols Ancient and Modern», William Chappell «A Collection of National English Airs» and Robert Bell's «Ancient Poems, Ballads and Songs of the Peasantry of England».

  27. Architecture In the 19th century it was a fragmentation of English architecture. Classical forms were used widely, but were challenged by a series of distinctively English revivals of other styles, drawing chiefly on Gothic, Renaissance, vernacular traditions and other elements.

  28. The Houses of Parliament Charles Barry

  29. Red House at Bexleyheath Philip Webb

  30. Castell Coch William Burges

  31. Glasgow School of Art Charles Rennie Mackintosh

  32. The Royal Albert Hall Francis Fowke

  33. The Crystal Palace Joseph Paxton

  34. Changes in thinking The most important idea of the nineteenth century was that everyone had the right to personal freedom, which was the basis of capitalism. Many of the first socialists in Britain were writers or artists. Some of these belonged to the "Arts and Crafts Movement", whose members turned away from the new middle-class values, and looked to pre-industrial handcraft and to nature for inspiration.

  35. Above all, Victorian society was self-confident. This had been shown in the Great Exhibition in 185I. British self-confidence was built not only upon power but also upon the rapid scientific advances being made at the time.

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