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American Romanticism

American Romanticism. 1800-1860 A Movement Across the Arts. Definition. Romanticism refers to a movement in art, literature, and music during the 19 th century. Romanticism is characterized by the 5 “I”s Imagination Intuition Idealism Inspiration Individuality. Imagination.

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American Romanticism

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  1. American Romanticism 1800-1860 A Movement Across the Arts

  2. Definition • Romanticism refers to a movement in art, literature, and music during the 19th century. • Romanticism is characterized by the 5 “I”s • Imagination • Intuition • Idealism • Inspiration • Individuality

  3. Imagination • Imagination was emphasized over “reason.” • This was a backlash against the rationalism characterized by the Neoclassical period or “Age of Reason.” • Imagination was considered necessary for creating all art. • British writer Samuel Taylor Coleridge called it “intellectual intuition.”

  4. Intuition • Romantics placed value on “intuition,” or feeling and instincts, over reason. • Emotions were important in Romantic art. • British Romantic William Wordsworth described poetry as “the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings.”

  5. Idealism • Idealism is the concept that we can make the world a better place. • Idealism refers to any theory that emphasizes the spirit, the mind, or language over matter – thought has a crucial role in making the world the way it is. • Immanuel Kant, a German philosopher, held that the mind forces the world we perceive to take the shape of space-and-time.

  6. Inspiration • The Romantic artist, musician, or writer, is an “inspired creator” rather than a “technical master.” • What this means is “going with the moment” or being spontaneous, rather than “getting it precise.”

  7. Individuality • Romantics celebrated the individual. • During this time period, Women’s Rights and Abolitionism were taking root as major movements. • Walt Whitman, a later Romantic writer, would write a poem entitled “Song of Myself”: it begins, “I celebrate myself…”

  8. Origins • Romanticism began to take root as a movement following the French Revolution. • The publication of Lyrical Ballads by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge in 1792 is considered the beginning of literary Romanticism.

  9. The Arts • Romanticism was a movement across all the arts: visual art, music, and literature. • All of the arts embraced themes prevalent in the Middle Ages: chivalry, courtly love. Literature and art from this time depicted these themes. Music (ballets and operas) illustrated these themes. • Shakespeare came back into vogue.

  10. Neoclassical art was rigid, severe, and unemotional; it hearkened back to ancient Greece and Rome Romantic art was emotional, deeply-felt, individualistic, and exotic. It has been described as a reaction to Neoclassicism, or “anti-Classicism.” Visual Arts

  11. Visual Arts: Examples Neoclassical Art Romantic Art

  12. “Classical” musicians included composers like Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Franz Josef Haydn. Romantic musicians included composers like Frederic Chopin, Franz Lizst, PyotrIl’yich Tchaikovsky Music

  13. 1730-1820. Classical music emphasized internal order and balance. 1800-1910. Romantic music emphasized expression of feelings. Music: Components

  14. Literature • In America, Romanticism most strongly impacted literature. • Writers explored supernatural and gothic themes. • Writers wrote about nature – Transcendentalists believed God was in nature, unlike “Age of Reason” writers like Franklin and Jefferson, who saw God as a “divine watchmaker,” who created the universe and left it to run itself.

  15. Historical Context

  16. American Romantic Movement • Reaction to Classicism—Age of Reason • Age of Reason • Rational thought • Social concerns • Reason & facts • Romanticism • Emotional thought • Personal concerns/experiences • Examination of inner feelings • Imagination & intuition Vernal Falls, Albert Bierstadt

  17. American Romantic Movement • Romantics held a keen awareness of the past • Major themes: • Natural man • Lost innocence • Nature vs. civilization Street Scene in New York, Winter, 1855 H.V.V. Sebron

  18. Folklore • Folktales, Myths, Legends • Oral tradition • Exists in variation • Often anonymous • Told by the common people of a particular culture • Often teach a lesson or moral truth about life • “The Devil and Tom Walker” by Irving 1824 • The Tragedy of Dr. Faustus by Marlowe 1564-93 • Faust by Göethe 1749-1832 The Headless Horseman Pursuing Ichabod Crane, Smithsonian American Art Museum, John Quidor

  19. Detailed Characteristics • Values feeling and intuition over reason • Places faith in inner experience and the power of the imagination • Shuns the artificiality of civilization and seeks unspoiled nature • Prefers youthful innocence to educated sophistication • Champions individual freedom and the worth of the individual

  20. Detailed Characteristics • Contemplates nature’s beauty as a path to spiritual and moral development • Looks backward to the wisdom of the past and distrusts progress • Finds beauty and truth in exotic locales, the supernatural realm, and the inner world of the imagination • Sees poetry as the highest expression of the imagination • Finds inspiration in myth, legend, and folk culture

  21. 6 Characteristics • Profound love of nature Sunset over Lake George, by John Frederick Kensett

  22. 6 Characteristics • Focus on the self and the individual Thomas Cole, 1842, The Voyage of LifeChildhood

  23. 6 Characteristics • Fascination with the supernatural, the mysterious, and the gothic • Dark, irrational side of the imagination Thomas Cole, 1842, The Voyage of LifeManhood

  24. 6 Characteristics • Yearning for the picturesque and the exotic Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, 1872 Thomas Moran

  25. 6 Characteristics • A deep-rooted idealism • Idealism is the belief that true reality is spiritual rather than physical Thomas Cole, 1842, The Voyage of LifeYouth

  26. 6 Characteristics • Passionate love of country or nationalism Emigrants Crossing the Plains 1867 by Albert Bierstadt

  27. American Romantic Hero • Is young, or possesses youthful qualities • Is innocent and pure of purpose • Has a sense of honor based not on society’s rules but on some higher principle • Has a knowledge of people and of life based on deep, intuitive understanding, not on formal learning • Loves nature and avoids town life • Quests for some higher truth in the natural world

  28. The “Fireside Poets” • Because poems were read aloud at the fireside for family entertainment • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow • James Greenleaf Whittier • Oliver Wendell Holmes • James Russell Lowell • William Cullen Bryant • Subject matter: • Love, patriotism, nature, family, God, and religion • Comforting rather than challenging

  29. Thomas Cole, 1842, The Voyage of Life, Old Age

  30. Frederic Edwin Church, 1860, Twilight in the Wilderness, Cleveland Museum of Art

  31. Albert Bierstadt, 1863, The Rocky Mountains: Lander's Peak

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