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The Nineteenth Century:

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Presentation on theme: "The Nineteenth Century:"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Nineteenth Century:
The Birth of the “isms”

2 Neoclassicism: Roman Fever

3 Neoclassicm This period reflects a return to an interest in Roman and Greek art as a reaction against the ornate Rococo art. Important subjects included Greek and Roman history and mythology. The tone of paintings was calm, serious and rational. The art was meant to be inspirational and morally uplifting.

4 Jacques-Louis David Oath of the Horatii (1784).

5 Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres
Pauline Eleanore de Galard de Brassac de Bearn, Princesse de Broglie 1853

6 Ingres Napoleon on his Imperial Throne 1806

7 Benjamin West The Death of General Wolfe (1770)

8 John Singleton Copley Paul Revere, 1768 (oil on canvas, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)

9 Gilbert Stuart George Washington, 1796

10 Francisco de Goya (No “ism”
The Third of May, 1808

11 Romanticism The Power of Passion

12 Theodore Géricault The Raft of the Medusa,

13 Géricault La Monomane de l'envie, 1819-1820
Wounded Cuirassier leaving the battle), 1814

14 Eugène Delacroix Orphan girl at the Cemetery, 1824

15 Eugène Delacroix Hamlet and Horatio in the Graveyard, 1835

16 John Constable Parham Mill at Gillingham 1826

17 John Constable The White Horse, 1819

18 Constable Deutsch: Wolken-Studie, 1822

19 J. M. W. Turner The Fighting Téméraire tugged to her last Berth to be broken, 1838, Watercolour

20 J. M. W. Turner Flint Castle, 1838

21 Thomas Cole: Hudson River School
The Course of the Empire: The Savage State, 1836

22 Cole The Voyage of Life: Old Age 1842

23 George Caleb Bingham Raftsmen Playing Cards, 1847

24 George Caleb Bingham Fur Traders Descending the Missouri, 1845

25 Realism

26 Honore Daumier In the Theatre, c

27 Honore Daumier The Third-Class Carriage, 1862

28 Rosa Bonheur 'Le Retour du Moulin', before 1878

29 Gustave Courbet "Les Cribleuses de blé", 1854

30 Industrial Age Architecture
The Industrial Revolution, which began in England about 1760, brought architects and engineers new materials with which to build - cast iron, steel and glass. Initially, architects disguised the raw materials in neoclassical (Roman and Greek) style elements however bridges, factories and other basic buildings were more basic and didn't disguise the materials used. Soon architects and engineers realized that this style was cheaper and more efficient to use and the style became widespread.

31 Joseph Paxton, The Crystal Palace, 1850-51, London)

32 Gustave Eiffel, Eiffel Tower, 1889, Paris

33 Art Nouveau Between 1890 and World War 1, artists and architects brought in an ornamental style to counteract the functional and sterile work of the Industrial Age. Flowering forms, curvy lines and tendril like curves and water lily shapes appeared in wrought-iron work, jewelry, glass and even print.

34 Aubrey Beardsley, The Peacock Skirt, 1892

35 Louis Comfort Tiffany, Lampshade c. 1900

36 Early Photography A new form of art, photography, was developed due to new discoveries in chemistry in optics. The first surviving photo was taken in 1826 by Nicephore Niepce, a French chemist. He required 8 hours for a hazy image to be captured. Daguerre invented a more efficient process that only required minutes. Other processes were invented that would speed up the exposure time and provide a more precise image until the instant photograph replaced the daguerreotype in 1858.

37 Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre, Boulevard du Temple, late 1838 or early 1839, Paris,

38 Jacob Riis, Bandit's Roost, 1888

39 Paul Nadar (Gaspard-Felix Tournachon), Sarah Bernhardt, 1859, Paris

40 Impressionism A totally new style of art was born in France in the early 1860's. It rejected Renaissance composition, perspective, idealized or realistic depictions and the use of light and shadow to depict depth (chiaroscuro). The Impressionist artists were more concerned with capturing the initial glimpse of a scene, the changing effect of light, reflection and weather on colour.

41 Édouard MANET Manet prefered to paint contemporary scenes and updated versions of old masters. He painted simplified forms of flat colour patches with hard edges often outlined in black, with dark partches of colour against light. His early work is somber while later work is more colourful.

42 The Railway

43 A Bar at the Folies-Bergeres 1881-82

44 Claude MONET Monet painted landscapes, water scenes, haystacks and buildings (and some figures). His later work included water lilies that were very near to being abstract. He prefered to paint with bright hues, using primary colours dabbed side by side. He created shadows using complementary colours. Subjects had soft edges and glowed with light.

45 Coquelicots (Poppies, Near Argenteuil) 1873

46 Water Lillies, 1906

47 Meule, Effet de Neige, le Matin (Morning Snow Effect), 1891

48 Pierre-Auguste RENOIR
Renoir painted café society, children, flowers and women. He avoided black and used blue for darker areas, rich reds and primary colours as his main colours. His first works were blurred figures executed with quick brushstrokes, blended in hazy backgrounds. His later works here more classical and solidly formed females.

49 Le Moulin de la Galette 1876

50 Dance in the Country 1883

51 The Luncheon of the Boating Party - 1881

52 Edgar DEGAS Degas specialized in portraits of people in action poses, for example ballerinias, horse races, café society, circus performers and workers. He used strong coloured pastels that gave vibrancy to his images. In later years he like to portray women with stronger coloured pastels. His work often is drawn with asymmetrical balance, figures cropped at the edges or using odd angles.

53 The Dance Class, 1874

54 L'absinthe

55 Dance Class at the Opera 1872

56 Post-Impressionists Post-Impressionism was driven by French artists Seurat, Gauguin, Cézanne and Toulouse-Lautrec. Vincent van Gogh was a Dutchman who did his major work in France. They built on the style of the now accepted Impressionist, especially the use of bright colour and light, however they wanted to capture more than a moment in time, an impression.

57 Georges SEURAT

58 Henri de TOULOUSE-LAUTREC

59 Paul CÉZANNE

60 Paul GAUGUIN

61 Vincent VAN GOGH

62 Early Expressionism – Edvard Munch

63 Symbolism – Henri Rousseau

64 Odilon Redon


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