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NeoClassicism

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Page 1: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

NeoClassicism

Page 2: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Background

• Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s• Dominant areas France and England• Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art• Scientific and archeological discoveries such as buried

Roman cities of Herculaneum (1738) and Pompeii (1748)

• Engravings and publications on the individual and chronological art periods in Greek and Roman history

• Renewed interest in Greek antiquity…not just Roman• German scholar Johann Joachim Winckelmann

prompted sculptors to embrace the idealized approach Greeks had to figure sculpture…create an archetype for figure sculpture

Page 3: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Characteristics

• Earlier works heavily influenced by Renaissance, Baroque and Rococo artworks but with a rational shift

• 1780’s saw a shift in style in France….revolution influenced style to similar of Roman themes of stoicism, nationalism and heroism

• Outline and linear design• Historical accuracy especially in architecture and

costume• Simplicity in form and setting

Page 4: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Jacques-louis David (1748 - 1825)

• Born in France

• Earliest training in a Rococo style under Boucher…short lived

• 1775-80 studied in Italy and adopted a more patriotic style

• Believed in the revolution and it almost had him executed…saved by wife

• Ended in Brussels

Page 6: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Marat Assassinated

1793

Page 7: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Angelica Kauffmann (1741 - 1807)

• Swiss born

• Prodigy in art and music at early age (11)

• Trained in Italy

• Supportive father

• Met Sir Joshua Reynolds and helped found the Royal Academy in 1769

• Moved to England and married fellow artist Antonio Zucchi

Page 8: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Virgil reading the ''Aeneid'' to Augustus and Octavia ,  

1788

Page 9: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Parting of

Abelard and

Heloise   Before

1780

Page 10: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Study for the portrait

of the Marchione

ss of Townshen

d and son

Page 11: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Jean-auguste-dominique Ingres (1780 - 1867)

• Born in France

• 1797 Father prompted him to go to Paris to study under David

• Won the prix de Rome in 1801

Page 12: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Characteristics

• Idealization of human forms

• Elongated backs

• Drawing techniques reflected in works

Page 16: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Antonio Canova

•  b. 1757 Possagno, Italy, d. 1822 Venice, Italy 

• Sculptor

• Worked predominantly in marble

• Created plaster models to scale prior to carving works

• Took several trips to Rome to study

• Became the most celebrated sculptor of NeoClassical period

Page 17: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Characteristics

• Earlier works had emotion from Baroque and appealed to wealthy patrons from Venice

• Grandeur• Physically idealized• Mythological themes• Portraits often blended mythology with reality• Created full scale plaster models of sculptures

prior to starting marble incarnations

Page 18: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Plaster model for Cupid and Psyche, 18th century (1794)

Plaster

Page 19: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific
Page 20: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Theseus and the

Minotaur1781-83Marble

Page 21: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Perseus with the Head of Medusa, 1804–6

Page 22: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Architecture

• Heavily influenced by archeological discoveries of ancient Greek/Roman structrues

• Classic Greek/Roman temple epitomy of pure architectural style sought after for neoclassicism

Page 23: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Characteristics• Clean, elegant lines• Uncluttered appearance• Long, flat rows of free standing columns for

structural support• Massive buildings• Flat, horizontal roofs• Lack of towers or domes• Symmetrical flat facades with lack of ornamentation• Geometrically patterned gardens

Page 24: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Notable architects

• Karl Friedrich Schinkel

• John Soane

• Charles Cameron

• Juan de Villanueva

Page 25: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Juan de VillanuevaPrado Museum 1785

Page 26: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Karl Friedrich SchinkelThe Altes Museum ("Old Museum") in Berlin

Page 27: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

John SoaneMoggerhangerhouse

Page 28: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Resources• http://www.all-art.org/history356.html• http://wwar.com/masters/movements/neoclassicism.html• http://www.jeanaugustedominiqueingres.org/• http://www.abcgallery.com/B/boucher/boucher51.html• http://s7d2.scene7.com/is/image/Fathead/3713118_ingres-apotheos

is-homer-18x24-smart_prod?layer=comp&wid=640&hei=640&fmt=jpeg&qlt=95,1&op_sharpen=1&resMode=bicub&op_usm=0.5,0.2,0,0&iccEmbed=0&bgc=0xdedede&bgColor=0xdedede

• http://www.artble.com/artists/jean_auguste_dominique_ingres• http://musee.louvre.fr/oal/psyche/psyche_acc_en.html• http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/canova_antonio.html• http://www.wga.hu/frames-e.html?/bio/c/canova/biograph.html• http://www.worldofleveldesign.com/categories/architecture/

neoclassical/neoclassical_architecture.php

Page 29: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Critique:19th century

http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://edgarlowen.com/a55/b7966.jpg&imgrefurl=http://edgarlowen.com/sculpture.shtml&usg=___0p4aLN1LnLAHiPzKEn9Ij0bFXs=&h=1272&w=706&sz=36&hl=en&start=4&zoom=1&tbnid=sq4ozMKCSNgROM:&tbnh=150&tbnw=83&ei=cDdOT5SCGYaztwf1m6WlCA&prev=/images%3Fq%3DNeoclassical%2Bsculpture%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DX%26rls%3Dcom.microsoft:*:IE-SearchBox%26rlz%3D1I7ADSA_enUS458%26tbm%3Disch&itbs=1

Page 30: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Comparative

Dominique Ingres “triumph of Homer” oil on canvas

Francois Boucher “Apollo revealing his divinity to the Shephardess”

Page 31: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Romanticism

Page 32: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Background

• 1760-1870 approx• Reaction against NeoClassicism style not the

appreciation of antiquities• Began in N Europe with a rejection of technical

restrictions calling for perfection• Influenced by literature of time• Explored the interdisciplinary nature of art: music,

dance, etc• Orientalism had huge influence upon works• Exploration of the individual, exotic, folk origins, ethnic

origins, and occult.• Break from strict guidelines of Neoclassicism

Page 33: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Characteristics

• Concerned with the personal, emotional and transcendental experience

• Nature’s beauty intrinsic to works• Senses over reason and emotion over reason• Imagination• Struggle between heavenly ideals and earthly

desires• Included the American Hudson River School of

landscape painters (1835-1870)

Page 34: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Eugene Delacroix

• 1798-1863• Born in France• Use of color and technique influenced

Impressionists and Post Impressionist artists• Historical themes as well as visit to Morocco

dominated works• Created more than 850 paintings• Technique often employed the application of

colors not blended, yet from a distance, a sense of whole color….kick start to Impressionist technique

Page 35: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

The Sultan of Morocco

and his Entourage

Page 36: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Andromeda c. 1852

Page 37: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Lion Hunt 1854

Page 38: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Francisco Goya y Lucientes • 1746-1828• Born in Spain• Young age trained with local artist• Went to Italy to finish studies• Came back, painted frescoes in a Rococo style for local church…

made him• Worked as “cartoon” painter for textile company…where his genre

of everyday life depictions started• Became portrait painter for aristocracy and eventually for

king….elected court painter• France came in….brutal conflict…depicted in a series of etchings

published posthumously “The Disasters of War”• French court painter• Pardoned when Spain regained control….but eventually lost favor

and voluntarily left spain for France

Page 39: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Characteristics of work

• Color technique that applied color in strokes next to each other instead of blended

• Keen observations of human nature

• A realistic approach to theme

Page 40: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

1783 portrait of

Count Floridabana

1st important commission

Page 41: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Los Caprichos

• 1797 works on 80 etchings under the guise of exploration into witchcraft practices in Spain

• It is believed that this is a veil for the true subject….inquisition practices by powerful and unchecked Church

Page 42: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Los Caprichos plate 77

• Text caption (below) from the "Prado" etching version:

• "The way of the world. The people laugh and play bullfightering with each other. He who yesterday played the bull plays today the toreador. Chance rules the game and assigns the parts according to her caprices."

Page 43: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

The sleep of reason produces monsters1797-98Etching

with

aquatint

Page 44: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Isabel de Porcel

1804-05

Page 45: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

TimeLes Vieillesc. 1810-12

Page 46: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Disasters of War

• http://www.napoleonguide.com/goyaind.htm

Page 47: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

The Shootings of May Third 18081814

Page 48: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Burial of the Sardinec. 1816

Page 49: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Resources

• http://www.arthistoryarchive.com/arthistory/romanticism/arthistory_romanticism.html

• http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/delacroix/lion-hunt.jpg

• http://www.eugenedelacroix.org/

• http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/goya/

• http://www.eeweems.com/goya/index.php

Page 50: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Critique

JMW Turner Slavers throwing overboard the Dead and Dying - Typhoon coming on ("The Slave Ship") 1840; Oil on canvas

Page 51: NeoClassicism. Background Mid 1700’s to mid 1800’s Dominant areas France and England Arose as a reaction against the excesses of Rococo art Scientific

Comparative Summary

• John Constable Salisbury Cathedral from the Bishop's Grounds c. 1825

Angelica Kauffman The Family of the Earl of Gower 1772