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I know that its was one of the major art movements.....I have this project on romanticism and Casper David Friedrich...he was one of the famous artists during that time period....anything would help!

2007-02-23 06:33:43 · 3 answers · asked by blondefolie 1 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Painting

3 answers

Here's a few sites that might be of some help for your project. I'm sure you could find some good stuff to on a Wikipedia search as well.
It's not much but I hope it helps you some.
Good luck.

2007-02-23 16:42:07 · answer #1 · answered by adamizer 2 · 1 0

Beginning with the late -18th to the mid -19th century, new Romantic attitude begun to characterize culture and many art works in Western civilization. It started as an artistic and intellectual movement that emphasized a revulsion against established values (social order and religion). Romanticism exalted individualism, subjectivism, irrationalism, imagination, emotions and nature - emotion over reason and senses over intellect. Since they were in revolt against the orders, they favored the revival of potentially unlimited number of styles (anything that aroused them).
Romantic artists were fascinated by the nature, the genius, their passions and inner struggles, their moods, mental potentials, the heroes. They investigated human nature and personality, the folk culture, the national and ethnic origins, the medieval era, the exotic, the remote, the mysterious, the occult, the diseased, and even satanic. Romantic artist had a role of an ultimate egoistic creator, with the spirit above strict formal rules and traditional procedures. He had imagination as a gateway to transcendent experience and spiritual truth.
The German poets and critics August Wilhelm and Friedrich Schlegel first used the term 'Romanticism' to label a wider cultural movement. For the Schlegel brothers, it was a product of Christianity. The culture of the Middle Ages created a Romantic sensibility which differed from the Classical. Christian culture dealt with a struggle between the heavenly perfection and the human experience of inadequacy and guilt. This sense of struggle, and ever-present dark forces was allegedly present in Medieval culture.
While this view partly explains Romantic fascination with the Middle Ages, the actual causes of the Romantic movement itself correspond to the sense of rapid, dynamic social change that culminated in the French Revolution and the Napoleonic era.

2007-02-23 14:55:53 · answer #2 · answered by the_lipsiot 7 · 0 0

Romanticism is best described as a cultural movement and not an art movement. One can find romanticism in art, more so in different periods of arts' history than others. Romanticism is more of a theme, empressionism, realism, cubism, etc. are art movements that changed not just what we see but how we see things and express them in art. I am an artist and niether myself or my art friends have ever heard of romanticsm described as an art movement in itself.

2007-02-24 10:10:42 · answer #3 · answered by GUERRO 5 · 0 0

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