Title: Romanticism
 1ROMANTICISM
The Artistic Expression of Liberalism 
 2The Spirit of the Age (1790-1850)
- A sense of a shared vision among the Romantics. 
- Early support of the French Revolution. 
- Rise of the individual 
- Dehumanization due to industrialization. 
- Radical poetics / politics -- an obsessionwith 
 violent change.
31. Emotions! Passion! Irrationality! 
 4A Growing Distrust of Reason
Early19c
Enlightenment
Romanticism
Society is good, curbing violent impulses!
Civilization corrupts!
- The essence of human experience is subjective and 
 emotional.
- Human knowledge is puny compared to other great 
 historical forces.
- Individual rights are dangerous efforts at 
 selfishness -- the community is more important.
5The Romantic Movement
- Began in the 1790s and peaked in the 1820s 
- Mostly in Northern Europe, especially in Britain 
 and Germany, then followed to America
- A reaction against classicism/rationalism. 
- The Romantic Hero 
- Greatest example was Lord Byron 
- Tremendously popular among the European reading 
 public
- Youth imitated his haughtiness and 
 rebelliousness
6Characteristics of Romanticism
- The Engaged  Enraged Artist 
- The artist apart (not a part of) from society 
- The artist as social critic/revolutionary 
- The artist as genius
7Wandering Above the Sea of FogCaspar David 
Friedrich,1818 
 8Lady Macbeth Henry Fuseli, 1794 
 92. The "Rugged" Individual 
 10Characteristics of Romanticism
- The Individual/ The Dreamer 
- Individuals have unique, endless potential 
- Self-realization comes through art 
- Artists are the true philosophers
11The Dreamer Gaspar David Friedrich, 1835 
 12Solitary Tree Caspar David Friedrich, 1823 
 133. The Power and Fury of Nature 
 14Characteristics of Romanticism
- Glorification of Nature 
- Peaceful, restorative qualities an escape from 
 industrialization and the dehumanization it
 creates
- Awesome, powerful, horrifying aspects of nature 
- Indifferent to the fate of humans 
- Overwhelming power of nature
15An Avalanche in the AlpsPhilip James de 
Loutherbourg, 1803 
 16Sunset After a Storm On the Coast of Sicily  
Andreas Achenbach, 1853 
 17The DelugeFrancis Danby, 1840 
 18Tree of CrowsCaspar David Friedrich, 1822 
 19The Wreck of the Hope (a.k.a. The Sea of 
Ice)Caspar David Friedrich, 1821 
 20Shipwreck  Joseph Turner, 1805 
 21The Raft of the MedusaThéodore Géricault, 1819 
 22The Eruption of Vesuvius - John Martin 
 234. Science Can Be Dangerous! 
 24Isaac Newton  William Blake, 1795 
 25Dr. Frankensteins Adam  Eve?? 
 265. The "New" Technology Is Dehumanizing 
 27Rain, Steam, and SpeedJoseph Mallord William 
Turner, 1844 
 28Rain, Steam,  Speed(details) 
 29The Slave ShipJoseph Mallord William Turner, 1842 
 30The Slave Ship(details) 
 316. Romanticizing Country Life 
 32Flatford Mill John Constable, 1817 
 33The Corn FieldJohn Constable,1826 
 34The Hay Wain - John Constable, 1821 
 357. The Gothic "Romanticizing" the Middle Ages 
 36Characteristics of Romanticism
- Revival of Past Styles 
- Gothic  Romanesque revival. 
- Neo-Gothic architectural style. 
- Medieval ruins were a favorite theme for art and 
 poetry.
37Salisbury Cathedral from the Bishops GroundJohn 
Constable, 1825 
 38Salisbury Cathedral from the MeadowsJohn 
Constable, 1831 
 39Hadleigh Castle - John Constable, 1829 
 40Eldena RuinGaspar David Friedrich, 1825 
 41Winter Landscape with ChurchGaspar David 
Friedrich, 1811 
 42British Houses of Parliament1840-1865 
 438. The Exotic, the Occult, and the Macabre! 
 44Characteristics of Romanticism
- The Supernatural 
- Ghosts, fairies, witches, demons 
- The shadows of the minddreams  madness 
- The romantics rejected materialism in pursuit of 
 spiritual self-awareness
- They yearned for the unknown and the unknowable
45Cloister Cemetery in the SnowCaspar David 
Friedrich, 1817-1819 
 46Abbey in an Oak ForestCaspar David Friedrich, 
1809-1810 
 47Mad Woman With a Mania of Envy TheodoreGericaul
t, 1822-1823 
 48Pity - William Blake, 1795 
 49The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed with 
the SunWilliam Blake, 1808-1810 
 50Stonehenge - John Constable, 1836 
 51Nightmare (The Incubus)Henry Fuseli, 1781 
 52Manfred and the Witch of the AlpsJohn Martin - 
1837 
 53Witches SabbathFrancisco Goya,1798 
 54Procession of Flagellants on Good 
FridayFrancisco Goya, 1793 
 55Saturn DevoursHis SonFrancisco Goya,1819-1823 
 569. Nationalism 
 57Greece on the Ruins of MissolonghiEugène 
Delacroix, 1827 
 58Liberty Leading the People Eugène Delacroix, 1830 
 59Detail of theMusket BearerDelacoix, himself 
 60The Rise of the Cartheginian EmpireJoseph 
Turner, 1815 
 61His Majestys Ship, Victory(Trafalgar) - John 
Constable, 1806 
 62An Officer of the Imperial Horse GuardThéodore 
Géricault, 1814 
 63Napoleonat theSt. BernardPass Jacques-Louis 
David,1803 
 64The Shooting of May 3, 1808Francisco Goya, 1815 
 65Pandemonium - John Martin, 1841 
 6610. Interest in Exotic Foreign Lands 
 67Characteristics of Romanticism
- Exoticism 
- The sexy other 
- A sense of escape from reality 
- A psychological/moral justification of 
 imperialism?
68Grand Canal, VeniceJoseph Mallord William 
Turner, 1835 
 69Massacre of Chios Eugène Delacroix, 1824 
 70The Fanatics of TangiersEugène Delacroix, 
1837-1838 
 71The Sultan of Morocco and His EntourageEugène 
Delacroix, 1845 
 72Women of Algiers in Their ApartmentEugène 
Delacroix, 1834 
 73The Bullfight - Francisco Goya 
 74Charge of the Mamelukes, May 2nd, 1808Francisco 
Goya, 1814 
 75The Royal Pavillion at BrightonJohn Nash, 
1815-1823 
 7611. Return to Christian Mysteries 
 77God as the Architect William Blake, 1794 
 78Elohim Creating AbrahamWilliam Blake, 1805 
 79Body of Abel Found by Adam and EveWilliam Blake, 
1825 
 80Faust and MephistophelesEugène Delacroix, 
1826-1827 
 81The Seventh Plague of EgyptJohn Martin, 1823 
 82The CathedralGaspar DavidFriedrich,1818 
 83The Cathedral(details)Gaspar 
DavidFriedrich,1818 
 84The Great Age of the Novel
-  Gothic Novel Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte 
 (1847) Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte
 (1847)
-  Historical Novel Ivanhoe - Sir Walter Scott 
 (1819) Les Miserables - Victor Hugo (1862)
 The Three Musketeers  Alexander Dumas
 (1844)
85The Great Age of the Novel
- Science Fiction Novel Frankenstein - Mary 
 Shelley (1817) Dracula  Bramm Stoker (1897)
- Novel of Purpose Hugh Trevar - Thomas Holcroft 
 (1794)
86(No Transcript) 
 87Other Romantic Writers
 Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm  - Grimms Fairy 
Tales (1814-1816)
 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe - Faust 
(1806-1832) 
 88British Romantic Poets
- Percy Bysshe Shelley 
- Lord Byron (George Gordon) 
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge 
- William Wordsworth 
- John Keats 
- William Blake
89George Gordon(Lord Byrons)Poem ThePrisonerof
 Chillon 
 90MaryShelley Frankenstein 
 91SirWalterScott Ivanhoe 
 92WilliamWordsworthspoem,TinternAbbey 
 93Samuel TaylorColeridgesPoem,The Rimeof 
theAncientMariner 
 94American Romantic Writers 
-  Solidified as a nation during the period 
-  Intellectual revolution second in importance 
 only to the political revolution that brought
 nation into being
- Placed central importance upon the emotions and 
 upon the individual
95Emily Dickinsons Poetry 
 96Edgar Allan Poe  
 97Nathaniel Hawthornes novel, The Scarlet Letter  
 98Herman Melvillesnovel,Moby Dick
Captain Ahab
Herman Melville 
 99Ralph Waldo Emersons Nature  
 100Henry David Thoreaus Walden 
 101Walt Whitmans Leaves of Grass 
 102And finally . . .
- There is a serene and settled majesty to 
 woodland scenery that enters into the soul and
 delights and elevates it, and fills it with noble
 inclinations.
-  -- 
 Washington Irving