18 th century high culture

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18 th Century High Culture

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18 th Century High Culture. Travel. Elites began to travel for pleasure in greater numbers than ever before. The “grand tour” of Europe became a must for the cultured. People wished to see the ruins of antiquity and the new urban centers throughout Europe. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: 18 th  Century High Culture

18th Century High Culture

Page 2: 18 th  Century High Culture

Travel Elites began to travel for pleasure in greater

numbers than ever before. The “grand tour” of Europe became a must

for the cultured. People wished to see the ruins of antiquity

and the new urban centers throughout Europe.

Coffee houses offered a meeting place for people to discuss philosophy and the issues of the day.

Page 3: 18 th  Century High Culture

The Salons Groups organized by

women, such as Madame de Pompadour, of wealthy families.

Gave a forum to which philosophes could share their ideas.

Allowed women a place were they could be taken seriously.

Often, the etiquette of the gatherings made things ‘artificial.’

Page 4: 18 th  Century High Culture

Publishing and Reading Publishing and bookselling became a major

commercial enterprise in the 18th century. Newspapers and journals became a part of

the daily life of most urban Europeans. Newspapers began to write more about

political issues, particularly in England and during the Revolution in France.

There was also a large market for “bad books” describing scandals and sex.

Page 5: 18 th  Century High Culture

The Arts:Neoclassicism to Romanticism Literature

– The Novel• Novel had its origins in mid 18th century

England with the rising demand for fiction from the middle class.

• Pioneers included Samuel Richardson and Henry Fielding.

• A wide range of topics were covered in novels; they shadowed the plays of the time in dealing with family and social issues of the day

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The Arts:Neoclassicism to Romanticism Poetry

– For 140 years from 1660 to 1800 neoclassical poetry reigned England.

– Also known as Augustan poetry, neoclassical used strictly, structurally balanced verses, witty and elegant language with restrained and controlled emotion, the idea being to create a more refined verse.

– Amongst the most famous neoclassical poets were John Dryden and Alexander Pope.

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The Arts:Neoclassicism to Romanticism

Poetry– However, in 1798 poets William Wordsworth and Samuel

Taylor Coleridge published an anthology Lyrical Ballads, opening the Romantic period of poetry.

– Romantic poetry was the complete opposite of Neoclassical. Wordsworth accurately described romantic poetry as the "spontaneous overflow of feelings". Romantic poetry used simple language to create the impression that the poet were speaking out loud and usually spoke about common, everyday aspects of life and nature.

– Later famous romantic poets of the time were William Blake, Lord Byron, John Keats and Percy Bysshe Shelley.

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The Arts:Neoclassicism to Romanticism

Poetry– Johann von Goethe (1749-1832)

• Prolific German writer and poet who’s work encompassed Neoclassical and Romantic elements.

• He inspired the literary movement known as Sturm und Drang (Storm and Stress), emphasizing strong emotion experience.

• His great works include The Sorrows of Young Werther (1774) and Faust (1801 and 1831)

Page 9: 18 th  Century High Culture

The Arts:Neoclassicism to Romanticism Music

– Symphony– Began moving from “light” neoclassical

works to more powerful and extended works.• Franz Joseph Hayden• Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

– Powerful extended symphonies that reflected the emotion of the Romantic movement.

• Ludwig von Beethoven

Page 10: 18 th  Century High Culture

The Arts:Neoclassicism to Romanticism Visual Arts

– Neoclassical Art is a severe and unemotional form of art harkening back to the grandeur of ancient Greece and Rome. Its rigidity was a reaction to the overdone Rococo style and the emotional charged Baroque style. The rise of Neoclassical Art was part of a general revival of interest in classical thought, which was of major importance in the Enlightenment and the American and French revolutions.

Page 11: 18 th  Century High Culture

Jacques-Louis David (1748–1825) The most famous painter in

Europe in the late 1700s and early 1800s. He breathed new life into history painting with his rigorously constructed compositions

David could be petty, graceless, and abrasive. Intensely competitive, he was confident and even boastful of his talent.

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Jacques-Louis David - The Lictors Bring to Brutus the Bodies of His Sons  

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Jacques-Louis David – Oath of the Horatii

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Benjamin West, The Death of General Wolfe (1770)

Page 15: 18 th  Century High Culture

Benjamin West, Penn's Treaty with the Indians (1771)

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The Arts:Neoclassicism to Romanticism Romanticism might best be described as

anticlassicism. A reaction against Neoclassicism, it is a deeply-felt style which is individualistic, exotic, beautiful and emotionally wrought.

Although Romanticism and Neoclassicism were philosophically opposed, they were the dominant European styles for generations, and many artists were affected to a lesser or greater degree by both. Artists might work in both styles at different times or even combine elements, creating an intellectually Romantic work using a Neoclassical visual style, for example.

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Jacques-Louis David – Bonaparte Crossing the Alps

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J.M.W. Turner - Snowstorm: Hannibal and His Army Crossing the Alps