neoclassicism vs. romanticism goya, goethe, byron

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Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

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Page 1: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism

Goya, Goethe, Byron

Page 2: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

• The sleep of reason produces monsters

• The dream of reason produces monsters

Page 3: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Neoclassicism

• Symmetry• Proportion• Order• Clarity• Restraint

Page 4: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Neoclassicism

Page 5: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Neoclassicism

Landscape with Aeneas on Delos

Page 6: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Neoclassicism

• Decorum• Harmony• Restraint• Imitation of Greek and

Roman originals• Dominance of pre-

established rules

Jean-Louis David, Oath of the Horatians

Page 7: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Neoclassicism

• Purpose of art: to instruct by delighting

• Dominance of the moral over the aesthetic function of art.

Page 8: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Romanticism

J.M.W. Turner, Snow Storm - Steam-Boat off a Harbour's Mouth

Page 9: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Romanticism

Caspar Friedrich, Abbey in the Oak Wood

Page 10: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Romanticism

Page 11: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Romantic Garden

Page 12: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Romanticism

• Prevalence of the individual, subjective, personal, spontaneous

• Emphasis on the power of imagination, emotion, irrationality

• Search for the transcendental• Appreciation for the power/beauty of

untamed nature

Page 13: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Romanticism• Emotion over reason, senses over the intellect• Preoccupation with genius, the individual, the

exceptional• Artist as the supreme creator• Rejection of rules, importance of experimentation• Imagination as way to reach transcendental

experience/truth• Predilection for the exotic, mysterious, weird,

occult, monstrous, diseased, satanic• Search for national, autochthonous origins

(resurgence of medieval, revaluation of Shakespeare, Calderón, Lope de Vega)

Page 14: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Francisco de Goya y Lucientes 1746-1828

His life is described as having four stages:

• Until 1793 – slow rise to maturity

• 1793 – illness that left him deaf and released pent up creative forces within him

• 1808 – Napoleonic invasion and Goya’s responses to the war.

• 1819 – a second illness, he retires to the Quinta del Sordo, the Black Paintings

Page 15: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

First Stage: Tapestry Cartoons

• General impression?• Calm, peace, harmony• Lack of emotion• Beauty, grace• Balance

Page 16: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

1808 – 1814 Napoleon and the War of Independence

The 3rd of May, 1808

Page 17: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

The disasters of the war

Page 18: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron
Page 19: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

The Colossus – between 1808-1812

• Ambiguity of giant– Ignorant, arrogant prince?

(Ferdinand VII)• Mountains= the powerful• Donkey=nobility

– Hercules who rises up against Napoleon?

– Buried to above the knees– Back to spectator– Closed eyes

Page 20: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Black Paintings– 1820-1823

The witches’ Sabbath

Page 21: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Saturn eating his son

Page 23: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Prometheus

• Rebel god (Titan)• Stole fire from Zeus

and gave it to man• Chained to a rock• Eagle ate his liver

each day• 13 generations later,

Heracles killed the eagle

Page 24: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Prometheus, Gustave Moreau

Page 25: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Some Romantic works based on the Prometheus myth

• Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, “Prometheus” (1774)

• Ludwig van Beethoven, opus 43, Creatures of Prometheus (ballet), overture (1801)

• Lord Byron, “Prometheus” • Percy Shelley, Prometheus Unbound (1820)• Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Frankenstein

or the Modern Prometheus (1818, 1831)

Page 26: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Johan Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)

• Perhaps the most important German writer (poet, essayist, dramatist, novelist)

• Collected works form around 144 volumes

• Most influential works: The Sorrows of Young Werther (1774), Wilhem Meister (1821-1829), Faust (Part I, 1808, Part II 1832)

• A principal figure of the Sturm und Drang movement

Portrait by Eugene Delacroix

Page 27: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

George Gordon, Lord Byron (1788-1824)

• Perhaps the best known of the English Romantic poets

• Main works:– Childe Harold’s

Pilgrimage (1812-1818)

– Manfred. Dramatic Poem. (1817)

– Don Juan (1819-1824)

Page 28: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Byronic hero

• Exiled or solitary wanderer

• Moody, passionate• Superior intellect• Heightened sensitivity• Rejects traditional

values and moral codes

Page 29: Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism Goya, Goethe, Byron

Goethe and Byron’s “Prometheus”

• In groups of three discuss the following and choose an image that you feel is particularly powerful to exemplify each:

1. How the Gods (Zeus, in particular) are characterized.

2. How Prometheus is characterized.3. What stage of the Promethean myth is

presented.4. How the attitudes of the two poets differ.