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Day 81 Revolution in the arts

Day 81 Revolution in the arts. Warm Up: What is the purpose of creating Art? The English Romantic John Keats believed that beauty is truth and Truth is beauty. What do you think he meant? What is the truth in beauty if any?. Instructions.

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Day 81 Revolution in the arts

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  1. Day 81 Revolution in the arts • Warm Up: What is the purpose of creating Art? • The English Romantic John Keats believed that beauty is truth and Truth is beauty. What do you think he meant? What is the truth in beauty if any?

  2. Instructions Step 1: Listen to and take notes on description of each style of art. Step 2: In pairs quickly discuss and decide what style of art you are looking at your team will score one point for each selected correctly.

  3. Neo-Classical • Art of the Enlightenment • Focused on Reason and human potential • Neo (new) Classical (Greco-Roman) • Music Classical focused on technique • Literature- humanistic

  4. Romanticism • Inner Feelings, emotion and imagination • Mysterious, supernatural, exotic, grotesque, horrifying • Untamed nature • Past of simpler and nobler time • Glorified heroes and actions • Folk traditions music and stories • Valued Common people and individual • Promoted radical and revolutionary change

  5. Romantic Literature • Authors: Wordsworth, Lord Byron, Shelly, Keates,Victor Hugo • Poetry, Gothic Novel, Grimm's Fairy Tails , Historical Novels

  6. Romantic Music • Composers: Beethoven, Lizt, Schumann, Brahms Mendelssohn, Chopin, Verdi, Wagner • Romantic ideals • Reaction against the tightly controlled classical music of enlightenment • Example: Braham’s Hungarian Dance 14

  7. Architecture • Neo-Gothic • Revival of Medieval Era • Castle, Cathedral, intricate detail • Focus on form over function

  8. Realism • Tried to show life how it was not how it should be • Show workers suffering • Photography capture the moment

  9. Realism Literature • Authors: Charles Dickens Honore de Balzac and Emile Zola • Focused on the difficulties of every day life

  10. Example Realism in music- Opera Carmen The story is set in Seville Spain, circa 1830, and concerns the eponymous Carmen, a beautiful Gypsy with a fiery temper. Free with her love, she woos the corporal Don José, an inexperienced soldier. Their relationship leads to his rejection of his former love, mutiny against his superior, turn to a criminal life, and ultimately, out of jealousy, murder of Carmen. Although he is briefly happy with Carmen, he falls into madness when she turns from him to the bullfighter Escamillo.

  11. Impressionist • Painters: Monet, Degas, Renoir • Catching of a fleeting moment with pure and shimmering colors- Reject studios • Literature: Symbolist- The world is only a collection of symbols that reflected the human mind. • Composers: Ravel and Debussey • Music: Not focused on one pitch or key. Experimental sound and complex chords.

  12. Excerpt- Braham Stokers - Dracula I thought at the time that I must be dreaming when I saw them, for, though the moonlight was behind them, they threw no shadow on the floor. They came close to me and looked at me for some time and they whispered together. Two were dark, and had high aquiline noses, like the Count’s, and great dark, piercing eyes, that seemed to be almost red when contrasted with the pale yellow moon. The other was fair as fair as can be, with great, wavy masses of golden hair and eyes like pale sapphire. I seemed somehow to know her face, and to know it in connection with some dreamy fear, but I could not recollect at the moment how or where. All three had brilliant white teeth, that shone like pearls against the ruby of their voluptuous lips. There was something about them that made me uneasy, some longing and at the same time some deadly fear. I felt in my heart a wicked, burning desire that they could kiss me with those red lips. It is not good to note this down, lest some day it should meet Mina’s eyes and cause her pain; but it is the truth. They whispered together, and they all three laughed-such a silvery, musical laugh, but as hard as though the sound never could have come through the softness of human lips. It was like the intolerable, tingling sweetness of water-glasses when played on by a cunning hand. The fair girl shook her head coquettishly, and the other two urged her on.

  13. Beauty – Charles Baudelairs Flowers of Evil I'm fair, O mortals, as a dream of stone; My breasts whereon, in turn, your wrecks you shatter,Were made to wake in poets' hearts alone A love as indestructible as matter. A sky-throned sphinx, unknown yet, I combine The cygnet's whiteness with a heart of snow. I loathe all movement that displaces line, And neither tears nor laughter do I know. Poets before my postures, which I seem To learn from masterpieces, love to dream And there in austere thought consume their days. I have, these docile lovers to subject, Mirrors that glorify all they reflect — These eyes, great eyes, eternal in their blaze!

  14. Music • Hungarian Dance # 5 - Brahms

  15. The Milliner’s

  16. Excerpt Madame Bovary His wife had been mad about him in the beginning; she had loved him with a boundless servility that made him even more indifferent to her. She had been vivacious, expansive and brimming over with affection in her youth, but as she grew older she became peevish, nagging and nervous, like sour wine turning to vinegar. She had suffered so much at first without complaining, watching him run after every village strumpet in sight and having him come home to her every night, satiated and stinking of alcohol, after carousing in a score of ill-famed establishments! Then her pride rebelled; she withdrew into herself, swallowing her rage with a mute stoicism which she maintained until her death. She was always busy with domestic and financial matters. She was constantly going to see lawyers or the judge, remembering when notes were due and obtaining renewals; and at home she spent all her time ironing, sewing, washing, supervising the workmen and settling the itemized bills they presented to her, while Monsieur, totally unconcerned with everything and continually sinking into a sullen drowsiness from which he roused himself only to make disagreeable remarks to her, sat smoking beside the fire and spitting into the ashes.

  17. Excerpt from Oliver by Charles Dickens They walked on for some time, through the most crowded and densely inhabited part of the town; and then, striking down a narrow street more dirty and miserable than any they had yet passed through, paused to look for the house which was the object of their search. The houses on either side were high and large, but very old, and tenanted by people of the poorest class, as their neglected appearance would have sufficiently denoted without the concurrent testimony afforded by the squalid looks of the few men and women who, with folded arms and bodies half doubled, occasionally skulked along.

  18. Harlequin Pablo Picasso

  19. Summary Questions • Gothic novels are most associated with what style of art? • What word best describes romanticism? • Love c) First Impressions • Wild Emotions d) Logic and reasoning 3) The first photographs were printed on what? 4) What era was Realism associated with? 5) Which art style is most closely connected with a mental image? 6) Which art is most associated with the enlightenment?

  20. Extra Credit Film: Opera:La Boheme Opera: Carmen

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