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  1. The differences between Romanticism and classicism include that classicism emphasized order and reason while Romanticism emphasized feelings and emotions, that classical architecture...

  2. Kenneth Clark studies the rich and turbulent world of 18th- and early 19th-century art--the romantic movement. Classicists Jacques Louis David and Jean Ingres, and romanticists Goya, Piranesi, Delacroix, Turner, and Constable are discussed in this introduction to the series

  3. 27 de may. de 2024 · Romanticism can be seen as a rejection of the precepts of order, calm, harmony, balance, idealization, and rationality that typified Classicism in general and late 18th-century Neoclassicism in particular.

  4. Neoclassicism, prevalent from the mid-18th to late 18th century, emphasized reason, classical themes, and clean aesthetics. On the other hand, Romanticism, spanning the late 18th to mid-19th century, celebrated emotion, imagination, and individualism.

  5. In Romantic art, nature—with its uncontrollable power, unpredictability, and potential for cataclysmic extremes—offered an alternative to the ordered world of Enlightenment thought. The violent and terrifying images of nature conjured by Romantic artists recall the eighteenth-century aesthetic of the Sublime.

  6. Inspiration for classicism. Although art from ancient Greece and Rome is often classified under the umbrella terms of “Greco-Roman art,” “classical art,” or the “art of antiquity,” in reality, art making visibly changed throughout the centuries. Art created by the ancient Greeks is vastly different from works later created by Roman ...

  7. Romantics and Realists. Overview. Romantic has always been an elusive label -- in 1836 one wag concluded that romanticism "consisted in not shaving, and in wearing vests with heavily starched lapels." Delacroix, who in fact declined to identify himself as a romantic, is often set opposite the "classical" Ingres.