Neo Classicism
Neo Classicism
Neo Classicism
1 Overview
Neoclassicism is a revival of the styles and spirit of
classic antiquity inspired directly from the classical
period,[2] which coincided and reected the developments in philosophy and other areas of the Age of Enlightenment, and was initially a reaction against the excesses of the preceding Rococo style.[3] While the movement is often described as the opposed counterpart of
Romanticism, this is a great over-simplication that tends
not to be sustainable when specic artists or works are
considered. The case of the supposed main champion of
late Neoclassicism, Ingres, demonstrates this especially
well.[4] The revival can be traced to the establishment of
formal archaeology.[5][6]
The writings of Johann Joachim Winckelmann were important in shaping this movement in both architecture
and the visual arts. His books, Thoughts on the Imitation of Greek Works in Painting and Sculpture (1750) and
Geschichte der Kunst des Alterthums (History of Ancient
Art, 1764) were the rst to distinguish sharply between
Ancient Greek and Roman art, and dene periods within
Greek art, tracing a trajectory from growth to maturity
and then imitation or decadence that continues to have
inuence to the present day. Winckelmann believed that
art should aim at noble simplicity and calm grandeur,[7]
and praised the idealism of Greek art, in which he said we
nd: not only nature at its most beautiful but also something beyond nature, namely certain ideal forms of its
beauty, which, as an ancient interpreter of Plato teaches
us, come from images created by the mind alone. The
theory was very far from new in Western art, but his emphasis on close copying of Greek models was: The only
way for us to become great or if this be possible, inimitable, is to imitate the ancients.[8]
With the advent of the Grand Tour, a fad of collecting
antiquities began that laid the foundations of many great
collections spreading a Neoclassical revival throughout
klassiks classicus)[1] is the name given to Western Europe.[9] Neoclassicism in each art implies a particmovements in the decorative and visual arts, literature, ular canon of a classical model.
Henry Fuseli, The artist moved to despair at the grandeur of
antique fragments, 177879
As for painting, Greek painting was utterly lost: neoclassicist painters imaginatively revived it, partly through basrelief friezes, mosaics, and pottery painting and partly
through the examples of painting and decoration of the
High Renaissance of Raphael's generation, frescos in
Neros Domus Aurea, Pompeii and Herculaneum and
through renewed admiration of Nicholas Poussin. Much
neoclassical painting is more classicizing in subject
matter than in anything else. A erce, but often very
The term Neoclassical was not invented until the mid- badly informed, dispute raged for decades over the rel19th century, and at the time the style was described ative merits of Greek and Roman art, with Winckelmann
by such terms as the true style, reformed and re- and his fellow Hellenists generally the winning side.[14]
vival"; what was regarded as being revived varying considerably. Ancient models were certainly very much involved, but the style could also be regarded as a revival
of the Renaissance, and especially in France as a return 2 Painting and printmaking
to the more austere and noble Baroque of the age of
Louis XIV, for which a considerable nostalgia had devel- It is hard to recapture the radical and exciting nature
oped as Frances dominant military and political position of early neo-classical painting for contemporary audistarted a serious decline.[12] Ingres's coronation portrait ences; it now strikes even those writers favourably inof Napoleon even borrowed from Late Antique consular clined to it as insipid and almost entirely uninteresting
diptychs and their Carolingian revival, to the disapproval to ussome of Kenneth Clark's comments on Anton
of critics.
Raphael Mengs' ambitious Parnassus at the Villa Al-
bani,[15] by the artist who his friend Winckelmann described as the greatest artist of his own, and perhaps of
later times.[16] The drawings, subsequently turned into
prints, of John Flaxman used very simple line drawing
(thought to be the purest classical medium[17] ) and gures mostly in prole to depict The Odyssey and other
subjects, and once red the artistic youth of Europe
but are now neglected,[18] while the history paintings of
Angelica Kauman, mainly a portraitist, are described as
having an unctuous softness and tediousness by Fritz
Novotny.[19] Rococo frivolity and Baroque movement
had been stripped away but many artists struggled to put
anything in their place, and in the absence of ancient examples for history painting, other than the Greek vases
used by Flaxman, Raphael tended to be used as a substitute model, as Winckelmann recommended.
numerous and protable, and taken back by those making the Grand Tour to all parts of Europe. His main subject matter was the buildings and ruins of Rome, and
he was more stimulated by the ancient than the modern. The somewhat disquieting atmosphere of many
of his Vedute (views) becomes dominant in his series
of 16 prints of Carceri d'Invenzione (Imaginary Prisons) whose oppressive cyclopean architecture conveys dreams of fear and frustration.[21] The Swiss-born
Johann Heinrich Fssli spent most of his career in England, and while his fundamental style was based on neoclassical principles, his subjects and treatment more often
reected the Gothic strain of Romanticism, and sought
to evoke drama and excitement.
Neoclassicism in painting gained a new sense of direction with the sensational success of Jacques-Louis David's
Oath of the Horatii at the Paris Salon of 1785. Despite
its evocation of republican virtues, this was a commission by the royal government, which David insisted on
painting in Rome. David managed to combine an idealist style with drama and forcefulness. The central perspective is perpendicular to the picture plane, made more
emphatic by the dim arcade behind, against which the
heroic gures are disposed as in a frieze, with a hint of
the articial lighting and staging of opera, and the classical colouring of Nicholas Poussin. David rapidly became
the leader of French art, and after the French Revolution became a politician with control of much government
patronage in art. He managed to retain his inuence in
the Napoleonic period, turning to frankly propagandistic
works, but had to leave France for exile in Brussels at the
Bourbon Restoration.[22]
Davids many students included Jean Auguste Dominique
Ingres, who saw himself as a classicist throughout his
long career, despite a mature style that has an equivocal relationship with the main current of Neoclassicism, and many later diversions into Orientalism and the
Troubadour style that are hard to distinguish from those
of his unabashedly Romantic contemporaries, except by
the primacy his works always give to drawing. He exhibited at the Salon for over 60 years, from 1802 into the
beginnings of Impressionism, but his style, once formed,
changed little.[23]
The work of other artists, who could not easily be described as insipid, combined aspects of Romanticism
with a generally Neoclassical style, and form part of
the history of both movements. The German-Danish
painter Asmus Jacob Carstens nished very few of the
large mythological works that he planned, leaving mostly
drawings and colour studies which often succeed in approaching Winckelmanns prescription of noble simplicity and calm grandeur.[20] Unlike Carstens unrealized
schemes, the etchings of Giovanni Battista Piranesi were
Sculpture
Since prior to the 1830s the United States did not have a
sculpture tradition of its own, save in the areas of tombstones, weathervanes and ship gureheads,[31] the European neoclassical manner was adopted there, and it was to
hold sway for decades and is exemplied in the sculptures
of Horatio Greenough, Hiram Powers, Randolph Rogers
and William Henry Rinehart.
Resting Faun, 1770, Johan Tobias Sergel
Voltaire by Jean-Antoine Houdon, 1778, one of several dierent versions.
Monument to Copernicus by Thorwaldsen, Warsaw
Le triomphe de 1810, Jean-Pierre Cortot, from the
Arc de triomphe
Hercules and the horses of Diomedes, Johann Gottfried Schadow, study for the Brandenberg Gate
triumphal arch
Diskobolos preparing to throw, Mathieu Kessels,
Chatsworth House
One of the character heads of Franz Xaver
Messerschmidt
Nydia, Randolph Rogers, 1859
A second neoclassic wave, more severe, more studied (through the medium of engravings) and more consciously archaeological, is associated with the height of
the Napoleonic Empire. In France, the rst phase of neoclassicism was expressed in the Louis XVI style, and
the second in the styles called Directoire or Empire.
The Rococo style remained popular in Italy until the
Napoleonic regimes brought the new archaeological classicism, which was embraced as a political statement by
young, progressive, urban Italians with republican leanChteau de Malmaison, 1800, room for the Empress Josphine,
ings.
In the decorative arts, neoclassicism is exemplied in
Empire furniture made in Paris, London, New York,
Berlin; in Biedermeier furniture made in Austria; in Karl
Friedrich Schinkel's museums in Berlin, Sir John Soane's
Bank of England in London and the newly built "capitol"
in Washington, DC; and in Wedgwood's bas reliefs and
black basaltes vases. The style was international; Scots
architect Charles Cameron created palatial Italianate interiors for the German-born Catherine II the Great, in
Russian St. Petersburg.
Very light and loose dresses, usually white and often with
shockingly bare arms, rose sheer from the ankle to just
below the bodice, where there was a strongly emphasized
thin hem or tie round the body, often in a dierent colour.
The shape is now often known as the Empire silhouette
although it predates the First French Empire of Napoleon,
but his rst Empress Josphine de Beauharnais was inuential in spreading it around Europe. A long rectangular
shawl or wrap, very often plain red but with a decorated
border in portraits, helped in colder weather, and was apparently laid around the midri when seated - for which
sprawling semi-recumbent postures were favoured.[38] By
7
the start of the 19th century, such styles had spread widely ics. Various strategems were used to avoid depicting them
across Europe.
in modern scenes. In James Dawkins and Robert Wood
Neoclassical fashion for men was far more problematic, Discovering the Ruins of Palmyra (1758) by Gavin Hamiland never really took o other than for hair, where it ton, the two gentleman antiquaries are shown in toga-like
played an important role in the shorter styles that nally Arab robes. In Watson and the Shark (1778) by John Sindespatched the use of wigs, and then white hair-powder, gleton Copley, the main gure could plausibly be shown
for younger men. The trouser had been the symbol of nude, and the composition is such that of the eight other
the barbarian to the Greeks and Romans, but outside the men shown, only one shows a single breeched leg prominently. However the Americans Copley and Benjamin
painters or, especially, the sculptors studio, few men
were prepared to abandon it. Indeed the period saw West led the artists who successfully showed that trousers
could be used in heroic scenes, with works like Wests The
the triumph of the pure trouser, or pantaloon, over the
cullottes or knee-breeches of the Ancien Regime. Even Death of General Wolfe (1770) and Copleys The Death
of Major Peirson, 6 January 1781 (1783), although the
when David designed a new French national costume
at the request of the government during the height of trouser was still being carefully avoided in The Raft of
completed in 1819.
the Revolutionary enthusiasm for changing everything in the Medusa,
1792, it included fairly tight leggings under a coat that Classically inspired male hair styles included the Bedford
stopped above the knee. A high proportion of well-to- Crop, arguably the precursor of most plain modern
do young men spent much of the key period in military male styles, which was invented by the radical politician
service because of the French Revolutionary Wars, and Francis Russell, 5th Duke of Bedford as a protest against
military uniform, which began to emphasize jackets that a tax on hair powder; he encouraged his frends to adopt
were short at the front, giving a full view of tight-tting it by betting them they would not. Another inuential
trousers, was often worn when not on duty, and inuenced style (or group of styles) was named by the French after
cilivian male styles.
the Roman Emperor Titus, from his busts, with hair
short and layered but somewhat piled up on the crown,
often with restrained quis or locks hanging down;
variants are familiar from the hair of both Napoleon and
George IV of England. The style was supposed to have
been introduced by the actor Franois-Joseph Talma,
who upstaged his wigged co-actors when appearing in
productions of works such as Voltaire's Brutus. In 1799
a Parisian fashion magazine reported that even bald men
were adopting Titus wigs,[39] and the style was also worn
by women, the Journal de Paris reporting in 1802 that
more than half of elegant women were wearing their
hair or wig la Titus.[40]
James Dawkins and Robert Wood Discovering the
Ruins of Palmyra, by Gavin Hamilton (1758)
Madame Raymond de Verninac by Jacques-Louis
David, with clothes and chair in Directoire style.
Year 7, that is 1798-99.
Portrait of Madame Rcamier, David, 1800
Princess Elizabeth Alexeievna (Louise of Baden) in
1802
7 Later Neoclassicisms
Francis Russell, 5th Duke of Bedford in a Bedford Crop
In American architecture, neoclassicism was one expression of the American Renaissance movement, ca 1890
1917; its last manifestation was in Beaux-Arts architecture, and its very last, large public projects were the
Lincoln Memorial (highly criticized at the time), the
National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC (also heavily criticized by the architectural community as being
7 LATER NEOCLASSICISMS
7.1
In music
Ostankino Palace, designed by Francesco Camporesi and completed in 1798, in Moscow, Russia
9
existed with moderately modernist architecture of Boris
Iofan, bordering with contemporary Art Deco (Schuko);
again, the purest examples of the style were produced by
Zholtovsky school that remained an isolated phenomena.
The political intervention was a disaster for constructivist
leaders yet was sincerely welcomed by architects of the
classical schools.
tympanum.
7.3
Adam style
American Empire style
Empire style
Federal architecture
Nazi architecture
Neo-Grec, the late Greek-Revival style
Neoclassical inuenced fashions
Stalinist architecture
9 Notes
[1] Etymology of the English word neoclassicism. myetymology.com. Retrieved 2012-02-22.
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
dominance (roughly post-World War II until the mid1980s), neoclassicism has seen somewhat of a resurgence.
As of the rst decade of the 21st century, contemporary neoclassical architecture is usually classed under the umbrella term of New Classical Architecture.
Sometimes it is also referred to as Neo-Historicism
or Traditionalism.[42] Also, a number of pieces of
postmodern architecture draw inspiration from and include explicit references to neoclassicism, Antigone District and the National Theatre of Catalonia in Barcelona
among them. Postmodern architecture occasionally includes historical elements, like columns, capitals or the
10
[8] Both quotes from the rst pages of Thoughts on the Imitation of Greek Works in Painting and Sculpture
[9] Dyson, Stephen L. (2006). In Pursuit of Ancient Pasts:
A History of Classical Archaeology in the Nineteenth and
Twentieth Centuries. Yale University Press. pp. xii. ISBN
978-0-300-11097-5.
[10] Cunningham, Reich, Lawrence S., John J. (2009). Culture and values: a survey of the humanities. Wadsworth
Publishing; 7 edition. p. 104. ISBN 978-0-495-56877-3.
[11] Honour, 21
[12] Honour, 11, 23-25
[13] Honour, 44-46; Novotny, 21
11 FURTHER READING
10 References
Clark, Kenneth, The Romantic Rebellion: Romantic
versus Classic Art, 1976, Omega. ISBN 0-86007718-7.
Honour, Hugh, Neo-classicism. Style and Civilisation 1968 (reprinted 1977).
Gontar, Cybele, Neoclassicism, In Heilbrunn
Timeline of Art History.
New York: The
Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000 online
Hunt, Lynn, Freedom of Dress in Revolutionary France, in From the Royal to the Republican
Body: Incorporating the Political in Seventeenth- and
Eighteenth-Century France, Editors: Sara E. Melzer,
Kathryn Norberg, 1998, University of California
Press, 1998, ISBN 0520208072,9780520208070
Fritz Novotny, Painting and Sculpture in Europe,
17801880, 2nd edition (reprinted 1980).
Rifelj, Carol De Dobay, Coiures: Hair in
Nineteenth-Century French Literature and Culture, 2010, University of Delaware Press, ISBN
0874130999, 9780874130997, google books
11 Further reading
See also the References at Neoclassical architecture.
Eriksen, Svend.
(1974)
[36] Turner, Turner (2013). British gardens: history, philosophy and design, Chapter 6 Neoclassical gardens and landscapes 1730-1800. London: Routledge. p. 456. ISBN
978-0415518789.
11
Harrison, Charles; Paul Wood and Jason Gaiger
(eds) (2000; repr. 2003). Art in Theory 16481815:
An Anthology of Changing Ideas
Hartop, Christopher, with foreword by Tim Knox
(2010). The Classical Ideal: English Silver, 1760
1840, exh. cat. Cambridge: John Adamson ISBN
978-0-9524322-9-6
Irwin, David (1966). English Neoclassical Art: Studies in Inspiration and Taste
Rosenblum, Robert (1967).
Late Eighteenth-Century Art
12
Transformations in
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