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Art Bites 190: Romanticism and Romantic Era Painting

2m 43s

Romantic art embraced more than traditional romance. It expressed the full range of human emotions with melodramatic, epic-scale canvases, images that stir the emotions, and an almost religious embrace of nature.

Distributed nationally by American Public Television
Extras
With Europe as our classroom, Rick shares the essential skills for smart, smooth travel.
Painters, such as Velázquez, were paid to make royals look more divine than they were.
Neoclassical was a stern, no-frills style that celebrated a new age of science and reason.
The French Revolution came with art that celebrated liberty, equality, and brotherhood.
Rococo art featured aristocrats playing in their Baroque palaces and bucolic backyards.
Versailles, with its heavenly painted ceilings, was the ultimate Baroque palace.
Baroque art was propaganda for the state or for the Church.
Gritty realism, stark lighting, and drama gave Caravaggio’s art an emotional punch.
Rubens painted mythic battles, Catholic miracles, bloody hunts, and “Rubenesque” women.
Pro-Vatican Baroque featured big canvases, dramatic statues, and exuberant architecture.
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Greece’s timeless art: Golden Age temples, alluring Venuses, and exuberant Winged Victory.
We marvel at Stone Age cave paintings, mighty megaliths, and mysterious goddesses.
Early Europeans produce diverse art: from Christians to Muslims and Byzantines to Vikings.
Roaming Europe, we admire stately Neoclassical buildings and dramatic Romantic paintings.
The turbulent century and its rule-breaking art—Picasso, Surrealism and edgy architecture.
Shimmering Impressionist canvases by Monet and Renoir, plus Van Gogh, Gauguin and more.
From Portugal to Germany, booming economies and new technologies produce exquisite art.
We marvel at Baroque’s over-the-top churches, palaces, bubbly fountains, and theatric art.
Florence’s bold “rebirth” is powered by the genius of Leonardo, Rafael, and Michelangelo.
The grand cities of ancient Rome’s vast empire and majestic churches of its fall.