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ROMANTICISM (1863:Saint-Germain, Paris (Charles Baudelaire wrote a prose…
ROMANTICISM
1863:Saint-Germain, Paris
Charles Baudelaire wrote a prose poem celebrating an unusual character whom he calls a flaneur, a casual wonderer who has no particular job to go to and spends his time observing busy street life of a modern city
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1891: Le Havre
Paul Gauguin set sail for Tahiti, there he spent the rest of his life drawing young native women looked relaxed and natural without anything. In his eyes civiazation is what made us sick
1770:Brook Street, London
Thomas Chatterton kills himself because no one wants to publish his poetry which is concerned with beauty and wisdom
He became the idea of the sensitive doomed person, often rejected by a cruel vulgar world
1799: The Lake District, England
William Wordsworth and his sister moved into Daffocottage in Grasmere on the edge of the Lake District. Here,he wrote some of the greatest poetry, celebrating the natural world, he wrote about daffodils, oak trees, clouds, butterflies and rivers
To be a romantic is to take thr side of nature against industry. In facts Wordsworth always speaksup for the nature and a simple life
1847:Westminster, London
Augustus Pugin designed buildings which were new but were made to look old . He argues that his building is noble because it harks back to his country's pre-industrial past
1829: Niagar, United States
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1798: Madrid, Spain
Francisco Goya produced one of his most iconic images, titled The Sleep of Reason brings out monsters. It captures a romantic interest in the limits of reason and the power of the irrational over human fragile minds
1774: Leipzig, Germany
Goethe publishes the quintessential romantic love story, The Sorrows of young Werther. Story of a passionate doomed love affair between a young poet called Werther and a beautiful and clever woman called Charlotte.But Charlotte is already married so the love is impoossible from the start.He can't take him anymore so he kills himself
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1762:The Marais, Paris.
Jan Jacques Rousseau publishes a book about the raising of children on meal or education. He emphasizes that the child, the original rebel, the rapresentative of everything that's pure and school and outside of adult discipline is the seat of creativity and genius
Glamour is directed at the freedom from tradition and the natural innocence and sweetness of the child
refers to the birth of new set of ideas, about a mind set in a way of feeling: nature, love, children, sex, money and work
is best understood as a reaction to the modern world and some of its key features: industrialization, urbanization, secularization and consumerism
began in western Europe in the mid 18th century in the works of artists, poets and philosophers. And it subsequently spread all over the world
has come to stick up for the irrational, the untrained, the exotic, the childlike and the naive