Discuss the shift from Romanticism to Realism in literature, the visual arts, and music

What will be an ideal response?


As industrialization led to great inequality, the ideals of the Romantics were balanced by realistic portrayals of society in literature, art, and music.
Many writers pointed to these conditions and described them with unembellished objectivity. This unblinking attention to contemporary life and experience was the basis for the style known as literary realism. The novel, in its capacity to detail characters and conditions, fulfilled the Realist credo of depicting life with complete candor. In place of heroic and exotic subjects, the Realist novel portrayed men and women in actual, everyday, and often demoralizing situations. It examined the social consequences of middle-class materialism, the plight of the working class, and the subjugation of women, among other matters.
While painting found new ways to express the Romantic passion for nature and emotional intensity, the birth and rise of photography accompanied the Realist objectives. Photographs produced topographical studies of exotic geographic sites, architectural monuments, and thousands of portraits. Nineteenth-century photographs served as social documents: black-and-white images of poverty-stricken families, ramshackle tenements, as well as unflinching views of human carnage. Some painters, such as Gustave Courbet, adopted Realism as well, abandoning the nostalgic landscapes and heroic themes of Romantic art in favor of compositions depicting the consequences of industrialization and the lives of ordinary men and women.
In Italian opera of the late nineteenth century, a movement called verismo(literally, "truth-ism," but more generally "Realism") paralleled the Realist style in literature and art. Realist composers rejected the heroic characters of Romantic grand opera and presented the problems and conflicts of people in familiar and everyday—if somewhat melodramatic—situations.

Art & Culture

You might also like to view...

In Morisot's Summer's Day (25.20) the subjects of the painting __________

a. do not interact b. are talking c. are looking at each other d. are both looking at the viewer

Art & Culture

The Qur'an (Koran) was revealed to what prophet?

a. Isaiah b. Jesus c. Abraham d. Muhammad

Art & Culture

The postwar Italian Neorealist movement owed a large debt to popular ________.

A. psychological drama B. romantic melodrama C. film noir D. comedy

Art & Culture

In listening to music by an American Nationalistic composer, which ingredients would you expect?

A) jazz-related instruments, such as saxophone and trumpet B) jazz syncopations C) American folk songs D) all of the above

Art & Culture