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Romanticism
Community - 2009 Early 21st Century Romanticism 2-15 is rated/received certificates of: Netherlands:AL
It's Romanticism...! Early 19th Century movement in art and thought ~ focused on Emotion and Nature ~ Rather than reason and & Society.
Community - 2009 Early 21st Century Romanticism - 2.15 was released on: Canada: 10 February 2011 USA: 10 February 2011 Sweden: 8 October 2011 Netherlands: 28 October 2011
The correct chronological order is: Enlightenment, Romanticism, Realism, Naturalism. The Enlightenment period focused on reason and intellectual thought in the 18th century, followed by Romanticism in the late 18th to early 19th century emphasizing emotion and individualism. Realism emerged in the mid-19th century, depicting reality as it is, followed by Naturalism which further emphasized scientific observation in the late 19th century.
Community - 2009 Early 21st Century Romanticism 2-15 was released on: Canada: 10 February 2011 USA: 10 February 2011 Sweden: 8 October 2011 Netherlands: 28 October 2011
Neoclassicism emerged in the late 17th century as a reaction against the excessive ornamentation of the Baroque period. Romanticism followed in the late 18th century and early 19th century as a rebellion against the rationality of neoclassical ideals, focusing more on emotion, individualism, and the natural world.
I can only think of two: Neo-Classicism and Romanticism.
Early period of romanticism, Full-flowering of romaticism, transition period of romanticism, realism of romanticism
There are several differences between romanticism and realism, in both painting and storytelling. One of the key aspects in storytelling is that romanticism tells the story, while realism shows it. The realistic painting embraces the ugly and sordid side of life, rejecting the romantic views of the early 18th century.
Early Romanticism
The precursors of Romanticism can be traced back to the Enlightenment period, where writers and thinkers emphasized individualism, emotional expression, and a focus on nature. Key figures such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, and William Blake laid the groundwork for the Romantic movement with their exploration of passion, imagination, and the supernatural in literature and art. These ideas paved the way for Romanticism to flourish in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.