Neoclassicism or “New Classicism” Part One
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Transcript of Neoclassicism or “New Classicism” Part One
Neoclassicism
• 1660-late 1700’s in England, but the movement started earlier and occurred throughout Europe
• 1660 return of the Stuart line to the throne with Charles II after Puritans were overthrown from their 1648 takeover of the English government
• Reaction against the Renaissance• Back to the classics of the Greeks and Romans• Age of Reason – 17th Century• Age of Enlightenment – 18th Century
• Charles II restored to the throne (Stuart line) in 1660
• The Church of England restored from Puritan takeover
• Laws passed instituting the Book of Common Prayer and other pro-Anglican laws
Overview of Political/Religious History for this Period (Just for Historical Context)
• James II inherits the throne
• James tries to reinstate Roman Catholicism
• Protestant William of Orange and his wife Mary take over the throne in the Glorious Revolution
• James, his wife, and their son escape to France, to the Catholic court of Louis XIV
• Two attempts to regain the English throne
• Queen Anne is the last Stuart monarch
• German-born George I of Hanover rules after her death
• King George III is king when the colonists declare independence
Key Ideas/Contributions
• tabula rasa : the idea that humans start life with a “blank slate” in the mind, with no “pre-knowledge” ~John Locke
• Laws of gravity ~Isaac Newton
• Great Chain of Being: Man is just below angels and above nature ~Classical belief of classification and hierarchy
Deism
• Bible is not the inspired word of God
• God is like a clockmaker who created the world and then left men to rule themselves
• Religion based on reason and the study of nature
• Machinery set in motion
Key Ideas (continued)
• Decorum: the subject of art and writing should be appropriate, as should be the structure
• A story/play must have a beginning a middle, and an end ~ Aristotle (Ancient Greece)
RenaissanceNo limits on what man can
do
Intense emotions
NeoclassicismMan is limited and imperfect
Restrained emotion
Prized order
Art is work and suited for the wealthy
Traits of Neoclassicism: symmetry, economy, logic, utility, controlled emotion
Forms of Writing
• Essay• Letter• Epistle• Satire• Parody• Moral instruction
Play of mind: polite, urbane, witty language and humor
WritersAlexander PopeJohn MiltonJohn BunyanDaniel DefoeJonathan SwiftThomas GrayJohn DrydenSamuel JohnsonWilliam CowperVoltaireJean Jacques Rousseau
ArtistsJacques-Louis DavidBenjamin WestAntonio CanovaJean-Antoine HoudonJohn Flaxman
ComposersWolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Joseph Haydn