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Six Restoration and French Neoclassic Plays: Phedre, The Miser, Tartuffe, All for Love, The Country Wife, Love for Love

Six Restoration and French Neoclassic Plays: Phedre, The Miser, Tartuffe, All for Love, The Country Wife, Love for Love

An ideal introduction to plays and theater of the late 17th century in England and France that explored themes of sex, marriage, and society. Textual notes explain unfamiliar terms, allusions, and points of [...]

Same, Same, but Different

The spread and adaptation of neoclassical architecture in different countries
The neoclassical architectural movement grew out of a rejection of the popular architectural style of the mid-18th century, namely the rococo and baroque style of architecture. Seeking to revive the classical  Greek and Roman style, neoclassicism spread rapidly throughout the world. However, like everything, even neoclassical architecture was to be subject to the filters of perspective. Individual countries and architects adapted neoclassicism to their appropriate context and for their appropriate function at their appropriate period. Though neoclassical architecture shares fundamental similar characteristics, the spread of neoclassicism throughout the world was by no means uniform and simultaneous. Indeed, the wide range of purpose that neoclassical architecture had throughout countries demonstrates why to group its movement into one singular era is not true to reality in the least.

For many years, neoclassical architecture, albeit without the title, existed as an extension of the excessive Baroque style. In England, in particular, architects such as Christopher Wren and William Kent designed buildings, such as
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Tags: neoclassical architecture concept, neoclassicism countries, the arc de triomphe, neo classical?, arc de triomphe neoclassical, neoclassic style, neoclassicism

From Death Arises Life

A desire to return to more basic
Symmetry and order
“Traditional Architecture”
- NEOCLASSICAL ARCHITECTURE

There exists a popular cliché that is repeated to us – undoubtedly you have heard it- that goes: “From death arises new life.” Naturally, it is commonly associated with religious creed in the form of life after death; a message that death is not to be dreaded or feared for it produces something better and more perfect in its wake. Yet, the notion that the destruction of one entity will yield something better extends beyond theocracy. Many facets of life, politics, and idea are built on the foundations of previous or extinct entities. Nowhere is this more evident than in architecture. Neoclassical architecture represented a revolution in its truest sense. It was a reaction against the Baroque and Rococo, and an attempt to revive the essence of classical  Greco Roman forms from an epoch long past.
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Tags: rise of neo classical architecture, - politics and desire, classical architecture, Neoclassical Architecture, characteristics of neoclassical architecture