Categories

Recent Posts

The characteristics and composition of neoclassical paintings

One man, dressed in rags, sits stoically in his throne as a laurel wreath is gently placed atop his head by an otherworldly angel. Surrounding him is his audience; men and women varying in facial expressions, dress, and appearance. All these personalities are so dissimilar to one another, yet so familiar to us. There is Shakespeare! There is Virgil! There is Raphael Sanzio! The man in the centre turns out to be Homer, the ancient Greek epic poet. Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres’ depiction of historical and mythological figures in his painting, Apotheosis of Homer embodies the neoclassical movement that hit popular painting like a tidal wave from the mid-18th century to the early 19th century. Neoclassical art enjoyed popularity as a result of a backlash against the popular styles of the day which were viewed to represent the degeneracy of art. Ingres’ painting perfectly reflects the spirit of neoclassical painting: elements of the new meeting the glories of the past.
Continue reading to THE ARTICLE »

Tags: characters of neoclassicism, winckelmann neoclassicism, traits of neoclassical painting, neo-classic paintings, neo-classical art characteristics, neoclassical painters 21st century, neoclassical composition painting, characteristics of neoclassical style

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.
Continue reading to THE ARTICLE »

Tags: neoclassicism architecture in europe, paris neoclassical architecture, neoclassical architecture in europe, neoclassical buildings in europe, neoclassical architect, europe neoclassical architecture, why did neoclassical architecture became popular after the french revolution, greek revival movement