MUS115 art, music & ideas

1850-1900 Realism, Impressionist, Post-Impressionist  handout

 

In a letter written to a friend in 1850, Gustave Courbet announced that "in our so very civilized society it is necessary for me to live the life of a savage. I must be free even of governments. The people have my sympathies, I must address myself to them directly." These words shed considerable light on Courbet's art - and not just because Courbet's subjects aren't always the predictable, socially acceptable ones. There's something direct and even savage (if by that we mean unconventional) in the way Courbet attacks the canvas: in the way he sponges or scrapes the paint, juxtaposes areas that are more or less realistically handled, and frames or arranges figures and objects in unexpected ways.

            - Jed Perl (contemporary art critic)

 

It is true that Rodin's art makes overt reference to its own artificiality. When we say that his kind of realism was not seamless, we mean it: his sculptures often exposed the joint lines of the piece molds in which they were cast, as well as the "unfinished" marks of modeling and editing. Fragmentation and repetition functioned in the same way, as instances of the sculptor's processes made evident in his product. Rodin typically made "spare parts" - feet, hands, knees, and so on - and put together his figures from these. And once he made a figure, he would often remake it, by recasting multiple versions and variants. By showing these processes in the partial figures and modular recurrences of his exhibited work, he undercut his own virtuosity as a conjurer of stories in flesh and bone, and introduced an evident self-consciousness about the artificiality of art's means. [emphasis added]    - Kirk Varnedoe (contemporary art historian)

 

Realism                                               KEY IMAGE: Manet, p. 372.  know artist, title & style

§         “Realism in the arts aimed to give a truthful and objective representation of the social world, without illusion or imaginative alteration.” P. 353, emphasis added.

§         response to urban life

§          

Impressionism                         KEY IMAGE: Monet, p. 374.  know artist, title, date & style

§         1874 exhibition

§         Monet, Renoir, Cassatt, Morisot, others (see p. 374)

§         “sought to capture fleeting effects of light and color” (p. 374)

§         used color theory

§         open air, rather than studio painting

§         direct application of unmixed colors

 

Post-Impressionism 1880-1890s

KEY IMAGE: Van Gogh p. 383. know artist, title & style

KEY IMAGE: Cezanne p. 380 know artist

§         extended impressionist techniques

§         various steps toward modernist painting

§         (some works) less spontaneous, more composed

§         the picture dissolves into planes, brushstrokes, etc. – a consciousness of artistic  techniques

 

Following not on exam (not even in the textbook):

PUCCINI La Bohème (1896) – most performed opera in the 20th Century, rivaled only by Madama Butterfly (1904)

Sentimental look at artsy types in the “past,” fifty years previous

VERISMO – “Realism” in opera – (what is realistic about any opera?)  humble characters in poverty.  Similar to the realism in painting decades earlier. 

 

May 2007

David Meckler