Art: Romanticism and Genre Art
Art: Romanticism and Genre Art
Sources
Celebrating the Common Man. Genre painting, which focuses on scenes from everyday life, was a strong force in American art during the nineteenth century. By the 1840s it rivaled portrait and landscape painting in popularity. Its practitioners ignored specific names and
THE BIRTH OF PHOTOGRAPHY
Photography was born in France in 1826, when a chemist made the first surviving photograph by exposing a pewter plate for eight hours. Soon after and with great excitement, Louis J. M. Daguerre (1789-1851) introduced the daguerrotype, a more practical photographic process that required exposure times often to fifteen minutes. The invention of the photo negative came in 1839, followed in 1851 by a wet-plate process that Civil War photographer Mathew Brady used successfully to take more than seven thousand photographs of the American conflict. By the 1850s photography had established itself as a legitimate commercial enterprise. The tintype, introduced in 1855, was a fast and cheap method of making portraits. Although tintypes often produced poor-quality images, they were extremely popular and readily available to the masses.
Another large market for photography was travel pictures. Nineteenth-century audiences hungered for the exotic, and scenes of foreign countries and the American West were in constant demand. Timothy O’Sullivan (1840-1882), who had worked with Brady during the war, became one of the first leading travel photographers, documenting his journeys to Arizona, Nevada, and Panama.
Sources: George M. Craven, Object and Image: An Introduction to Photography (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1975);
Phil Davis, Photography (Dubuque, Iowa: William C. Brown, 1982);
Carol Strickland, The Annotated Mona Lisa (Kansas City, M¿.: Andrews & McMeel, 1994).
places in favor of depicting general, everyday occurrences. While there were exceptions, most genre scenes conveyed an optimistic or sympathetic view of American life. A particularly favored subject was rural America, especially the hardworking, rustic lifestyle of the farmer. With industrialization slowly changing the face of America, genre artists nostalgically captured the fading heritage of rural America. William Sidney Mount (1807-1868) preserved one country tradition in The Banjo Player (1858), while Eastman Johnson’s The Old Stage Coach (1871) was painted as railroads expanded nationwide, replacing that older mode of travel. George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879) was the first important genre painter of the American West. In frontier scenes such as Fur Traders Descending the Missouri (1845) and The Wood Boat (1850), he heroicized the grizzled traders, riverboat men, and pioneers who ventured into unknown territories.
The Rise of Printmaking. The popularity of genre subjects increased dramatically with technological developments in the field of printing. Industrial growth had spawned a large, literate middle class, which demanded printed news, books, and eventually graphic arts. Metal engraving, which used strong steel plates, enabled images to be mass-produced at affordable prices. The introduction of lithography in 1818 provided another efficient medium for reproduction. Perhaps the most notable lithographers of the second half of the nineteenth century were Nathaniel Currier and Merritt Ives, who formed Currier & Ives in 1857. Covering almost every subject imaginable to suit a wide range of tastes, the firm created more than four thousand images during its production life. Their pictures of ships and prairies, cities and farms, firefighters and fisherman chronicled American life and endeared Currier & Ives to the American public. Their series of prints depicting battles of the Civil War was overwhelmingly successful.
The Civil War. In his 1859 painting Old Kentucky Home Eastman Johnson (1824-1906) compared a grand southern manor with less-than-ideal quarters for slaves. Depicting southern slavery in a poignant way, Johnson recorded the nation’s bloodiest conflict. The devastation of the South and the repercussions following the Civil War were not lost on genre painters. We Both Must Fade (Mrs. Fithian) (1869), a portrait by Lilly Martin Spencer (1822-1902), shows a southern belle looking in a mirror while clutching a crumbling rose in her fingertips. Not just a commentary on the fragility of life, the work also seems to suggest the fading away of genteel southern life. Spencer, a child prodigy born to intellectual parents, was the first American woman painter to be acknowledged
on an equal footing with her male peers, setting an important precedent for women artists of future generations.
Daniel M. Mendelowitz, A History of American Art (New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1970);
John Lowell Pratt, ed., Currier & Ives, Chronicles of America (New York: Promontory Press, 1968);
Michael David Zellman, 300 Years of American Art, volume 1 (Secaucus, N.J.: Wellfleet Press, 1987).
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
When Liverpool was under siege; Two decades ago, Liverpool was on the political rack, as Larry Neild reports.(Features)
Newspaper article from: Daily Post (Liverpool, England); 3/10/2005; 700+ words
; ...political events happened which set Liverpool City Council and central government...election. Meanwhile, back in Liverpool, unknown Labour Party member...elected to represent Woolton East, the ward that took in the...who was de facto the ruler of Liverpool. Eventually, the controlling...
|
|
LIVERPOOL: Merseybeat.(European Capital of Culture)
Magazine article from: Design Week; 6/12/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...with Design Initiative, a Liverpool organisation that promotes...Munro as well as lesser known, Liverpool-based designers like Ilsa...Eriksen - is an offshoot of the East London Design Show, which...where a group of designers from Liverpool were exhibiting,' explains...
|
|
Liverpool vs Newcastle: a clash of cultures The race for the title of European Capital of Culture 2008 is in its final stages, and two British cities have emerged as the leading contenders. Which deserves to win? It depends what you mean by `culture', as two leading writers explain
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 9/19/2001; ; 700+ words
; LIVERPOOL Liverpool is bidding to become European Capital...Their only hope lies in the argument that Liverpool doesn't need to be made Europe's...reasons for bringing people to the North-east, but, by the same token, they are...
|
|
LIVERPOOL:EUROPEAN CAPITAL OF CULTURE 2008: YOUR pride in YOUR fabcity.(News)
Newspaper article from: Liverpool Echo (Liverpool, England); 6/5/2003; 700+ words
; ...Kris Heerasing,London FANTASTIC! Well done,Liverpool. We love ya, yeah, yeah, yeah! Dawn Jenkins,Liverpool CONGRATS to Liverpool my adopted workplace after moving from the South-East 12 years a go. It has 100 times nicer people and...
|
|
Liverpool is in more need.(News)
Newspaper article from: Evening Chronicle (Newcastle, England); 6/9/2003; 700+ words
; ...has lived in Newcastle and Liverpool, I must say that Liverpool...won. To be honest I think Liverpool's particular individuality...thoughts turned quickly North East to your probable disappointment...no hard feelings. GARRY G Liverpool Please give us your support...
|
|
Making Liverpool a great city; in association with LIVERPOOL The story behind our city's success started during the Industrial Revolution, as Mike Chappie discovers.(Features)
Newspaper article from: Daily Post (Liverpool, England); 6/4/2007; 700+ words
; ...what started things up for Liverpool after spending centuries out...Without their enterprise, Liverpool would have remained disconnected...survive in the building of the East Lanes Road and the Birkenhead...world firsts which changed Liverpool's whole perspective on its...
|
|
Liverpool harbouring great potential; After the Fourth Grace project was torpedoed, Liverpool's new cruise liner terminal moves to centre stage as the waterfront's heart. Peter Elson reports.(News)
Newspaper article from: Daily Post (Liverpool, England); 8/9/2004; 700+ words
; ...euphemistically called ``Liverpool Cruise Terminal'' in East Langton Dock. Even...director, says: ``Liverpool's East Langton Dock terminal...London and the South East. '' Nick Begy...manager, says: ``Liverpool is a very strong target...
|
|
Liverpool 2008.(Calendar)
Magazine article from: The Architectural Review; 1/1/2008; 700+ words
; ...Dock Building 20 Sept-30 Nov Liverpool Biennial Tate, Walker, Bluecoat...Outdoor Spectacular All over Liverpool 27 Sept Verdi Requiem Metropolitan...Project opens Chavasse Park and east of Paradise Street 2 Oct...Stirling Prize Award Ceremony Liverpool Arena 12 Oct Burial at Thebes...
|
|
Liverpool run out of suitors amid world financial woe
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 12/9/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...buyers disappear from view Liverpool have top place in their Champions...League the club might be but Liverpool are lacking anyone with any...prospect of the mystery Middle East suitor who came to the table...available," Gillett added. But Liverpool's future is dependent on...
|
|
LIVERPOOL RISING REPORTAGE REPORTAGE THE CITY THAT SPAWNED THE BEATLES IS HOPING THE ARTS CAN ONCE AGAIN BREATHE LIFE INTO ITS PASSIONATE HEART
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Herald; 1/27/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...flow across the sea, shaped Liverpool into the least English of England's cities. To understand Liverpool you have to acknowledge that...for the most part, lies to the east of it. Liverpool and its inhabitants have a tricky...
|
|
Liverpool
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to British History
Liverpool, created a borough by royal...share of the Irish trade, Liverpool gained impetus from profitable...industries. When trade with the East Indies and Spanish America...midwest began to expand, Liverpool's dominance of Atlantic...
|
|
East Liverpool
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
East Liverpool industrial city (1990 pop. 13,654), Columbiana co., E central...1798 as St. Clair, called Fawcett's Town until its incorporation as East Liverpool in 1834. Extensive clay deposits in the area are used in making pottery...
|
|
McCartney, Paul
Book article from: Contemporary Musicians
...act. Upon their return to Liverpool, the Beatles attracted a gifted...born June 18,1942, in Liverpool, England; son of James...drums. Group performed in Liverpool area and in Hamburg, Germany...States, Europe, and the Far East. Appeared in motion pictures...
|
|
Ocean Group Plc
Book article from: International Directory of Company Histories
...between Europe and the Far East throughout that period. Then...Alfred and Philip Holt of Liverpool, set up the Ocean Steam Ship...were the sons of a wealthy Liverpool cotton broker, and they had...and their business friends in Liverpool. The company was founded before...
|
|
Rathbone Brothers plc
Book article from: International Directory of Company Histories
...Rathbone went to work in Liverpool, then a fast-growing British...among the most prominent of Liverpool's rising shipping industry...when it became the official Liverpool trading agent for the giant East India Company. To support...
|