GALLERY OF ROMANTICISM
- “Wanderer above the Sea of Fog” by Caspar David Friedrich
- “Le Désespéré” by Courbet
- “Hylas and the Nymphs” by Waterhouse
- “The Sea of Ice Caspar” David Friedrich 1824
- “The Fighting Temeraire” by J.M.W. Turner 1839
- “The Liberty Leading the-People” by Eugene Delacroix 1830
- “The Ninth Wave” by Ivan Aivazovsky 1850
- “The Third of May” by Francisco Goya
- “The Slave Ship” by Turner
- “The burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons” by Turner
These are some key works that give a flavour of the range of works in the Romantic movements around Europe. I will add to this gallery from time to time. It is important to remember the impact that paintings had on culture. They were not separate, but far more entwined with mainstream events; Liberty Leading the People was a striking political statement, and has become iconic. The Slave Ship by Turner was just as much a political statement; he painted it to encourage Prince Alberts opposition to the horrors of the slave trade. The Romantic movement transcended borders and allowed a rich cross-fertilisation of ideas in art, poetry, music, science, literature, philosophy, archaeology and government.