| Romanticism in France | |
|---|---|
Top:Liberty Leading the People by Eugène Delacroix (The Louvre); Center:The Chateau de Challain-la-Potherie a Renaissance Revival chateau (1870s) Bottom:Imaginary View of the Grand Gallery of the Louvre in Ruins, Hubert Robert (1796) (Louvre) | |
| Years active | late 18th-mid-late 19th century |
Romanticism (Romantisme in French) was a literary and artistic movement that appeared in France in the late 18th century, largely in reaction against the formality and strict rules of the official style ofneo-classicism. It reached its peak in the first part of the 19th century, in the writing ofFrançois-René de Chateaubriand andVictor Hugo, the poetry ofAlfred de Vigny; the painting ofEugène Delacroix; the music ofHector Berlioz; and later in the architecture ofCharles Garnier. It was gradually replaced beginning in the late 19th century by the movements ofArt Nouveau,realism andmodernism.
French romantic painting was sometimes called "theatrical romanticism". Unlike the romanticism in Germany, it was based less on expressing philosophical ideas than upon achieving extravagant effects, with the dramatic use of color and movement. Figures were twisted or stretched out, canvases were crowded with figures, and lines were sometimes imprecise. The locations used were often exotic, usually in Egypt or the Turkish Empire.[1]
One of the early prominent figures in French romantic painting wasHubert Robert, famous especiallycapricci, picturesque depictions of real or imagined ruins in Italy and of France. These included his view of what the Grand Gallery of theLouvre would look like, collapsed and overgrown with vines.[2]
Anne Louis Girodet was one of the first important painters in French romanticism. A pupil ofJacques Louis David. His work was greatly admired by Napoleon; he paintedThe Shadows of French Heroes who died in the wars of Liberty, received by Ossian (1802) especially for the main salon of Napoleon's home atMalmaison. It featured the mysterious lighting, symbols, mythological figures and theatrical effects which were to be recurrent romantic themes.[3]
The first major painter of French romanticism wasThéodore Géricault (1791–1824). He had first made his reputation painting thechasseurs of Napoleon's Imperial Guard. His most famous work, however, was theRaft of the Medusa, (1818–1819), based on a real incident, showing the survivors of a shipwreck on a raft, waving desperately to be noticed by a faraway ship. the work was painted with extreme realism, after numerous studies, and captured in the most dramatic fashion the mixture of desperation and hopelessness of the passengers.[4]The French painter most frequently associated with romanticism isEugène Delacroix (1798–1863). Delacroix had tried seven times to enter the Academy of Fine Arts without success; he finally entered with the political support of Napoleon's foreign affairs minister,Talleyrand. Delacroix's favorite authors were Shakespeare andLord Byron, and he sought to vividly portray the summits of tragedy. Delacroix introduced a dramatic contrast of action, violence and nudity in an exotic setting, in hisDeath at Sardanapale (1827), a theme inspired by Byron.[1]
Delacroix's work was an example of another tendency of romanticism, the use of exotic settings; in French romanticism, these were usually in Egypt or the Middle East. He is best known forLiberty leading the People (1830), shown in theSalon of 1831, inspired by the combat outside the Hotel de Ville in Paris during theJuly Revolution of 1830. The semi-nude figure of Liberty, raising a flag, surrounded by the violence and death of combat, next to a small boy raising a pistol too large for his hand, was something new and dramatic.[4]
Later romantic painting retained the romantic content, but was generally more precise and realistic in style, adapting to the demands of the French Academy. Important figures in later French romantic painting included the Swiss-bornCharles Gleyre (1806–1874), who specialized in mythological and orientalist scenes. He painted in a more realistic style and with paler colors than the earlier romantics, but his works were equally charged in exoticism.[5] He was famous as a teacher, and some of his students later became prominent in very different styles; they includedClaude Monet,Pierre-Auguste Renoir,Alfred Sisley, andJames Abbott McNeill Whistler.[6]
Thomas Couture was another prominent late romantic painter, who combined history painting and romanticism. His most famous painting isThe Romans in their Decadence (1847), an enormous canvas, almost five meters by eight meters, crowded with scenes of decadence. He was a teacher at theEcole des Beaux-Arts, and, like Gleyre, he taught a number of famous later painters, includingÉdouard Manet,Henri Fantin-Latour, andPierre Puvis de Chavannes. In the center is a reclining woman with a look of despair, surrounded by all the possible vices of Rome, encircled by statues of ancient Roman heroes recalling the more virtuous classical age.[7]
The major sculptor of the romantic movement in France wasFrançois Rude (1784–1855). His best-known work isThe Departure of the Volunteers on the facade of theArc de Triomphe in Paris (1833–36), made at the peak of the romantic movement, with its vivid depiction of the passion and fury of the volunteers setting out from Paris in 1792 go defend theFrench Revolution. The model for the figure of the Genius of War, above the others with wings spread, sword pointed forward and arm raised, was Rude's wife, the painterSophie Frémiet.[8]
Another notable romantic work by Rude later in the period wasNapeoleon awakening into immortality (1845–47). Napoleon, in his uniform with a crown of laurels, is emerging from his shroud and seems to be floating upwards, above a rocky pedestal and the body of an eagle.[9]
In 1802François-René de Chateaubriand, at the age of thirty-four, publishedThe Genius of Christianity, describing the role that religion should play in politics, literature, and the arts. Following its success, Napoleon named him secretary of his Embassy in Rome. He achieved another literary success in 1809 with his novelLes Martyrs. His work had a major influence on the generation of writers who followed him.
In 1848 romantic literature reached a high point with the publication of the novelLa Dame aux Camélias byAlexandre Dumas fils. The novel became an immensely successful play, and then was transformed into one of the most successful operas of all time,La Traviata, byGiuseppe Verdi (1853).
Prosper Mérimée was another important figure in the romantic movement. His romantic novella,Carmen, published in 1845, was transformed byBizet into ahighly successful opera.
Romantic poetry was dominated by the work of four poets;Alphonse de Lamartine,Alfred de Vigny,Victor Hugo, andAlfred de Musset. The period of romantic poetry reached its peak in the 1840s, and the death of Victor Hugo in 1885 is often considered the end of the movement in poetry.[10] However, it was carried on by others, particularlyCharles Baudelaire,Théophile Gautier,Gérard de Nerval, andPaul Verlaine until the end of the century.[11]
In defining romanticism, the poetAlfred de Musset stated: "Romanticism is the star which weeps, the wind which cries out, the night which shivers, the flower which gives its scent, the bird which flies...It is the infinite and the starry, the warmth, the broken, the sober, and yet at the same time the plain and the round, the diamond-shaped, the pyramidal, the vivid, the restrained, the embraced, the turbulent."[12]

Victor Hugo was the first major figure in French romantic theater. His playHernani, which premiered on 23 February 1830 at theThéatre-Français in Paris, a few months before the overthrow of theCharles X of France and the Bourbon monarchy, was a sort of manifesto of romanticism. It was seen as a direct attack at the formal classicism of French theater. There were fights inside the theater, as more conservative playgoers jeered the performance. The play was later made into a successful opera,Ernani, byVerdi. However, Hugo's career as a romantic playwright did not last long; his next work, another historical playLes Burgraves, which premiered on 22 April 1843, was a dismal failure, and Hugo abandoned playwrighting entirely. The Paris theater turned instead to historical dramas, such asLa Reine Margot byAlexandre Dumas, which premiered on 19 February 1847.[13]
Hector Berlioz was the best-known French romantic composer. His major works included theSymphonie fantastique andHarold in Italy, choral pieces including theRequiem andL'enfance du Christ, and three operas:Benvenuto Cellini,Les Troyens andBéatrice et Bénédict, a "dramatic symphony"Roméo et Juliette and the "dramatic legend"La damnation de Faust.[14]
Another important figure in French romanticism wasCharles Gounod, best known today for his operasFaust andRomeo and Juliet and his arrangement ofAve Maria based on a melody by Bach.
French music was enriched by the presence of some of the most important romantic composers.Frederic Chopin moved to Paris in 1830, at the age of 20, and lived and composed there until his death in 1849.
Beginning in 1824,Gioachino Rossini lived and composed in Paris; he created a series of operas, includingThe Siege of Corinth and the operaWilliam Tell, with itsfamous overture, which premiered on August 3, 1829 at the Royal Academy of Music, It was not a popular success, and Rossini retired from writing operas, though he lived another forty years.[15]
The ComposersVincenzo Bellini,Gaetano Donizetti,Franz Liszt,Giuseppe Verdi andRichard Wagner all spent time in Paris during the romantic period, composing, influencing and being influenced by its music.[16]
Romantic ballet first appeared in Paris in the 1820s, developed by the company and school of theParis Opera Ballet, and performed at theSalle Le Peletier One landmark event was the 1832 début in Paris of the ballerinaMarie Taglioni in a new balletLa Sylphide, followed byGiselle (1841),Paquita (1846),Le Corsaire (1856),Le papillon (1860),La source (1866), andCoppélia (1870).[17]
Other celebrated dancers of romantic ballet includedCarlotta Grisi, the firstGiselle, andCarolina Rosati, who originated the role of Medora inLe Corsaire (1856). Famous male dancers includedLucien Petipa, who created the role of Count Albrecht inGiselle. From 1860 to 1868, he was ballet master of the Paris Opera Ballet. His brother Marius Petipa, also a dancer, became the ballet master of theImperial Ballet inSt. Petersburg, and created a series of romantic ballets, includingLa Bayadère (1877); andThe Sleeping Beauty (1890).
The Romantic ballet gave prominence to the ballerina, where previously the male dancers had been the stars, and introduced thePointe technique, with ballerinas on their toes, seeming to float across the stage, as well as the use of thetutu as a performance costume. Other innovations of Romantic ballet included a separate identity of the scenarist or author from thechoreographer, and the use of specially written music by one composer rather than a pastiche of works by several composers. The invention ofgas lighting also enhanced the atmosphere of the romantic ballet; it allowed gradual changes of lighting and a sense of mystery. Various other stage devices and illusions were introduced in romantic ballet, including the use of trap doors and wires to make it appear that the dancers could fly.[18]
Romantic architecture in France was highly eclectic, drawing upon earlier periods, particularlyGothic architecture, exotic styles, or upon literature and the imagination.
A celebrated early example is theHameau de la Reine created for QueenMarie-Antoinette in the park of thePalace of Versailles between 1783 and 1785. It was designed by the royal architectRichard Mique with the help of the romantic painterHubert Robert. It consisted of twelve structures, ten of which still exist, in the style of villages inNormandy. It was designed for the Queen and her friends to amuse themselves by playing peasants, and included a farmhouse with a dairy, a mill, a boudoir, a pigeon loft, a tower in the form of a lighthouse from which one could fish in the pond, a belvedere, a cascade and grotto, and a luxuriously furnished cottage with a billiard room for the Queen.[19]
The writerFrançois-René de Chateaubriand (1768–1848) played an important part in the popularity of romantic architecture. In his writings, includingThe Genius of Christianity, (1802) he attacked what he considered the materialism of the Enlightenment, and called for a return to the Christian values of earlier years, through the religious feelings inspired byGothic architecture. He described the Gothic style as the native architecture of France, comparable to the role played the forests in the pagan religion of theGauls.[20]
The revival of the Gothic style was also greatly enhanced by immense popularity of the novelNotre Dame de Paris byVictor Hugo, published in 1821. That led to a movement for the restoration of the Cathedral, and to the creation in 1837 of a commission of Historic Monuments, headed byProsper Mérimée, who was himself the author of popular novellas and stories in the romantic style. Restoration was first begun of the crumbling chapel ofSainte-Chapelle and then, between 1845 and 1850, of the battered cathedral ofNotre-Dame de Paris, which had been semi-ruined and stripped of its decoration. The restoration was carried out by the youngEugène Viollet-le-Duc (1834–1879) and Jean-Batpiste-Antoine Lapsus (1807–1857).
Movement for a Gothic revival led to the construction of the first neo-Gothic church in Paris, the basilica ofSainte-Clothilde, begun in 1845 by architects Christian Gau and Thédore Ballu. The new church had two towers and a purely Gothic nave and apse, with an abundance of sculpture and stained glass, but was slightly more linear and streamlined, following the classical tendency. Nonetheless, the project was harshly judged by the rigorously neoclassical faculty of theEcole des Beaux-Arts, who denounced it as "plagiarism" and "false Gothic."[21]
A notable shift in French official architecture took place in the 1830s, with a change in the direction of the Academy of Fine Arts. The devoted classicistQuatremère de Quincy departed, and the Academy turned toItalian Renaissance architecture as the new model. Major examples included theSainte-Geneviève Library, Paris byHenri Labrouste (1844–1850), with its pure Renaissance facade. Labrouste designed the interior of this library and of the reading room of theNational Library of France with an innovative use of new materials: he employed cast iron columns and arches, combined with simplified Renaissance decorative motifs, to create large and elegant open spaces with abundance of natural light. Italian Renaissance architecture, combined with modern materials, was also adopted for use in the new train stations constructed in Paris, particularly in theGare de l'Est byFrançois Duquesnoy[22]
Later in the 19th century, Some architects sought more exotic sources.Byzantine architecture was the inspiration for French some buildings in the late 19th century, notably the domes of the church ofSacré-Cœur, Paris begun byPaul Abadie (1874–1905). Marseille is home to two remarkable romantic churches, theMarseille Cathedral (1852–1896), in a Romanesque-Byzantine style, andNotre-Dame de la Garde, consecrated in 1864.