From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A cultural movement is a change in the way a
number of different disciplines approach their work. This embodies
all art forms, the sciences, and philosophies. Historically, different
nations or regions of the world have gone through their own
independent sequence of movements in culture, but as world
communications have accelerated this geographical distinction has
become less distinct. When cultural movements go through
revolutions from one to the next, genres tend to get attacked and
mixed up, and often new genres are generated and old ones fade.
These changes are often reactions against the prior cultural form,
which typically has grown stale and repetitive. An obsession
emerges among the mainstream with the new movement, and the old one
falls into neglect - sometimes it dies out entirely, but often it
chugs along favored in a few disciplines and occasionally making
reappearances (sometimes prefixed with "neo-").
There is continual argument over the precise definition of each
of these periods, and one historian might group them differently,
or choose different names or descriptions. As well, even though in
many cases the popular change from one to the next can be swift and
sudden, the beginning and end of movements are somewhat subjective,
as the movements did not spring fresh into existence out of the
blue and did not come to an abrupt end and lose total support, as
would be suggested by a date range. Thus use of the term "period"
is somewhat deceptive. "Period" also suggests a linearity of
development, whereas it has not been uncommon for two or more
distinctive cultural approaches to be active at the same time.
Historians will be able to find distinctive traces of a cultural
movement before its accepted beginning, and there will always be
new creations in old forms. So it can be more useful to think in
terms of broad "movements" that have rough beginnings and endings.
Yet for historical perspective, some rough date ranges will be
provided for each to indicate the "height" or accepted timespan of
the movement.
Cultural
movements
- Graeco-Roman
- The Greek
culture marked a departure from the other Mediterranean cultures
that preceded and surrounded it. The Romans adopted Greek and other styles, and
spread the result throughout Europe and the Middle East. Together, Greek and Roman
thought in philosophy, religion, science, history, and all forms of
thought can be viewed as a central underpinning of Western
culture, and is therefore termed the "Classical period" by
some. Others might divide it into the Hellenistic period and
the Roman period, or might choose other finer divisions.
-
- See: Classical architecture — Classical
sculpture — Greek
architecture — Hellenistic architecture — Ionic — Doric — Corinthian —
Stoicism — Cynicism — Epicurean — Roman
architecture — Early Christian —
Neoplatonism
- Romanesque
(11th century & 12th centuries)
- A style (esp. architectural) similar in form and materials to
Roman styles. Romanesque seems to be the first pan-European style
since Roman Imperial Architecture and examples are found in every
part of the continent.
-
- See: Romanesque architecture — Ottonian Art
- Gothic (mid 12th
cy until mid 15th cy)
-
- See: Gothic architecture — Gregorian chant
— Neoplatonism
- Nominalism
- Rejects Platonic realism as a requirement for
thinking and speaking in general terms.
- Humanism (1500s)
- Renaissance
- The use of light, shadow, and perspective to more accurately
represent life. Because of how fundamentally these ideas were felt
to alter so much of life, some have referred to it as the "Golden
Age". In reality it was less an "Age" and more of a movement in
popular philosophy, science, and thought that spread over Europe
(and probably other parts of the world), over time, and affected
different aspects of culture at different points in time. Very
roughly, the following periods can be taken as indicative of
place/time foci of the Renaissance: Italian Renaissance 1450–1550. Spanish
Renaissance 1550-1587. English Renaissance 1588–1629.
- Mannerism
- Anti-classicist movement that sought to emphasize the feeling
of the artist himself.
- See: Mannerism/Art
- Baroque
- Emphasizes power and authority, characterized by intricate
detail and without the "disturbing angst" of Mannerism. Essentially
is exaggerated Classicism to promote and glorify the Church
and State. Occupied with notions of infinity.
- See: Baroque art — Baroque music
- Rococo
- Neoclassical
(17th–19th centuries)
- Severe, unemotional movement recalling Roman and Greek
("classical") style, reacting against the overbred Rococo style and
the emotional Baroque style. It stimulated revival of classical
thinking, and had especially profound effects on science and
politics. Also had a direct influence on Academic Art in the 1800s. Beginning in
the early 1600s with Cartesian thought (see René
Descartes), this movement provided philosophical frameworks for
the natural sciences, sought to determine the principles of
knowledge by rejecting all things previously believed to be known
about the world. In Renaissance
Classicism attempts are made to recreate the classic artforms —
tragedy, comedy, and farce.
- See also: Weimar Classicism
- Age of Enlightenment (1688-1789):
Reason (rationalism)
seen as the ideal.
- Romanticism
(1770–1830)
- Began in Germany and spread to England and France as a reaction
against Neoclassicism and against the Age of Enlightenment.. The
notion of "folk genius", or an inborn and intuitive ability to do
magnificent things, is a core principle of the Romantic movement.
Nostalgia for the primitive past in preference to the
scientifically minded present. Romantic heroes, exemplified by
Napoleon, are popular. Fascination with the past leads to a
resurrection of interest in the Gothic period. It did not really
replace the Neoclassical movement so much as provide a
counterbalance; many artists sought to join both styles in their
works.
- See: Symbolism
- Realism
(1830–1905)
- Art Nouveau
(1880–1905)
- Modernism
(1880–1965)
- Postmodernism (since c.1965)
- Post-postmodernism (since
c.1990)
See also
External
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