The Humanistic Tradition, Book 5 Romanticism, Realism, and the Nineteenth-Century World

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Painting in the Late
Nineteenth Century

Science and Technology


116 CHAPTER 31 The Move Toward Modernism

116 Book5


engulf the listener in a nebulous flood of sound that calls
to mind the shimmering effects of light on water and the
ebb and flow of ocean waves. Indeed, water—a favorite
subject of Impressionist painters—is the subject of many
of Debussy’s orchestral sketches, such asGardens in the
Rain(1903), Image: Reflections in the Water(1905), and
The Sea(1905).

Symbolism

In the visual arts, Symbolists gave emphasis to the simpli-
fication of line, arbitrary color, and expressive, flattened
form. The Chosen One(Figure 31.3) by the Swiss artist
Ferdinand Hodler (1853–1918) employs these features in
depicting a young male child surrounded by a circle of
angelic figures. The painting does not represent a specific
event; rather, it suggests a mysterious and unnamed rite
of passage. Symbolist emphasis on suggestion rather than
depiction constituted a move in the direction of Modernist
Abstraction and Expressionism (see chapters 32 and 33
respectively).

Impressionism

The nineteenth-century art style that captured most
fully the intuitive realm of experience, and thus, closely
paralleled the aesthetic ideals of Bergson, Mallarmé, and

charged gestures and by dancing portions of the ballet bare-
foot. He outraged critics who attacked the ballet for its “vile
movements of erotic bestiality and gestures of extreme
shamelessness.”
Debussy had little use for the ponderous orchestras of
the French and German romantics. He scored the Prelude
for a small orchestra whose predominantly wind and brass
instruments might recreate Mallarmé’s delicate mood of
reverie. A sensuous melody for unaccompanied flute pro-
vides the composition’s opening theme, which is then
developed by flutes, oboes, and clarinets. Harp, triangle,
muted horns, and lightly brushed cymbals contribute
luminous tonal textures that—like the images of the
poem itself—seem based in pure sensation. Transitions
are subtle, and melodies seem to drift without resolution.
Shifting harmonies with no clearly defined tonal center

Figure 31.3 FERDINAND HODLER, The Chosen One, 1893–1894. Tempera and oil on canvas, 7 ft. 3^1 ⁄ 2 in.  9 ft. 10^1 ⁄ 2 in.
Six angelic figures float above the ground on which a nude boy sits before a barren tree. While the images suggest
renewal and rejuvenation, no clear narrative attaches to the scene.

1841 John G. Rand invents the collapsible metal paint
tube
1879 Edison produces the incandescent light bulb
1889 Edison invents equipment to take and show moving
pictures
1898 Wilhelm C. Röntgen (German) discovers X-rays

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