Realism in Art Key Characteristics 1 Disenchanted with










- Slides: 10
Realism in Art Key Characteristics 1. Disenchanted with Romanticism 2. Focused on the daily concerns of real people such as workers and peasants. 3. Criticized the cruelty of industrial life and the greed and insensitivity of the wealthy.
Gustave Courbet The Stone Breakers
Gustave Courbet The Stone Breakers This is realism in art because it focuses on the cruelty of industrial life.
Honore Daumier The Third Class Carriage
Honore Daumier The Third Class Carriage This is realism because it depicts the daily concerns of workers and peasants and also shows the insensitivity of the wealthy.
Edouard Manet Olympia
Edouard Manet Olympia is a painting of a reclining nude woman, attended by a maid and a black cat, gazing mysteriously at the viewer. Why were visitors to the Paris gallery, already quite familiar with art featuring the naked body, so outraged by the painting that the gallery was forced to hire two policemen to protect the canvas? The objections to Olympia had more to do with the realism of the subject matter than the fact that the model was nude. While Olympia's pose had classic precedents, the subject of the painting represented a prostitute. In the painting, the maid offers the courtesan a bouquet of flowers, presumably a gift from a client, not the sort of scene previously depicted in the art of the era. Viewers weren't sure of Manet's motives. Was he trying to produce a serious work of art? Was Olympia an attempt to parody other paintings? Or, worst of all, was he mocking them?
Leading Realist Authors Charles Dickens, Hard Times Gustave Flaubert, Madame Bovary Henrik Ibsen, A Doll’s House Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Crime and Punishment Edouard Manet’s painting of Emile Zola was responsible for turning realism into a literary movement. Zola published twenty novels that explored subjects not ordinarily treated in literature, including alcoholism, prostitution, and the problems of organizing labor.
Henrik Ibsen In Henrik Ibsen’s play, A Doll’s House, he carries realism into a presentation of domestic life. Its chief character, Nora, has a narrowminded husband who cannot tolerate independence of character or thought on her part. She finally leaves him, slamming the door behind her.
Fyodor Dostoyevsky Crime and Punishment This Russian story is about Rodion Romanivich and the internal moral struggle he faced after he committed a crime. It is an example of realism in literature because it focused on the daily concerns of real people such as workers and peasants.