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"romanticism" Definitions
  1. (also Romanticism) a style and movement in art, music and literature in the late 18th and early 19th century, in which strong feelings, imagination and a return to nature were more important than reason, order and intellectual ideas compare realism
  2. the fact of seeing people, events and situations as more exciting and interesting than they really are
  3. strong feelings of love; the fact of showing emotion, love, etc.

455 Sentences With "romanticism"

How to use romanticism in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "romanticism" and check conjugation/comparative form for "romanticism". Mastering all the usages of "romanticism" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Rachmaninoff and Mahler meet somewhere at the juncture of late Romanticism and post-Romanticism, styles in which the Philadelphians excelled through the 20th century.
But what would American poetry look like if it had followed not the better-known poetics of British Romanticism but the theoretical foundations of early German Romanticism?
Weaving dreamy landscapes with nymphic animals tucked away in forests, multi-media artist Andy Kehoe's latest collection of paintings titled Fantastical Romanticism at Jonathan LeVine Gallery spins the Romanticism tradition.
His lush paintings make you feel Romanticism in your guts.
His melodic lines soared above a sea of dreamy romanticism.
Mixed in with all of that is the aesthetics of Romanticism.
There's a certain kind of romanticism about these women reproducing whiteness.
Romanticism, animated by an Arcadian fantasia of Grecian urns, Elvan forests,
Like a romanticism attached to addiction and struggles with mental health.
Power through street brawls is the stuff of left-wing romanticism.
Romanticism has been unhelpful to us; it is a harsh philosophy.
It had romanticism, fluidity, trans-seasonality and a good color palette.
Any romanticism or mysticism about space was out of the question.
I think it's good to maintain some of that irrational romanticism.
The series has a touch of golden-hued Cameron Crowe romanticism.
Some collections bowed to an unbridled romanticism that bordered on decadence.
Most sad stories of love in our culture express disappointed romanticism.
We were more coming from British new wave and New Romanticism.
Instead, Eilish's maudlin romanticism seizes the garish out of sheer joy.
Noisey: There is a romanticism about Laurel Canyon but also some normality.
But he brought up a good point of hetero and homo romanticism.
We discuss Romanticism, Transcendentalism, and Austin's slashfic about Peter Parker and Darcy.
Storytelling and romanticism are closely linked—sisters in narrative, if you will.
Text posters by Ms. Rasheed cut Rockwellian romanticism with street-smart humor.
Pragmatists have their own kind of romanticism, cynics their own kind of naïveté.
I express the collision of my contradictions: romanticism encased in sadomasochism, for example.
It molded our romanticism for high school love affairs and the awkward kiss.
One that only exists in denial, or only in conversation with hetero romanticism.
The romanticism that colored Seeger's experience of life extended to the war itself.
She said that the practice of culling from the past began with Romanticism.
All that lends a romanticism to baseball that maybe some sports don't have.
His lectures and books imbue the everyday with a new sense of romanticism.
There's also the Route 66 romanticism many older Americans still have with the automobile.
But Sales doesn't probe Ethan's odd and possibly illuminating mixture of bravado and romanticism.
"I started this collection with the idea of romanticism as a strength," he explains.
"Mayerling" shows an uncannily profound sense of the morbid heart of 19th-century Romanticism.
At others he explains it away, ascribing it to out-of-fashion Byronic romanticism.
Below the movie's screwball shenanigans is a core of romanticism signaled in its soundtrack.
"I was tired of romanticism," Mr. Frank said of the book, published in 1959.
I think we each just got caught up in the romanticism of it all.
This project challenges the sentimentality and conquest of space, but it's not without romanticism.
As opposed to when tragedy happens to us normals – there's no sense there, no romanticism.
Much like Savannah, Florida's own St. Augustine is often excluded from the conversation regarding romanticism.
Stylistically, Milosz distrusted verbal excess, high Romanticism, pure poetry, which was cut off from life.
David Zinn's terrific scenic design embraces the play's dual impulses: nostalgic romanticism and haimish realism.
But in the defeated lovers, Zenobia and Arsace, Mr. Crutchfield sees a prototype of Romanticism.
Some, such as John Adams, are depicted as market-oriented artists peddling nostalgic neo-Romanticism.
Yet one evening in a smoky local casino cured any romanticism I might have had.
His work is deeply romantic, reminiscent of a time when romanticism was nationalism's lingua franca.
You might find this far from Romanticism, but Chopin makes overtones feel physical, even sensual.
Gone is the nationalism — even much of the Romanticism — that courses through Berlioz's grand opera.
Emilia's father, more prone to romanticism than bookkeeping, has left the shop's finances a mess.
I don't think it has the grandeur or elegance of gothic romanticism, it's not supposed to.
There is more room for romanticism, and the margin for error is wider than a concert.
Romanticism can be defined as the prioritization of emotional expression in art over nearly everything else.
Where Lana likes a Lolita-esque take on innocent sexuality in her songs, BØRNS prefers romanticism.
This crusty romanticism is somehow held in — it's just not cool to be outright about it.
The romanticism of internet culture as a whole burns in the flames of his sardonic contempt.
It's likely that they were drawn to the simultaneous romanticism, challenge, and folly of doing so.
I think there's often a kind of crypto-misogyny at work in that kind of romanticism.
There's a certain romanticism to me about being murdered by a woman, I don't know why.
Add to that romanticism the influence of Southern writers and you get a tinge of gothic.
Heroism, romanticism, the singular designer — these are not the preoccupations of architecture and design history now.
Queer artist Leigh Bowery defined New Romanticism and the look of gay culture in 1980s London.
But the swooning romanticism that frames the beginning of Luke and Offred's relationship lacks psychological complexity.
"People do watercolors, but not the extreme romanticism that his work has," Mr. Rhys Morgan said.
That we say romanticism is not a useful way to distinguish a certain kind of love.
But it's also tied to a sense of nostalgia and romanticism that I don't find very healthy.
With their idealized male bodies and often large formats, his paintings represented what he called 'Social Romanticism.
It is that rare book on addiction: neither preaching nor self-loathing, lapsing only occasionally into romanticism.
Because apparently we didn't get our full fill of awkwardness and misplaced romanticism the first time round.
These images are from her work in progress exploring the idealism and romanticism that surrounds these places.
The Quixote-like romanticism and innocence on display here would be cute if it weren't so disturbing.
But romanticism is not always the happiest bedfellow to essay-writing, particularly when it veers into sentimentality.
But all of this small-business romanticism would be for nothing if the final product wasn't good.
The tradition goes back, outside ballet, to aspects of 19th-century Romanticism: the belle dame sans merci.
Perhaps there is a more mature, adaptive romanticism than the version that Mr. de Botton rightly critiques.
Lurking deep within me, he said, was a dark romanticism, the same kind he saw within himself.
Some listeners may by inclined to enjoy Bach's animated Baroque style much more than Brahms's teeming Romanticism.
They steer us away from romanticism, warning that history is not all Corinthian columns and copper domes.
Serious Soviet music brought together Tchaikovsky's lugubrious Romanticism, Pioneer marches, a little Beethoven, folk song strains, tunelets.
Arca was for the freaks, but his romanticism shone through the noise like a lighthouse through fog.
It's a song that breaks every songwriting rule, and its cloying romanticism all but verboten in punk.
These postcards, which were manufactured as souvenirs for tourists, drench Germany with a kind of enchanted romanticism.
While the literary culture moved on from Romanticism, our broader cultural conception of the "artist" really hasn't.
"Her photographs are infused with romanticism, darkness, intimacy, and a certain lyrical quality," van Ree's Facebook page declares.
That romanticism comes to a halt when they finally reach Nick's motel room, which is messy and dodgy.
Those who relish extreme Romanticism with a smirk and a twinkle in the eye have the right idea.
"I think romanticism for [Tormund] would be eating meat in a cold tent with a fire," he said.
It's all still amusing, and the notes of strangled romanticism and just-perceptible nobility are still in place.
The young artist's confident gaze, tinged with earnestness, reflect a disciplined romanticism that would propel Krasner for decades.
Mr. Kerr traveled to Berlin regularly, curious about the influence of German Romanticism on the country's legal philosophy.
Notre-Dame, beyond its religious significance, embodies a certain starry-eyed romanticism of the international vision of Paris.
Full of bad haircuts, perfectly posed group shots, and unsentimental romanticism, the photos are nostalgia at its best.
Remarkably, he has turned to making pictures redolent of the mystical engagement with nature that characterizes German Romanticism.
That's striking because, for all its romanticism, the movie reads as a pessimistic take on heterosexual romantic relationships.
It was an ironic turn: this balletic child of revolution and Romanticism was now rescaled to imperial grandeur.
The idea "appeals to our romanticism," said Donald Berry, a statistician at MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.
It's got art, it's got Romanticism, it's got religious parody and, yes that's right folks, it's got dick jokes.
But taken together, they tell the story of how artists (mainly, French) moved from Romanticism to Realism to Modernism.
So maybe that takes a little bit of the romanticism out of the cycling, but that's how it is.
The 19th-century dislike of Romanticism is the rage of Caliban not seeing his own face in a glass.
"Lust to Love" celebrated a woman's anti-romanticism: "Love me and I'll leave you," the narrator warns her mate.
British painting styles, including Realism and Romanticism, had a large influence on the development of art in the country.
André de Jong's choreography is deliberately generic; and yet the ballet Romanticism of that scene shows Procida's yearning soul.
The period detail is impressive, but there's no romanticism for dirty old New York or easy-in-hindsight superiority.
Verdi's "Macbeth" (1847) is savage Italian blood and guts, a product of bel canto's discovery of full-bodied Romanticism.
There were many paintings and sculptures made in the style of Scientific Romanticism, which was influenced by Greek mythology.
A lethal combination of Hollywood sentimentality, Victorian romanticism and bridal-magazine kitsch has placed an impossible burden on love.
There is a certain pastoral romanticism to these performances — the gurgling streams, the birds, the music, the aerial ballet.
The Mariinsky Ballet has been variously known as the wellspring of ballet classicism and the finest home of ballet romanticism.
Romanticism is best indulged occasionally, just often enough for some healthy fun, and this irresistibly dislikable album scratches the itch.
Unlike some of Teen Suicide's earlier stuff, there's no real nostalgia or depressive romanticism to be found on Joyous Celebration.
A kind of romanticism, a back to nature, but guarded, perhaps subconsciously influenced by close-up photos in nature magazines.
Tributes to Tinseltown and Broadway, such as "La La Land", often focus on the glamour and romanticism of it all.
Landscape Painting Now: From Pop Abstraction to New Romanticism by Barry Schwabsky is available from Amazon and other online booksellers.
I'm not interested in an entranced romanticizing of nature, as was the case in historical Romanticism in art, for example.
Artists painted out of doors; the romanticism of nature was meant to evoke a feeling of otherworldliness and the sublime.
At Foxy Production, Srijon Chowdhury, Gina Beavers and Sascha Braunig offer reinventions of Gothic romanticism, surrealism, Op or Pop Art.
The words are a folk version of romance, while the music seems to be a pretty parlor reduction of Romanticism.
Nevertheless, he wrote his doctoral thesis on Romanticism and adapted and published it as his first book, "Shelley's Mythmaking" (1959).
" Hale dismisses this as naïve romanticism that ignores the inconvenient fact that nature is also "nasty and horrible and cruel.
His verses gave dignity and voice to the disenfranchised, and he is beloved for his romanticism and sense of humor.
From Buddhism and Romanticism we can get a fuller picture of what such a good enough world could be like.
Mr. Elsaesser was hired by the University of East Anglia in 20143 and taught European Romanticism and literary modernism there.
Alongside was a "Kitchen Sink" social realism popular in the UK, as well as the more florid, lyrical neo-romanticism.
But unlike Giger's alien aesthetic, Fernandez's achievement is a reinvention of romanticism, where the performative and the ingenious seem curiously intertwined.
Hablik's career as a painter illustrates the rapid shifts of his generation in Germany, from Romanticism to German Expressionism and beyond.
At a critical moment, Hablik transposed the ideals of German Romanticism to proto-Space Age fetishism for a utopian, technological society.
And there is an abstraction of good plain fields of glowing color, with a few curvy flourishes, close to romanticism again.
She also possesses a strange, beautiful romanticism that sweeps through the show like a motif broken loose from a Tchaikovsky symphony.
Next, we have the signs that return to their exes out of pure romanticism — Taurus and Libra, this one's for you.
Oriental Romanticism was, obviously, a wishful and gross distortion of reality and remains a bane to true understanding of Eastern cultures.
The third, "New Romanticism," concentrates on painting rooted in history, folk tradition and other subtexts, the signature artist being Anselm Kiefer.
Both write themes but don't capitulate on them or use romanticism to elevate their worlds beyond what's seen on the screen.
Herzog is a Romantic by allegiance—the author of a book on Romanticism, at work on a second—and by inclination.
Yet there remains a current of romanticism for those old times, before bullshit and money made the world into a playground.
A desire for unhinged indulgence in romanticism, and reluctant tempering with realism, couch so much of Wagner's work on this record.
It was frosted, sometimes too heavily, with moral dilemmas, light conundrums and the kind of romanticism associated with ancient British universities.
Despite that background, he says he is less cynical than the Pet Shop Boys expected; they learned to respect his romanticism.
Sometimes learning about what an artist ate humanises them, or else it adds to the romanticism and mythology of their lives.
There is something tiresome and incurious about the film's romanticism, which rests on the canard that girls aren't really into music.
That is romanticism, not the least because baseball is a grueling sport, and no career comes with a set expiry date.
"We couldn't teach him anything more," said M.H. Abrams, the eminent critic and scholar of Romanticism who was Professor Bloom's adviser.
Prokofiev's music is as wide-ranging as the story itself, careening from lush romanticism to crunchy modernism to comical sound effects.
I know how that sounds: at best like an aspiration dressed up as a hypothesis, at worst like woolly-headed romanticism.
But his social-political allegiance was to non-Nazi nationalist ideals that jibed with a conservative romanticism striving for cultural renewal.
Roxy Music never lost the vital parts of their character: an intense romanticism, a devotion to aesthetics, a willingness to confound expectation.
His lush paintings make you feel Romanticism in your guts, offering an antidote to some of today's more bloodless, blandly cerebral art.
But because of their romanticism and desire for another savior from across the Atlantic, the Germans allowed themselves to be taken in.
When you shake through the arguments, it becomes clear that the driving force keeping cursive alive is really just nostalgia and romanticism.
Yet, after three decades of Amtrak trips, I still genuinely enjoyed it, so I concluded that my romanticism wasn't entirely self-delusion.
That stylistic fusion came to be known as National Romanticism and culminated in Saarinen's 1904 design for the Helsinki central rail terminal.
The cynical romanticism of noir and the cosmic mind games of speculative sci-fi are a tricky and not always successful blend.
This Spanish pianist has the attentive delivery and dramatic flourish of a flamenco guitarist, but his harmonic language is suffused with Romanticism.
The quirks of Beaton's personality — his cultivation of enemies and frustrated romanticism, among them — are finally not as interesting as his work.
"'Caramel' has an optimism born not of dreamy romanticism but of resilience and a degree of hardheadedness," Mr. Scott wrote in 2008.
By keeping the music in the original language and style, the contrast between American ambience and classic Romanticism made a powerful impact.
Most accounts of the first Thanksgiving reflect the perspective of the English settlers, mixed with more modern strains of romanticism and commercialism.
Those who circled back to the Sueños LP were rewarded with an optimized fusion of R&B romanticism and dembow-laden groove.
Mr. Roth took the decadent route through this latest of late Romanticism, with glamour in the sound and a certain pathos throughout.
But on its own, much of Mr. McBurney's script still has an old-fashioned romanticism, idealizing the elemental pureness of a Rousseauvian world.
Before that, Wills suggests, Ginsberg seemed to regard anything more than trips between New Jersey and New York with thin romanticism and fear.
What is really important to me is to make sure that the human connection and romanticism are celebrated when that content is shared.
Their melodies tend grand, their mood bittersweet, the romanticism accentuated by their nasal, amateurish vocal inflections, which you can bet get romanticized too.
In the first half, the story that Gay and Gerald weave has a kind of romanticism to it, where nothing's gone sour yet.
The people of FORM were invested in a certain imaginative romanticism, a notion of what "could be" with enough intention and thoughtful action.
But every gesture of midcentury Romanticism in "The Girl From Venice" is a received one, repackaged and presented as the most profound wisdom.
Movies like Hackers and even Fight Club indulged in a sexy-apocalyptic romanticism because that's exactly what the 1990s were all about: indulgence.
Indeed, Shchukin's first purchases were creditable but benign, including a whiff of Romanticism: a lakeside enchanted castle by the Scottish painter James Paterson.
At some train stations, a cold bench would be a prize, but not in Union Station, which reveals the romanticism of rail travel.
Hazy, poetic and spilling over with aching romanticism, "The Souvenir" exposes the raw nerve of the kind of desperate love that changes lives.
Here it was recast for a small ensemble and a black, billowing cloud of a choir, an ominous drone with tinges of Romanticism.
After a brief stint as a scholar and professor of French Romanticism, Mr. Villas (pronounced VILL-as) switched careers in his early 30s.
Like the powerful symphony that brought Price national attention, the concerto draws together African-American folk music and spirituals with a silvery Romanticism.
Also included is Sibelius's "Kullervo," a symphonic poem that established the composer as the voice of National Romanticism in the late 221th century.
Splashes of Post-Impressionism (Cézanne nature scenes), Romanticism (dark landscapes from Gericault) and sculpture (a disfigured torso by Rodin) round out the mix.
His performances, while unfailingly musical and dramatic, were emblematic of the 20th century's dismissal of Romanticism in their authenticist strivings and deconstructive idiosyncrasies.
The turn of the nineteenth century is often described as the dawn of Romanticism, the movement in the arts that so enthralled Europe.
Castillo's work investigates the role of 'tropical romanticism' in Caribbean identity and representation, both homegrown and through the lens of the tourism industry.
Tim Rollins & K.O.S.'s "Metamorphosen (after Richard Strauss) #1" (2008), an ink-splattered sheet of score paper, delves empathetically into late Viennese Romanticism.
For IDM and Romanticism alike, it was a question of rhythm before it was a question of the revolution they wanted to spark.
We deserve true apocalypse pop or its polar opposite — the brain-pickling earnest romanticism of Carly Rae Jepsen's latest offering — and nothing in between.
For all the shock value of the trippy movie, Antibirth's most subversive move is to knock pregnancy off its pedestal of sentimentality and romanticism.
In post-World War I France, Les Six, which included Milhaud and Poulenc, represented an alternative to both German late Romanticism and French Impressionism.
But this enabled me to develop a pure affection for the franchise, not one based on nostalgia or romanticism—I just genuinely dug it.
Ever since jettisoning the fuzzy romanticism of his previous project Happy Trendy, Canadian producer Dylan Khotin-Foote has been exploring territories far more frigid.
Rise and Fall attempts to retcon other cultures, worldviews and, values into a story that's always been shot-through with nationalist and colonial romanticism.
Flaubert, writing a century earlier, had been looking for an alternative to Romanticism, a tendency he defined as broadly as Yvor Winters later did.
The seventies and eighties saw the gradual return of tonally based composition, in the form of minimalism, the New Simplicity, and the New Romanticism.
"L After L" finds him shirking romanticism ("Plenty time for love/ But for now fuck that"), and "Sino" draws on an old gambling habit.
The title evokes the musical era that preceded Romanticism, and this highly original movie has been denatured of romance or even obvious dramatic incident.
Death is only sexy when it's abstract: when it's part of a story happening to somebody else, imbued with a sense of misplaced romanticism.
As with so many classic works of Romanticism, Friedrich's image came to be co-opted by the Nazis as a symbol of national exceptionalism.
It becomes clear at this point that Fugazzi has reimagined one of the common chestnuts of painting, from Romanticism onwards, the sky at sunset.
Indeed, it is the lyricism and intimacy of his language, convincingly translated here by Alex Andriesse, that made Chateaubriand a precursor of French Romanticism.
Another striking development is the artist's judicious romanticism, as the landscapes track fluctuating light in sequential hours of the day and across varied seasons.
They then turned to Webern's "Langsamer Satz," a work that shows its 21-year-old composer steeped in late Romanticism but anticipating Expressionist angst.
Swimming against the tide of greatness is a counter-history of ethics embodied by schools of thought as diverse as Buddhism, Romanticism and psychoanalysis.
It was this romanticism that Durga Chew-Bose, in her collection of prose poems-cum-essays Too Much and Not the Mood, pushed back against.
TM Davy emphasizes Rand's romanticism with two portraits of an unclothed paramour named Liam, who is tenderly awash in blushed hues of red and pink.
This exhibition gazes upon and bolsters the dandy's deserved reputation as a discerning and witty art critic by demonstrating his relationship to life and Romanticism.
While the romanticism surrounding Christo and Jeanne-Claude's projects is strong — the love story (they even share a birthday!), the sumptuous billowing fabric, her hair!
The result is the presentation of acts anchored in tradition and place, without the veil of nostalgia, romanticism, or past pageantry smothering the art forms.
Scotland, especially since the high turnout for the 2014 independence referendum, has been described as a politically active country, often with a bit of romanticism.
At Milan Fashion Week that February, the Italian brand introduced a new creative director, Alessandro Michele, whose style was all about eccentricity, romanticism, and ruffles.
His heady combination of Romanticism and Realism — which helped lay the groundwork for Impressionism — was very popular with American collectors in the late 19th century.
Here, at last, is the romanticism that Strahan seeks — after a journey from science into the unknown that perhaps intentionally replicates the future to come.
I know that's heresy to many — it largely eschews the novel's comedic aspects in favor of swooning romanticism — but, dammit, I love a good swoon.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads The fact that much of contemporary American poetic practice is derived from British Romanticism should come as no surprise.
Even though the duo are musically opposite, Charly and Margaux complement each other, mixing together the viola's dark romanticism and the violin's colorful, upbeat vibe.
Despised as a royalist during the Revolution and forgotten about during the advent of Romanticism, Le Brun continued to be assailed during the 2200th century.
The combination of realism and romanticism makes the movie's 2019 Los Angeles a place you can imagine not only going to but wanting to visit.
He put into pragmatic operation the cooperative gesamtkunstwerk ideals that cantilevered out of German idealist and Neo-Platonic philosophy and 2180th-century cultural utopian Romanticism.
Working with the cinematographer David Tattersall, he concocts sequences that tilt and drift, awash in neon and a soundtrack that evokes a woozy, winking romanticism.
Where I had once interpreted Olivier's reticence as pessimism, I now saw the deep romanticism, the hopefulness, of not wanting to overstate or to overpromise.
Her early work, bursting out of the gate with a romanticism that ebbed with age, didn't quite resonate with the editors of science fiction magazines.
Frequently echoing phrasings from memes and social media conventions more generally, de Vries's language is a cross between chat-room brevity and Minecraft-inspired Romanticism.
Queiroz, a former Portugal and Real Madrid manager, said his team will play against his countrymen on a policy of three 'R's — respect, realism and romanticism.
That really started with things like Romanticism—books like The Confessions of an English Opium Eater by de Quincey, in the beginning of the 19th century.
This was before the turn of the millennium, a time when the romanticism of dusty Midwestern boredom was heavily used to turn tricks in alternative rock.
It's his most accomplished one yet, with the sweet romanticism and austere cool of new wave cut through with slashes of emotional, social and political sorrow.
Designed by Laura Ashley, the dress, like most of the British icon's clothing, blended a folksy craft aesthetic with the dreamy romanticism of the Pre-Raphaelites.
During San Francisco's postwar years, romanticism of this kind flourished as the city turned into a crucial testing ground for a new sort of urban mixing.
"Also, the promotional material for the Persia was beautifully designed and sold the romanticism of traveling to the east," Mr. Goodman wrote in an email interview.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads A rising tide of romanticism in contemporary art has galvanized a resurgence of what was once called Pattern and Decoration.
But because of its magnitude—and perhaps because of its proximity—New York City was not the focus of my youthful brand of postwar nativist romanticism.
Given that dance music is predominantly a singles based medium, do you think the kind of 'dispensability' inherent to that adds to the romanticism you mentioned?
The first full-dress retrospective in North America devoted to the enigmatic giant of French Romanticism is a revelation of nearly 57093 paintings, drawings and prints.
The first full-dress retrospective in North America devoted to the enigmatic giant of French Romanticism is a revelation of nearly 73133 paintings, drawings and prints.
The first full-dress retrospective in North America devoted to the enigmatic giant of French Romanticism is a revelation of nearly 73193 paintings, drawings and prints.
The focus was always on the romanticism of the flats when they were first built, the new buildings, the new opportunities, all that hope and promise.
Now, it's not impossible to combine the "here is why the characters sing" safety net of these musicals with the ultra-romanticism of old-school musicals.
A hint of an answer emerges in that moment: an artist of extravagant gifts, quiet bitterness and, when given the means to express it, generous romanticism.
The story's thinness is balanced by its stylishness, its broody romanticism and its charming leads, however, and it's likely to find a large and enthusiastic audience.
When he returns decades later, in true prodigal son fashion, she's still there to provide redemption, like some virginal angel — a cliché of 19th-century romanticism.
But it was during the neoclassical Romanticism and nation building of the 19th century that artistic depictions of the sack of Rome began to gain steam.
This taste for despair was part of both men's romanticism, and, in Hitler's case, directly responsible for the horrific last months of a war already lost.
The first full-dress retrospective in North America devoted to the enigmatic giant of French Romanticism is a revelation of nearly 21212 paintings, drawings and prints.
The first full-dress retrospective in North America devoted to the enigmatic giant of French Romanticism is a revelation of nearly 53563 paintings, drawings and prints.
The first full-dress retrospective in North America devoted to the enigmatic giant of French Romanticism is a revelation of nearly 150 paintings, drawings and prints.
With grit, provisions and a pretty coffee-table book about the island that suggests her romanticism, or perhaps naïveté, Rike is following Charles Darwin to Ascension.
Unlike her compositions — a lovable admixture of American folk songs, avant-garde jazz, soft rock and Romanticism — Bley, at age 82, remains a rather inaccessible figure.
Playing the two works side by side, Mr. Ax emphasized the wildness, even radicalism, of the Schumann and highlighted hints of mystical Romanticism in the Benjamin.
Visitors to this show, from Paul and Rachel Mellon and the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, will also find Romanticism, Cubism and other styles.
The intellectual roots of American environmentalism are most often traced back to the nineteenth century ideas of Romanticism and Transcendentalism from thinkers such as Henry David Thoreau.
But I don't think it's romanticism to say, 'oh it's different because it's a black school'—it really is different, and fortunately in a really cool way.
So it was with a fresh perspective of both Romanticism and religion that he approached the centuries of history in the built environment of the holy city.
Many of the "isms" invented to heal the ressentiment (it sounds better in French)—romanticism, socialism, authoritarianism, nationalism and anarchism—can be traced back to Rousseau's scribblings.
In Godfrey's work, yearning and heartbreak are never far, as if he's channeling both the 17th-century metaphysics of Robert Herrick and the Romanticism of John Keats.
In Paris, with the new avant-garde of Romanticism, art shifted away from epic tales of gods and kings towards representations of everyday life in the city.
Dismantling her romanticism, in her plays she could curse England and Europe in their own language, while wondering what her yellow body would look like without them.
While form-loving English novelists like McEwan and Julian Barnes celebrated the novel, Martin Amis—student of English Romanticism, worshipper of Joyce and Bellow—has been silent.
As the collection progresses chronologically, you see American depictions of wildlife in art become less scientific, leaving behind the Enlightenment, and more emotionally charged, as in Romanticism.
She is wry and unflinching, stating the songs so boldly that their male chauvinism, untenable romanticism or high morality start to form a genre of dark humor.
It's no surprise that Mr. Petrenko's true Beethoven triumph was last August, in the Ninth Symphony, whose Romanticism leans more toward Wagner than does the concerto's Classicism.
One concert will pair music of Chopin and Berlioz, friends with different ideas about Romanticism; another will feature the little-known Polish opera "Halka," by Stanislaw Moniuszko.
Scenes, allusive and eclectic, exploded into barbed romanticism reminiscent of Prokofiev, and the humor in the writing had the sweet/sour qualities of someone schooled in Soviet tradition.
Novels this cerebral and literary often take refuge in cheap cynicism, so when it ultimately becomes clear that Brit's romanticism will win the day, it's a pleasant surprise.
Now, on the stage where it premiered, at New York's Lincoln Center, the Paris Opera Ballet will dance "Emeralds," which recalls French Romanticism, to music by Gabriel Fauré.
My trouble with the paragon of French Romanticism was, and remains, the turbid indefiniteness of his style, which never really coalesces and which topples, at times, into wackiness.
Lartey-Williams was responsible for organizing the logistics, but still found herself taken aback by the opulence and romanticism of the scene playing out in front of her.
It's a sentiment that, on the surface, is treated in a kind of humorous and ironic way, but which ultimately reveals itself as a kind of refugee romanticism.
I think that romanticism has marked our lives very much, that it's very difficult not to be romantic in some way, although many of us don't realize it.
Both men elongated the figure, but in Klimt's case, this resulted in a kind of elfin romanticism, while Schiele's knobbly portraits can look like prefigurations of heroin chic.
What they build up to is even more seductive than anything that led up to it — a moment of breathtaking romanticism that's as intoxicating as it is unexpected.
Occasionally, I would shoot fashion photography, but it is a photographic repertoire of its own, and about a certain romanticism, precisely composed, with a production, groomers, stylist, etc.
Mr. Mooallem, who worked at The Voice in the late 1990s after graduating from Brown University, said there was a certain romanticism about The Voice of the past.
I can't say for certain that being more honest with my friends or broadening my "brand" to include a bit of depth, romanticism and pain would have helped.
"Harmonielehre" pays homage to the voluptuous textures of late Romanticism, wedded in the outer movements to a rhythmic sense of purpose and stridency that feels urban and fresh.
The accompanist treats the song with her own sense of passionate restraint, collapsing its harmonies at the center, as if to represent the song's fraught, nearly fatalist romanticism.
Primarily composed of farmland, forests, and rolling hills, you can easily see how so many Englishmen and women joined the Romanticism movement in the 20053th and 19th centuries.
By bringing these in dialogue with the outsider works of Gustave Baumann and Ansel Adams, Picturing Passion opens up a larger dialogue about self-representation, community, and Western romanticism.
Evans' history of drug addiction, relatively early death at age 19763 and the introspective romanticism of his playing tend to reinforce that image, but it's not a complete one.
Yet, we get absolutely none of that romanticism with the premiere of The Deuce, where penises pop up not once, not twice, but three times in a single episode.
I've seen six episodes so far, and I'd have a hard time recommending it to viewers who might want a counterpart to the hopeful romanticism of Parker's earlier series.
Chalk it up to Oriental Romanticism, the West's fascination with the exotic mysteries of the East, which began in the late 18th century and took off during the 19th.
Evoking everything from iconic European design to German Romanticism and Hollywood kitsch, Kunath's extraordinary space makes you wonder why so many other artists treat their studios like dumping grounds.
Reminiscent of gothic art with a tinge of romanticism, her interest in medieval paintings and self portraits mixes perfectly with her ability to refrain from taking herself too seriously.
But it had a little post-Vietnam grittiness and raunchiness, a little hard-boiled romanticism and an endearing (if unsophisticated) love of Hong Kong-action-movie styles and poses.
But above all else, Damien Chazelle's newest film is about an age-old Hollywood theme: the clash between romanticism and realism, between an idealized past and a possible future.
An offshoot of City Ballet, the Miami company understands what Balanchine discovered and taught: how exactitude needn't sacrifice warmth; how even in Romanticism, rhythmic accuracy allows momentum to build.
The world as we know it today is a product of these successive waves of displacement, and of the social and artistic movements they inspired: Romanticism, socialism, progressivism, Communism.
Along with the hard-headed reasons that some voted to leave, there was a lot of romanticism about the United Kingdom claiming back its status as a sovereign nation.
In the past two decades, the club's efforts to nurture a feeling of old-school romanticism, and local-club familiarity, have earned it a measure of fame outside Berlin.
People tend to focus on Marx's early work a lot, because that's where you get the romanticism and the revolutionary fervor, but you seem to prefer the later Marx.
Hence the more grown-up aesthetic: The archaic cadences of the words and the ornate, cascading illustrations evoke German Romanticism, and also the music of Mozart, which Sendak adored.
He was old enough to have had a kind of lived experience of 224th-century Romanticism unavailable to younger artists; he would circle back to it as he grew older.
"The Sun Still Burns Here," which opened Tuesday at the Joyce Theater, is set in a dark, decaying world; it seems to be grasping at a sinister sort of romanticism.
Shelley and Godwin fille spent their illicit courtship, as much Romanticism as romance, passionately reading the works of her parents while reclining on Wollstonecraft's grave, in the St. Pancras churchyard.
The women of the Lovette and Lopez Ochoa ballets weren't passive; they made demands, they showed needs, but they carried on as if this were ballroom Romanticism à la Balanchine.
Mr. Rautavaara's adoption first of neo-Classical and then of 24-tone techniques was seen as a reaction to the late Romanticism of Sibelius, who died in 1957 at 91.
Enhancing the old-Hollywood romanticism is a sultry blond widow (Jeri Ryan) who lives in a gated community with an overly friendly, seemingly naïve security guard (an excellent Brent Sexton).
There is the French Romanticism of "Emeralds," set to Fauré; the urgency and jazz of America in "Rubies," to Stravinsky; and the splendor of Imperial Russia in "Diamonds," to Tchaikovsky.
A proudly self-made property developer launches into a tirade about the useless romanticism of youth, and advises Sinan to instead write a tourist-trap guidebook that will be more profitable.
With a subject like this, where the stories are almost always saturated with romanticism, and tend to look at events in just one country, Wieviorka's transnational accounting provides a useful antidote.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Any enduring romanticism for war was obliterated by the industrialized brutality of World War I, from which legions of soldiers returned disfigured by facial injuries.
Born in 1874, Schoenberg eventually concluded that the late Germanic Romanticism of his youth, with its hold on tonal (that is, major- and minor-key) harmony, had become an exhausted language.
In a recital that reaches from the Baroque to late Romanticism to the near contemporary, this leading exponent of the viola will include works by Biber, Telemann, Bach, Reger and Ligeti.
Few performers are willing to take on not only its daunting scale, but also its grueling restraint — a cohesion held together in a delicate tension of wild Romanticism and controlled transparency.
In the world of Mr. Garrel, whose whole work can be seen as an inquiry into the nature of love, romanticism is crushed, slowly and inexorably, yet refuses to die fully.
Inspired by a range of art movements — from German Expressionism to French Romanticism, he incorporated shadows and sets to carefully curate mise-en-scènes that throbbed with sensuality, drama, and romance.
This harsh miniature romanticism has by now been so well distributed and diffused through punk culture that its lugubrious repetitions are recognizable only as languor, or as a certain sardonic laconicism.
When a drink is fragrant and frothy and frosty, with crushed ice and foam on top, and it shows up in a big sifter, there's no question about the romanticism of it.
He was a literary heir to Walt Whitman, depicting a rugged American individualism, romanticism and freedom as wide as the Lower 48, with his boots pulled up and his hat worn low.
In doing so, he conjures the romanticism of artists like Paul Cadmus, Jean Cocteau, and Yannis Tsarouchis, who elevated gay love to the cosmos, while moving away from a hyper-masculine ideal.
Likewise, Coll's landscapes do not have the wild romanticism of Friedrich's; they are strange and undeniably modernist, harkening to surrealism and pop art, as well as the role of collage in modernism.
They might be surprised, though, at how deeply most of these musicians have buried what Westerners may think of as the national style of Romanticism, which goes back to Glinka and Tchaikovsky.
" In the early eighteenth century, a decisive break had occurred—the start of what Winters branded Romanticism, defined as the misbegotten idea that "literature is mainly or even purely an emotional experience.
Rather, Mr. Langrée — swapping his casual Mostly Mozart look for a tailed tuxedo — presented four works at the hinge of Romanticism and the 20th century, connected through themes of poetry and sensuality.
JON PARELES The grave pomp of Russian late Romanticism meets the jittery electronics of trap in Zola Jesus's "Exhumed," an early preview of her album, "Okovi" (Russian for "shackles") due in September.
Mr. Lindbergh conveyed a timeless, humanistic romanticism in his work, producing instantly recognizable imagery in advertising campaigns for luxury industry names like Dior, Giorgio Armani, Prada, Donna Karan, Calvin Klein and Lancôme.
Yet here the word "pictures" also has a certain gentlemanly flavor, carrying echoes of the 18th-century aesthetic cult of the "picturesque," a characteristically British tempering of the excesses of Continental romanticism.
But anyone who cares about romanticism in its modern incarnations must reckon with the prevalence of this ethos in the ears and hearts of young people, and this album is prime erotic melodrama.
It's really easy to get caught up in that romanticism—which is a beautiful thing—but there are still the harsh realities of that hard life because of the nature of the place.
Essenhigh is comfortable sharing her sensibility, committing with no preconditions to the Romanticism of 19th century landscape painting and to later offshoots of the same, like the vines and swirls of Art Nouveau.
She wraps all that 1960s capital-r Romanticism in conventions of modern hip-hop and indie rock — string arrangements, guitar reverb, and the kind of drum-machine beats that sound like muted explosions.
Employing lush romanticism and arcane classical references pulled from a magic bag of artificial effects, he enabled a certain sector of the very rich to make their own mark on the 20th century.
A particular strain of moody romanticism pervades "One Discordant Violin," a monologue with music adapted by Anthony Black from a jejune short story that Yann Martel ("Life of Pi") wrote in his 20s.
Four decades have passed since such sweet R&B ballads flooded the airwaves, and the distance between then and now makes you nostalgic for a soaring teenage romanticism that has all but disappeared.
" Later, with less romanticism if equal virtuosity, she describes the cruel cycle of afflictions endemic to poorer neighbors: "I can remember being repulsed and being held by the gaunt unhealthiness of their faces. . . .
In contrast, his mentor, Théodore Géricault, took up the banner for Romanticism at the 1819 Paris Salon with his immense "Raft of the Medusa," which depicted the gruesome aftermath of an 1816 shipwreck.
The language is stylized and extravagantly poetic, matching the photographs' explicit sexual content while meeting their cool elegance with punk Romanticism ("worship the almighty / target practice / tells me to flex / tighten my torso").
And, as a composer, Henze's career was like a journey to find connections between musical styles: atonality, post-World War II modernism, echoes of expressive German Romanticism, even jazz and Latin-American music.
Then, too, across the life-cycle the models may need to shift — romanticism tempered by stoicism for the young, the reverse for fathers of young children, and some gentlemanly combination in old age.
Also, it was interesting to me how people still lionize the mafia and yet crews like SMM hold little romanticism to the outside world—they are just seen as a menace to society.
For Smith, a great artist must be a rebel of romanticism, whether it be the poet Arthur Rimbaud or the rocker Jim Morrison (two exalted figures in her bad-boy Hall of Fame).
When Miranda was treated as a romantic fantasy for women about love and work, her cynicism was a liability; when she's treated as a fantasy of a politician, her romanticism becomes a problem.
With the rise of techno and house music in the decade following 1993, IDM would come to redraw the lines of the dance music genre exactly like German Romanticism had revolutionized classical music.
The fruit of Romanticism and its liberal capacity, had become functions in impressionism from composers like Claude Debussy to Arnold Schönberg; from the liberation of the sound of Edgard Varèse to musique concrète.
And just as Mr. Lyght translated the forms he knew from his native land into contemporary art, Cole reinvented 19th-century European Romanticism and Neo-Classicism in the terms of his newfound American vision.
"The idea of real romanticism that's been on so many of the runways from New York ...(is) certainly very apparent here in London as well," Ken Downing, fashion director at Neiman Marcus, told Reuters.
Moreover, Swedenborg wrote voluminously about the relationship between the spiritual and the material planes, believing there was an infinite, indivisible power to life — an idea which reinforced the neo-Platonic sublime ideals of Romanticism.
It's as if, over the last decade, he has realised the need to embrace, if not equally, the two sides of his nature—wildness and control, rectitude and romanticism, "emotionality" and a spotless sideboard.
And, although it's clearly not the only influence, its imprint can be seen in the sounds of artists like iLoveMakonnen or even Lil Yachty today, who have a similar type of nursery rhyme romanticism.
Sewell, an avid reader of John Grisham novels, had been so appalled by what he observed, and so intrigued by the romanticism of going undercover, that he had decided to become a whistle-blower.
"  – Author and political commentator Mark Steyn, on " Tucker Carlson Tonight ," saying much of the Democratic Party appears to be shedding an alleged longtime facade of centrism and embracing "the romanticism of the far-left.
In one way they are very banal, in another way they are charged, in another way they are funny, at times they feel like appropriated images, and they are almost sentimental in their romanticism.
Her place in Balanchine history is central: She inspired him to make some of his most radically modernist works; opened up fresh torrents of Romanticism in him; showed how old roles could be transformed.
However, near the lectern are also examples of art from Asia and two movements indebted to the philosophical history of Romanticism: the British Arts & Crafts movement and the Viennese Wiener Werkstätte (or Vienna Secession).
I will say there's a very specific romanticism about the way the light feels at a certain time of day here, we talked about that a lot, and the way that makes us feel.
They will perform "The Thrill of the Hunt," a program that includes Haydn, Mozart and Brahms — as well as "Jagdquartett," Jorg Widmann's 2003 work that parodies the romanticism of hunting in the 18th century.
In the summertime, the sculpture itself is illuminated with the "Lasershow Spectacular in Mountainvision," which tells the story of the Civil War, complete with patriotism and fireworks (and sans romanticism about the old South).
Intrinsically tied to the early '80s club scene that became known as New Romanticism, his clothes wound up in the windows of London's Browns boutique; the singer Diana Ross bought one of his Incroyables coats.
" Powell offered her most important set of literary definitions in 1936: "Satire is people as they are; romanticism, people as they would like to be; realism, people as they seem with their insides left out.
The Nazis did it when they used medieval-obsessed German Romanticism of the nineteenth century (Wagner, fairytale castles) as a template for a new national identity that was founded on the extermination of minority groups.
Instead of basking in the capital of German Romanticism, the troupe witnesses one of Pegida's "evening strolls," the anti-immigrant movement's demonstrations that take place every Monday night in front of the city's opera house.
The lyricism of Helen Levitt, the romanticism of Saul Leiter, the expressionism of Ted Croner take the concrete reality of this most public of arenas as their starting point, transforming (rather than celebrating) the banal.
But their explicitly political versions of history, which recounted a black past that was more than slavery and sometimes had its own share of romanticism, couldn't dislodge decades — centuries, really — of white supremacy via textbook.
The beauty and absurdity (things also get harrowing) don't entirely compensate for the overheated romanticism in which the movie is grounded, but they do make "Two Lovers and a Bear" a nearly singular cinematic trek.
For those who find Bruckner's symphonies long-winded and structurally wayward, hearing them performed by great musicians who have immersed themselves in these challenging, personal and profound works of late Germanic Romanticism was a revelation.
This kind of romanticism helps us understand the radical impetus of abstract painting in the early and mid-20th century as a reaction to a recalcitrant aestheticism (something that wouldn't be obvious to our contemporaries).
Starting from the stigmatizing of the feminine, the visitor works her way through rooms of passion, adoration, gallantry, libertinage, and romanticism; but this historical overview does not seek to be exhaustive nor does it exhaust.
He invented glam-rock and New Romanticism; he mimicked plastic soul and, more recently, plastic jazz; he pioneered a flexible, everlasting art-rock style that swallowed up any genre that dared to develop in its wake.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Sheldon Church would be at home in a Caspar David Friedrich painting, its Greek Temple–style ruins crumbling in the shadows of moss-laden oaks like an apparition of Romanticism.
The conductor at various times of several of the world's great orchestras, the London Symphony, the London Philharmonic, the Pittsburgh Symphony, the Vienna Philharmonic, took a lifetime to shed that label of lightweight Los Angeles Romanticism.
"I am also really interested in romanticism and the underlying historic feminine aesthetic in relation to these ideas, and how themes of beauty and nurturing are presented as weaknesses in a masculine, capitalist society," she says.
The Marvel Cinematic Universe film and its 2017 sequel have helped foster a newfound romanticism for the once mighty media, along with hit Netflix series, Stranger Things, which got its own cassette soundtrack release this summer.
With early Beatles efforts like "And I Love Her" and "I've Just Seen a Face," he established romanticism as his wheelhouse, and since then he hasn't stopped churning out lovely odes to those closest to him.
Drawing on European Romanticism, Emersonian self-reliance, and American Transcendentalism, the movement's occult vocabulary spoke to American aspirations and anxieties in a manner that the arid Enlightenment-era rationalism of the nation's founding simply did not.
But I like the way these budding romances underline another aspect of the show that works much better: its utter romanticism of the idea of trying to make it as an artist in the big city.
His works have been associated strongly with 19th century Romanticism as they recall the writing of J.K. Huysmans and Oscar Wilde in their barely-concealed queerness, abounding with beautiful boys sipping wine in verdant nature scenes.
You might even argue that the minor mode forms the basis for the whole of musical Romanticism, as Mr. Perahia suggested with pieces by Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert, and Mr. Pollini with a program of Chopin.
The movie, which won an Oscar for best original screenplay, "is marvelously romantic, even though — or precisely because — it acknowledges the disappointment that shadows every genuine expression of romanticism," A. O. Scott wrote in The Times.
"It's going to be very clinical — it's going to take the mystique, the romanticism out of the city," said Alyx Gauthier, 27, a local service-industry worker who was nursing a pint on a recent afternoon.
The endurance of her visage, which Albert Camus compared to the Mona Lisa, combines something of a lingering 19th-century Romanticism about death, the objectification of the female corpse, and a fascination with her inscrutable expression.
When the trailer for the film dropped, there was a huge backlash from those who believe the topic, timing, and romanticism of falling in love with someone in a white nationalist organization was in poor taste.
Classicism, Romanticism, numbers and pornographic sgraffito pop up in a drawing titled "See Naples + Die," with the outline of a possible temple, a quote from Keats and crude, sputtering gunlike shapes that evoke Claes Oldenburg's early sculpture.
Yeah, we know, "Coma Cat" got played so much that Tensnake doesn't really mean anything to anyone anymore, but this absurdly exciting slice of house-inflected cosmic-romanticism is a sadly forgotten masterpiece that deserves endless rewinds.
For young people, there's a huge romanticism towards bartending, and justifiably so: you make a ton of money, you get a lot of attention, you get laid a lot, you are—for all practical purposes—a rockstar.
Underpinned by sluggish subbass and a keen sense of romanticism, "Hanging Flowers Of Albion" is most animated in its percussive movements, which pull and flutter in haptic textural arrangements evoking woven fabrics such as shearling or felt.
They're impressive for different reasons: Mr. Gandelsman's playing is buoyant and crisp, with the dancing spirit of folk music, while Ms. Hahn's blend of historically informed performance and old-fashioned Romanticism has preternatural clarity amid symphonic grandeur.
Tisci, who grew up Catholic in Southern Italy, brought a self-described "dark romanticism" to the house, and relied heavily on religious iconography throughout his time there, using madonna-and-child motifs on T-shirts and sweatshirts.
On Tuesday, George Balanchine's "Jewels" — a visceral journey through three schools of dance, from the French romanticism of "Emeralds" to the jazzy, American tour de force of "Rubies" to the Russian majesty of "Diamonds" — did just that.
Balke (220-21920) and Chappel (219-21853) were almost exactly the same age, and shared humble origins and an inborn romanticism, but they worked in different styles, under vastly different circumstances on opposite sides of the Atlantic.
Or there's "O Caledonia," a novel by Elspeth Barker, a sparky, funny work of genius about class, romanticism, social tradition and literary tradition, and one of the best least-known novels of the 20th century, I reckon.
Throughout her career, Dr. Reich fought to redress belittling portraits of Clara Schumann by earlier authors and to have her recognized as a significant composer, pianist and educator, as well as a central figure of German Romanticism.
Nourished by his passion for music and inspired by mythological subjects or odes to the beauty of the female body in the guise of chaste allegories, this work reveals the artist's lesser-known forays into English Romanticism.
The scene was rife with bands that borrowed heavily from earlier elements of Romanticism, the occult, and literature; from Siouxsie Sioux's Egyptian-inspired eye makeup to Adam Ant's Byronic "Dandy Highwayman" to Bauhaus' discordant homage to famous vampires.
The romanticism of that time and its zeitgeist has worn off in a time of extreme wealth inequality, with millennials struggling to pay for the things their parents had even while they work full time with side hustles.
The next folk revival, blossoming in the 1960s, was sparked by the arrival of blues from America, by the awakening of folk culture in England's industrial north and by a Marxist revision of the first revival's rural romanticism.
I've always ran hot and cold on Jewel's and, by extension, Chromatics' night-drive aesthetic, but in this context it totally clicked for me, oozing romanticism and nostalgia without pushing the needle into the red for either trait.
The Stone Among the many stories that can be told about the origins of the environmental movement in the West, perhaps the most common is that it began with the emergence of Romanticism in the late 18th century.
The whole thing lays on the cheese, but it works—a sweetly endearing nod to the overwrought romanticism of 90s bad boy R&B groups, with hooks that linger long after those nighttime shades fade from the screen.
The exhibit at the Portland Art Museum, titled Prints for the People and partially drawn from the museum's collection, presents a varied tableau of romanticism, social critique, and hope amid the economic desperation of the 21946s and '19359s.
And so Walser eloquently calls attention to the obvious, such as (still of Watteau) that "all the romanticism that dwelled within him possessed, as it were, excellent manners," without being able to enlighten us further about the matter.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Art critic Barry Schwabsky's new book, Landscape Painting Now: From Pop Abstraction to New Romanticism (DAP), delivers a global and multi-generational perspective on what may be the most malleable of painting genres.
Marshall's underlying romanticism takes a supernatural turn in "Train Window 1 (The Apparitions)" (40 x 50 inches, latex ink on silver vinyl mounted on Dibond; 2016), pushing beyond mere garden-variety subjectivity into the realm of hallucination and paranoia.
At home, the children of the Bolsheviks read what they called the "treasures of world literature," with an emphasis on the Golden Ages analogous to their own (the Renaissance, Romanticism and the realist novel, especially Balzac, Dickens and Tolstoy).
In about two dozen interviews in and around Nantes, a flourishing city near the Atlantic coast, voters expressed a mixture of wariness and romanticism about their new president, who is just 39 and had never before held elective office.
Like Romanticism, Steampunk, which evolved in the late 1980s out of a fascination with Victorian science fiction, was fueled by an idealized conception of earlier times, in this case the late 19th century, when industry was powered by steam.
As always, Ms. Morisseau's characters are distinctively expressive, and there are beautiful monologues of self-revelation by Nya, Omari and Ms. Velazquez's uprooted boarding-school girl, who combines adolescent romanticism with a precocious awareness of how love usually ends.
"He was an extraordinary singer from an era that, with his songs and his romanticism, made a lot of people from my generation cry and be happy," Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador told reporters, according to the BBC.
"The story of Alice has been told so many times and in so many ways, but always with a white cast," Walker, whose work is famous for its eerie and surrealist fantasy and romanticism, told the New York Times.
Henri ties the total-art approach to an extension of the philosophy of Romanticism in that it proclaims a sweeping, transcendent gesamt ("total" or "whole") resolution of diversity that is all-embracing and envelopes (supposedly) all aspects of our lives.
While these early-20th-century poets clearly reveled in new freedoms of form and expression, the writing sometimes veers into self-indulgent romanticism ("I am a patch of cloud in the sky / Casting by chance a shadow on your heart").
Although the film has been predicted to win Best Picture since its debut at the Venice film festival, its romanticism has alienated  some  critics who find the musical vapid in the era of Trump, a time of serious political danger.
Although the film has been predicted to win Best Picture since its debut at the Venice film festival, its romanticism has alienated some critics who find the musical vapid in the era of Trump, a time of serious political danger.
All three of them saw the project as a conceptual art work, using a social structure (marriage) for a purpose (art-making) that it was not intended to serve, and they all agreed that no trace of romanticism was involved.
As Mr. Rabinowitz discovered, there are some who seem to conflate the sign with its predecessor, a board made by the Italian company Solari, whose flaps, with their satisfying analog movements and clicking sounds, are the subject of some romanticism.
He could be described as a younger generation's "Boy From Oz." The baritone crooner Todd Murray, and Gay Marshall, a gifted interpreter of Édith Piaf, filled out the bill performing songs that elaborated the show's theme of reckless doomed romanticism.
And sometimes his romanticism can be about rendering whatever story is on the docket in strains of high drama, not too removed from a Clint Eastwood western or a Murder City Devils song, but, occasionally, the song is simply about love.
The album's glittering romanticism makes it sound better suited to teenagers whose sexual experiences are limited to listening to T. Rex records in their bedroom than those out actually experiencing them—a reflection Gaspard recognizes as true to their own lives.
From back when he came on like a nicer relation of Stuart Murdoch, Lekman's romanticism and indeed sexuality have always had a lot of agape in it, hinting at social consciousness only insofar as agape is social consciousness's engine and embodiment.
When her curiosity takes her to a Manhattan puzzle shop — and into competition training with Robert (Irrfan Khan), a champion puzzler with all the sophistication and romanticism lacking in her oafish spouse (David Denman) — Agnes's tedious existence is ripped open.
Most of the music, by Shawn's main accompanist of the 1930s, Jess Meeker, is tepidly formulaic sub-Romanticism: The series of prettily descending triplets in the Water and Air sections feel endless, while other sections seem close to operetta kitsch.
Perhaps reports of bodies abandoned and found have inspired others with misguided criminal romanticism—and as the Mojave Desert's reputation for body dumping has become increasingly solidified both amongst law enforcement and throughout media reporting, criminals may be growing more creative.
By the time Taborn entered this daunting arena, it was all but empty, aside from a handful of obscure avant-garde pianists and Jarrett himself: "The Köln Concert" had become a somewhat quaint symbol of '43s sprawl and flowery romanticism.
Mathon's photography captures, on the one hand, the lush romanticism of an 18th-century lesbian romance on the Brittany coast and, on the other, a dreamy romance set in contemporary Dakar, gripped with anxiety as a shipload of young people disappears.
Bathed in fluorescent light at supermarkets and liquor stores and Chinese takeout counters, they cling to the rattle of romanticism despite the grinding passage of time and the growing abundance of evidence that the old world is collapsing around them.
"His tales of weary policemen and jumpy criminals have a depth, and a romanticism, that come from characterization and attention to quotidian detail rather than sheer visual polish," Mike Hale, a critic for The New York Times, wrote in 2015.
But since the 1990s, a small French expat community, attracted by the romanticism of Harlem, its strong sense of community and colorful history, as well as by comparatively lower real estate prices, has sprung up, and, inevitably, so have French restaurants.
But the artworks actually work to quell those anxieties, infused with a very human romanticism that warms their emotionless utility, normalizes their presence in an art space, and ultimately obscures how they are actually used — and, more importantly, by whom.
Arguably, Zuckerberg has spent the past decade and a half taking advantage of the forces of a free market and benefitting from the romanticism with which our culture has treated the kid-in-a-dorm founder, the embodiment of the modern American dream.
Yet I cannot dismiss his adoption of a transcendent, all-embracing, total-art ideal that sprang from monotheistic religious submission into Romanticism (with its Neo-Platonic roots) through the Arts and Craft Movement, flowering as the reason d'être of the Art Nouveau movement.
Walsh, who plays the grieving mother of Hannah Baker (Katherine Langford) in the series, told The Huffington Post that the show runners tried to strip Hannah's death of any romanticism or glamour, to deliberately depict these difficult topics in their true light.
It wanted trade protection from Madrid but was also influenced by German Romanticism, especially the ideas of Johann Gottfried Herder, who believed that a nation was an organic essence defined by language rather than a cultural and political construct, as theorists today think.
The issues raised by their collage-like narratives (often labeled in Hungarian as painters' theatre) were conceptual, addressing questions about the essence and research of art, while they were defined by postmodernism's new romanticism, pastiche, and the high/low practice of the era.
One in particular, "Der Tod, das ist die küle Nacht" ("Death Is Cool Night"), caught me off guard for its blatant Romanticism — death as night, life as "sultry day" — which Brahms seems to have embraced in his setting of the Heinrich Heine text.
What happens there, I think, is that Baudelaire distills a fugitive, dark essence from Delacroix's Romanticism as he did from that of Poe, shrugging off the artistic limitations of both to furnish a poetry of emotional candor and formal discipline beyond their reach.
In "Wrong Move," an updated version of Goethe's "Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship" written by Peter Handke, Mr. Vogler plays a petulant would-be poet whose search for a utopian unity of poetry and politics telescopes, even as it satirizes, two centuries of German Romanticism.
Loewenthal, an East Coast native and self-identified Californian living in Oakland, brought all of that magic to Psychscapes, a photo series that explores the romanticism of her adopted home state, overlapping sky, mountains, and rugged terrain to create single alluring images.
While El Greco's work had to wait until the kindred spirits of Romanticism and Modernism came along, Oldenburg's — based on the castoff and the crude, on the flotsam and jetsam of modern life — was a hit from the beginning with his contemporaries.
In "Far From the Madding Crowd," the hero, Gabriel Oak, is a stoic with a well-integrated romantic streak; his foil and rival for the heroine's affections, William Boldwood, believes himself a stoic but discovers a romanticism he can't control, with violent consequences.
Mr. Tuymans is a practiced curator, a rarity among artists: In 2016 he organized a well-received retrospective of the Belgian Expressionist James Ensor at the Royal Academy in London, and he has curated shows of German Romanticism and Polish contemporary art.
Traveling alone comes with a certain kind of romanticism: hand-making pasta with the locals in an Italian villa, belting karaoke surrounded by your newest friends in Tokyo, feeling at one with your thoughts while cruising down the Pacific Coast Highway in California.
A 1993 review in The New York Times compared his photographic style to "aspects of Robert Frank's melancholy romanticism with Weegee's harsh fascination with the underside of city life"; his cinéma vérité style of documentary filmmaking was most associated with anthropological research.
Another artist who springs immediately to mind in front of Dunkley's paintings is Samuel Palmer (1805-1881), a central figure in British Romanticism whose early ink drawings of landscapes, inspired by his discovery of medieval art, share Dunkley's compressed space and intense spirituality.
During the Belle Époque, with an infectious zeal for art hinged on exoticism, romanticism, and nostalgia, Mucha churned out everything from posters, decorative panels, and fabulous fabric designs — such as the velvet "Woman with Daisy" (1900), to calendars, table settings, menu cards, and wine labels.
This combination of romanticism and fragility is often Pisces' biggest flaw: They leave things unsaid hoping that their partner can intuit their feelings, or worse yet, believe that someone must have the ability to read their mind in order to be the right partner.
Although a few people—Samuel Johnson was one—had suspicions, Ossian's work was read and admired in Europe and America and translated into many languages, and his fake poems are considered a major influence on Romanticism—a literary movement that made authenticity a supreme value.
Still, eyebrows were raised when it first emerged that Pirelli was allowing Mr. Walker, whose reputation has been forged largely on his depictions of eerie romanticism and surrealist fairy-tale worlds in magazines like W, Vogue and Love, to tackle black identity for the calendar.
I love him, not only because I know him better than any other person in the world, but also because I've learned from him to distrust romanticism, and above all, because it would never occur to him to ever again give me a Valentine.
The Opéra national de Paris will perform the "Emeralds" act, revelling in the mysteries of French romanticism; NYCB will dance the "Rubies" section with the exuberance of mid-century Manhattan; the Bolshoi Ballet will perform "Diamonds" in tribute to imperial Russia (where Balanchine trained as a boy).
By the time he published his award-winning volume, Spring in the World of Poor Mutts, Ceravolo had turned his romanticism into complex love poems, such as "Ho Ho Ho Caribou," a joyous celebration of his wife and children (dedicated to Rosemary): I Leaped at the caribou.
Yet Nickson turns these loaded, time-honored motifs into compelling, wholly contemporary images that toggle between unabashed romanticism and a modern celebration of the expressive power of super-saturated color relationships and abstract structure, with a healthy admixture of awareness of the history of western art.
But early on, as Cap'n Bill Paxton waxes rhapsodic about the vessel, an underling replies, "You are so fulla shit, boss"—a line that gets at the push-pull at the film's heart, in which tough-stuff action comes up against unabashed romanticism and folds upon contact.
It's one of thirty-one works in which the Austrian composer distilled his musical inheritance—an odd combination of post-Wagnerian Romanticism and medieval polyphony—into a bracing new style of crystalline compression that exerted a towering influence over modern composition after the Second World War.
It was a tale told on the runway and off, in the way they imbued the house with a high romanticism married to an almost monklike purity of line, a youthful lightness of being with its own discipline, and in the alacrity with which customers responded.
Pisces are also known as dreamers and idealists, which can sometimes translate to hopeless romanticism—so if you're not sure whether your fish would appreciate a musical date, it's a safe bet to plan a good old-fashioned intimate dinner for two somewhere you can play footsies.
The book, which I have found myself returning to again and again over the course of this year, pulses with want, and it casts its author, a native of Ohio, as an heir to a strain of romanticism we tend to associate with the long ago.
Later, as the cello and violin plucked bluesy, hurrying phrases — like cinematic balladry and Romanticism and Ray Nance all run together — Ms. Ibarra put down her sticks and played with only her hands and feet, smacking a drumhead with her palm and thumping the kick drum.
In front of the scrim, atop where the orchestra pit has been covered, actors in dark clothes and green faces move in slow motion, carrying and rearranging objects: a tin drum, a cutout of a church, the blue flower that was a key symbol of German Romanticism.
At the same time, part of the pleasure of "Escapes" is how Mr. Almereyda, drawing deeply from the American pop archives (comics, old movies and television), connects the original "Blade Runner" to Mr. Fancher's life with its movie love, romanticism, beautiful women and mad, circuitous rides.
Instead, Darsa's take on deep house focused more on the velvety romanticism that comes to mind for most people when thinking about the city of love—one he articulated via cosmic synths that expanded and retreated like tidal waves and bird chirps reminiscent of a calm early morning.
I am realizing now that my discomfort with "The Story of Adidon" is, in part, rooted in my romanticism of the rap beefs I grew up with, which — of course — crossed lines, but seemed to do it at a much slower pace, after all other avenues had exhausted themselves.
For example, Julia Brown's An Abundance of Strawberries is very pastoral, full of Byronesque lyrical romanticism like "my heart is the leaves, my body the trees", and sensory eulogies for the woods and parks Ray grew up wandering around before they were replaced by strip malls and housing developments.
Amit Shah, a close aide of Modi and the head of the BJP, in a closed door meeting attended by two ministers in February said bureaucrats continued to suffer from "communist romanticism", a reference to the alleged influence of the left-leaning Congress opposition party on the bureaucrats.
The Iranian atmospheric black metal project (sole member Harpag Karnik is based in Tehran) focuses on crafting a heavily emotive sense of romanticism (think of a more stripped down early Alcest) within its gentle, almost pastoral compositions; it's black metal, yes, but of the loveliest and most ethereal sort.
And the Sun Ra Arkestra, under Mr. Allen's direction and conducting (and with the charismatic singer Tara Middleton), played raucous improvisations over swing rhythm and extended its romanticism to the cosmos; their greatest-hits set ended with "Space Is the Place" and a ceremonial parade through the audience.
A journey of transformation, in which the white European is spiritually renewed, almost at the expense of his darkly exotic subjects, is familiar enough from German Romanticism; you can imagine a contemporary version, in which the novelist traffics in the most supple kind of self-protective self-criticism.
Where "The Daughter of Dawn" interprets Native American culture according to the precepts of 19th-century American melodrama, "The Return" simultaneously embodies the white supremacist attitudes of early 20th-century pulp fiction ("Tarzan" springs to mind) and, a particularly graphic buffalo slaughter notwithstanding, the countercultural romanticism of the 1960s.
Perhaps, as some suggested, the romanticism of sequined jacket prints depicting Dorothy Gale asleep on a bed of roses (not far from Oz) were a reference to Mr. Abloh's belief in pursuing one's dream, but they also underscored the Midwestern gumption he shares with that girl from Kansas.
" In the late 19983s, he started teaching art in New York as his own career as a painter was blossoming; the New York Times art critic John Canaday even reviewed him, seeing in his work "echoes of 21998th-century German romanticism adapted to juvenile (or even infantile) demonism.
She presented her graduate collection at Parson's M.F.A. spring 2018 show, and went on to work for designers including Tory Burch and Jason Wu. When she set out to start her own brand, Hu wanted to create something rooted in romanticism, with an emphasis on artful and intricate craftsmanship.

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