Masterpieces of 19th century art

Take a closer look at masterpieces of the nineteenth century, a period in which a style known as Romanticism developed.

This story was created for the Google Expeditions project by Smarthistory, now available on Google Arts & Culture.

Tap to explore

Caspar David Friedrich at the Altes Nationalmuseum

The Altes Nationalmuseum in Berlin owns one the finest collections of the German Romantic painter Caspar David Friedrich. Romanticism is a style of art from the early nineteenth century (and has nothing to do with the way we use the word “romantic”).

Tap to explore

The style we call Romanticism explored human emotion and experience, and Friedrich was one of its greatest proponents in painting. In music, you could think of the composer Ludwig von Beethoven. In poetry, you might think of William Wordsworth.

Monk by the Sea (1808/1810) by Caspar David FriedrichAlte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Friedrich, Monk by the Sea, c. 1809

In Monk by the Sea a small lone figure stands on the shore and looks out to the empty sea and sky. We sense the monk contemplating important ideas — the smallness of man in relation to the vastness and eternity of nature.

Tap to explore

Friedrich, Abbey in the Oakwood, c. 1809

Ancient oak trees rise above the horizon. The frozen ground is covered with old snow. Monks carry a coffin through the ruins of an ancient abbey. Again, Friedrich asks us to think about the shortness of human life and the eternal quality of nature.

Tap to explore

Friedrich landscapes

This wall of smaller paintings by Friedrich invites us to stop and take in the beauty of nature and to think about our place in the world. From left to right, Man and Woman Contemplating the Moon, The Solitary Tree, and The Riesengebirge Mountains.

Tap to explore

Jean Chalgrin, Arc de Triomphe, 1806-36

Triumphal Arches date back to ancient Rome where they were built to honor victorious armies. When, many centuries later, Napoleon ordered the construction of the Arc de Triomphe (triumphal arch) in Paris in 1806, he was was emperor of France and ruled over most of Europe.

Tap to explore

Napoleon’s arch was intended to honor the French army, but it was also a way for him to associate himself with the great rulers of ancient Rome.

Tap to explore

Arc de Triomphe, Paris, view from Avenue Hoche

While the Arc de Triomphe was inspired by the triumphal arches of ancient Rome, Napoleon’s version is much larger and  is inscribed with the victories of the French army. It is a memorial to France’s fallen soldiers from the Revolution and the Napoleonic wars.

Tap to explore

Rude, Departure of the Volunteers of 1792

The Arc de Triomphe is covered with sculpture. This one commemorates a battle where the French defended the nation from attack. The volunteers—some strong, some young—are all pushing forward, inspired by the symbol of Liberty above them.

Tap to explore

Olmsted and Vaux, Central Park, 1857

You might think Central Park in New York city gives us an idea of what the island looked like before the city was built up.

Tap to explore

But the landscape, trees, ponds, and paths were all constructed according to the design of two architects who won a competition held by the city. All the great cities of Europe had beautiful parks, so it was felt New York City needed one too.

Tap to explore

Bethesda Fountain, the Meer and the Ramble

We’re in the very center of the park looking uptown toward a large plaza. In the center we see Bethesda Fountain. The figure with wings outstretched at the very top is called Angel of the Waters. Beyond the lake is a wooded area named The Ramble. 

Tap to explore

Terrace and Manhattan schist outcropping

Just behind the trees, you can see a large rock that was exposed when a giant ice sheet scraped clean the land that is now Central Park during the last ice age that ended about 12,000 years ago.

Tap to explore

Manet and Whistler at the Musée d’Orsay

The Musée d’Orsay in Paris focuses on French art of the 1800s,  but they also have work by the American painter, James Abbott McNeill Whistler, who lived in London and Paris.

Tap to explore

The Musée d’Orsay also has a particularly strong collection of the work of Édouard Manet, one of the most influential artists of the 19th century. Both of these artists broke with the rules set by the influential royal academies in London and Paris about what art should look like.

Tap to explore

Édouard Manet, Le déjeuner sur l'herbe (Luncheon on the Gras

You might wonder why Luncheon on the Grass was rejected for the official exhibition in 1863. After all, the painting just depicts three contemporary Parisians having a picnic in a park, but this type of subject was allowable only when the subject was from mythology.

Portrait of the Artist's Mother (1871) by James Abbott McNeil WhistlerMusée d’Orsay, Paris

James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Arrangement in Grey and Black

Though this famous portrait of the artist’s mother seems very traditional, it was actually radical for its time since the subject seems to be more about color harmonies than the artist’s mother (part of the title is “Arrangement in Grey and Black”).

Tap to explore

James McNeill Whistler, The Peacock Room, 1877

 If you visit the Freer|Sackler — one of the many museums in Washington D.C. that are part of the Smithsonian Institution, you’ll see Whistler’s fabulous Peacock Room (named for the birds Whistler painted here).

Tap to explore

The room was made for an English collector, but it was purchased by Henry Freer who brought it to the United States and donated it to the Smithsonian Institution.

Tap to explore

James McNeill Whistler, West Wall, Peacock Room

In the Peacock Room Whistler, inspired by Chinese and Japanese art, sought to create “a total work of art”—one that combines architecture, painting, and decorative elements to provide a more complete experience for the viewer.

Tap to explore

James McNeill Whistler, South wall, Peacock Room

The room’s original owner, Frederick Leyland, refused to pay Whistler the amount he billed for decorating the room, and offered him much less. As a result, Whistler painted the back wall with two fighting peacocks, one representing the artist, the other Leyland.

Tap to explore

Whistler, The Princess from the Land of Porcelain

We see a standing figure dressed in a gorgeous Asian silk robe in colors of peach, orange and grey. The emphasis is on color harmonies, not telling a story. The European artists who were fascinated by Asian art were using it for their own purposes.

Tap to explore

Gustave Eiffel, Eiffel Tower, 1889

Gustave Eiffel’s tower is one of the most recognizable landmarks in the world and has become a symbol of the city of Paris, but when it was first constructed for the World’s Fair of 1889, it was almost too modern.

Tap to explore

Leading artists and architects called the design “monstrous,” fearing that the fantastic size of this “hateful column of bolted sheet metal” would humiliate the great stone monuments of the past such as the Cathedral of Notre Dame.

Tap to explore

Looking up at the Eiffel Tower

The tower’s graceful arches and delicate ironwork soar upward—thanks to the engineering advances of the industrial revolution. Before iron was hidden behind traditional materials such as stone. Here, Eiffel proudly exposes the tower’s iron girders near the center of Paris.

Tap to explore

Close view of the Eiffel Tower

Here we can see one of three observation decks. Elevators and stairs that ascend the legs allow access to three observation levels. The Eiffel tower remains a stunning focal point in one of the most beautiful cities in the world.

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
Explore more
Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites