Romanticism
Humanism, Secularism, Individualism, Classicism, Realism
romance keeps your relationship alive.
Romanticism
romanticism
For instance Classicism, Romanticism or Impressionism.
Romanticism emphasized emotion, intuition, and individualism, while Classicism focused on order, simplicity, and rationality. Romanticism valued nature, the supernatural, and the exotic, whereas Classicism looked to ancient Greek and Roman art for inspiration. Romanticism often sought to break away from traditional forms and explore new artistic expressions, while Classicism adhered to established conventions and ideals.
Romanticism
Beethoven's music exhibits elements of both classicism and romanticism. He took the structural clarity and form of classical music and infused it with emotional depth, passion, and individual expression characteristic of the romantic era. By pushing the boundaries of traditional forms and expressing profound emotions in his music, Beethoven helped to bridge the gap between classicism and romanticism.
They found contemporary painting (neo-classicism) dry and devoid of feeling. So they emphasized feeling instead.
I can only think of two: Neo-Classicism and Romanticism.
what came before neo classicism
Yes this is true romanticism did happen before transcentalism
Baroque, Rococo, Neo-classicism, Romanticism, Impressionism, Post-impressionism, Symbolism, Expressionism, Cubism, and all kinds of Modernism and Post-modernism.
He was active at the time Classicism was giving way to Romanticism. He saw himself as a composer. He mostly used the forms and harmonies of the Classical era, therefore wasconservative.
Victorian compromise is a tendency that motivates the belief in parallelism between science and religion, rationalism and believes, democracy and monarchism, classicism and romanticism, feudalism and modernism, employer and employees etc.
J. Douglas Kneale has written: 'Romantic aversions' -- subject(s): Classical influences, Classicism, English poetry, History, History and criticism, Knowledge, Literature, Romanticism