Neoclassicism: (1750 - 1830) The term Neoclassicism refers to the classical revival in European art, architecture, and interior design that lasted from the mid-eighteenth to the early nineteenth century. This period gave rebirth to the art of ancient Rome and Greece and the Renaissance as an opposition to the ostentatious Baroque and Rococo art that preceded the movement. Although the movement spread throughout Western Europe, France and England were the countries that used the style most frequently in their arts and architecture, using the classical elements to express ideas of nationalism, courage, and sacrifice. The movement was inspired by the discovery of ancient Italian artifacts at the ruins of Herculaneum and Pompeii. Also influential in the development was the cultural studies of German art historian Johann J. Winckelmann who claimed that the most important elements of classical art were "noble simplicity and calm grandeur." Neoclassicism emphasized rationality and the resurgence of tradition. Neoclassical artists incorporated classical styles and subjects, including columns, pediments, friezes, and other ornamental schemes in their work. They were inspired by the work of Homer and Plutarch and John Flaxmann’s illustrations for the Illiad and Odyssey. Other classic models included Virgil, Raphael, and Poussin among others. Neoclassical painters took extra care to depict the costumes, settings, and details of classical subject matter with as much accuracy as possible. Much of the subject matter was derived from classical history and mythology. The movement emphasized line quality over color, light, and atmosphere. The height of Neoclassicism was displayed in the paintings of Jacques-Louis David and Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres. Artists: (biography & artworks) Abildgaard, Nicolai Abraham - 1743 - 1809 Alma-Tadema, Sir Lawrence - 1836 - 1912 Appiani, Andrea - 1754 - 1817 Auguste, Robert-Joseph - 1723 - 1805 Banks, Thomas - 1735 - 1805 Bidauld, Jean-Joseph-Xavier - 1758 - 1846 Canova, Antonio - 1757 - 1822 Carlin, Martin - 1730 - 1785 Carracci, Annibale - 1560 - 1609 Carstens, Asmus Jakob - 1754 - 1798 Chinard, Joseph - 1756 - 1813 Crawford, Thomas - 1813 - 1857 Dadd, Richard - 1817 - 1886 David, Jacques-Louis - 1748 - 1825 Deare, John - 1759 - 1798 Drouais, Francois-Hubert - 1727 - 1775 Drouais, Jean-Germain - 1763 - 1788 Eckersberg, Christoffer Wilhelm - 1783 - 1853 Fabre, Francois-Xavier - 1766 - 1837 Feuerbach, Anselm - 1829 - 1880 Flandrin, Hippolyte - 1809 - 1864 Flaxman, John - 1755 - 1826 Garnier, Pierre - 1725 - 1800 Gerard, Francois - 1770 - 1837 Giani, Felice - 1758 - 1823 Girodet de Roussy-Trioson, Anne-Louis - 1767 - 1824 Godward, John William - 1861 - 1922 Greenough, Horatio - 1805 - 1852 Guerin, Pierre-Narcisse - 1774 - 1833 Houdon, Jean-Antoine - 1741 - 1828 Ingres, Jean-Auguste-Dominique - 1780 - 1867 Kauffmann, Angelica - 1741 - 1807 Labille-Guiard, Adelaide - 1749 - 1803 Lagrenee, Louis Jean Francois - 1725 - 1805 Ledoux, Claude-Nicolas - 1736 - 1806 Lehmann, Henri - 1814 - 1882 Mengs, Anton Raphael - 1728 - 1779 Nollekens, Joseph - 1737 - 1823 Pajou, Augustin - 1730 - 1809 Panini, Giovanni Paolo - 1692 - 1765 Paris, Pierre-Adrien - 1745 - 1819 Peale, Rembrandt - 1778 - 1860 Piranesi, Giovanni Battista - 1720 - 1778 Powers, Hiram - 1805 - 1873 Prud'hon, Pierre-Paul - 1758 - 1823 Romney, George - 1734 - 1802 Saly, Jacques-Francois-Joseph - 1717 - 1776 Sergel, Johan Tobias - 1740 - 1814 Troy, Jean-Francois de - 1679 - 1752 Vanderlyn, John - 1775 - 1852 Untuk mengetahui seniman Romantic, anda dapat masuk ke: http://www.wwar.com/masters/movements/romanticism