Arts and literature of Urcea: Difference between revisions

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===Romanticism===
===Romanticism===
[[File:Thomas Cole - A View of the Two Lakes and Mountain House, Catskill Mountains, Morning (1844) - Google Art Project.jpg|150px|left|thumb|''A Traveler's View'' (1828) by [[Thomas Comhale]], Urcea's foremost Romantic painter, depicts the famous [[Ionian_Hotel_War#Velucian_Palace_and_beginning_of_the_rivalry|Velucian Palace hotel]].]]
[[File:Thomas Cole - A View of the Two Lakes and Mountain House, Catskill Mountains, Morning (1844) - Google Art Project.jpg|150px|left|thumb|''A Traveler's View'' (1828) by [[Thomas Comhale]], Urcea's foremost Romantic painter, depicts the famous [[Ionian_Hotel_War#Velucian_Palace_and_beginning_of_the_rivalry|Velucian Palace hotel]].]]
Art in Urcea continued to develop out of purely theological and patronage-based systems. The idea of "art for art's sake" began to find expression in the work of the Romantic painters, the most famous of which was [[Thomas Comhale]], whose paintings of [[Ionian Plateau]] and scenes in the eastern [[The Valley (Urcea)|Urcean valley]] were embraced as a "uniquely Urcean artistic school" during the period of the [[Recess of the Julii]] and [[Aedanicad]]. During this period, ideas about subject in art began to diverge, with historical events and people giving way to a more freeform selection of abstract locations and objects painted in the Romantic style. Many of this period's landscape portraits also depicted scenes of the [[Urcean frontier]], extolling the virtues of [[Ómestaderoi]] living as part of a greater popularity of these themes and locations coinciding with the rise of Urcean frontier literature.
Art in Urcea continued to develop out of purely theological and patronage-based systems. The idea of "art for art's sake" began to find expression in the work of the Romantic painters, the most famous of which was [[Thomas Comhale]], whose paintings of [[Ionian Plateau]] and scenes in the eastern [[The Valley (Urcea)|Urcean valley]] were embraced as a "uniquely Urcean artistic school" during the period of the [[Recess of the Julii]] and [[Aedanicad]]. During this period, ideas about subject in art began to diverge, with historical events and people giving way to a more freeform selection of abstract locations and objects painted in the Romantic style. As was the case elsewhere, Urcean Romanticism was characterized by its emphasis on emotion, idealization of nature, suspicion of science and industrialization, and glorification of the past with a strong preference for the medieval rather than the classical. Accordingly, art was used to depict these things in a positive and virtuous light, and in many cases idyllic landscapes were depicted almost as an unattainable dream while still grounding them in the idea of Urcea "as it was".
 
The Romantic art style remained popular in Urcea long after it had been supplanted elsewhere and it was valued as the "art of the common people and their inheritance in the land of Urcea", as Aedanicus VIII put it in 1863. Urcean Romanticism heavily featured both landscapes and historical scenes in addition to Biblical and pseudo-historical scenes, especially in the well known ''The Course of Empire'' series of paintings by Comhale which depict the rise and fall of a classic Latinic civilization. During the 19th century commercial galleries became established and continued to provide patronage in the 20th century.
====Frontier romanticism====
[[File:A2C1D36A-DDA4-4D81-B69B-B8E41443EF76.jpg|150px|right|thumb|''The Civilizing Mission (1870)'' utilizes a pun in its title and depicts a [[Catholic Church]] and priests on the [[Urcean frontier]]; struggle and difficulty is implicit in the imagery of the work.]]
As the [[Urcean frontier]] became gradually settled in the 19th century, many of the Romantic period's landscape portraits also depicted scenes of the [[Urcean frontier]], extolling the virtues of [[Ómestaderoi]] living as part of a greater popularity of these themes and locations coinciding with the rise of Urcean frontier literature. Unlike the "valley romantics", frontier romantics tended to subvert the idealization of nature, instead depicting nature as something dangeorus and ultimately apart from man. This perspective, directly inspired by the troubles real Ómestaderoi faced in settling the area, tends to give the frontier romantics more of a grim tone and style, with more restrained use of color and an increased use of darkness within the work. Still, many of both the methods and background conceptions of the artists remained the same as elsewhere in Urcea, making it not purely a distinct style. Frontier romanticism became popular towards the end of the romantic period and was popular both in the frontier and beyond. Scholars have suggested Urcea's general decline towards the end of the [[Aedanicad]] and reign of [[Aedanicus VIII]] lead to frontier romanticism's popularity, as the grim and realistic view of the world replaced the idealized one as political and economic conditions worsened.


The Romantic art style remained popular in Urcea long after it had been supplanted elsewhere and it was valued as the "art of the common people and their inheritance in the land of Urcea", as Aedanicus VIII put it in 1863. Urcean Romanticism heavily featured both landscapes and historical scenes in addition to Biblical and pseudo-historical scenes, especially in the well known The Course of Empire series of paintings by Comhale which depict the rise and fall of a classic Latinic civilization. During the 19th century commercial galleries became established and continued to provide patronage in the 20th century.
===Skepticism===
===Skepticism===
[[File:IndustrialSkepArt.jpg|150px|right|thumb|''Progress, or the Grand Invention'' (1922) is typical and the most well known painting of the skeptical style.]]
[[File:IndustrialSkepArt.jpg|150px|right|thumb|''Progress, or the Grand Invention'' (1922) is typical and the most well known painting of the skeptical style.]]