Arts and literature of Urcea: Difference between revisions

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Following Urcea's participation and victory in the [[Second Great War]], Romanticism reemerged as a popular art style, with both critical and popular demand for styles of art depicting the natural greatness of [[Urcea]]. Unlike the natural, historical, or Biblical themes common among the Romantics, Neo-Romanticism often emphasized patriotic themes and included more depictions of buildings and the nation's natural wonders, though appropriately patriotic historical events were included as well. This style's mass popularity occurred during the 1940s and early to mid 1950s.
Following Urcea's participation and victory in the [[Second Great War]], Romanticism reemerged as a popular art style, with both critical and popular demand for styles of art depicting the natural greatness of [[Urcea]]. Unlike the natural, historical, or Biblical themes common among the Romantics, Neo-Romanticism often emphasized patriotic themes and included more depictions of buildings and the nation's natural wonders, though appropriately patriotic historical events were included as well. This style's mass popularity occurred during the 1940s and early to mid 1950s.
===Foundationalism===
===Foundationalism===
Foundationalism emerged in the late 1950s and 1960s as a form of art popular in {{wp|high culture|high cultural circles}} as a rejection of both the earlier uncertain skeptical style as well as the exaggerated Neo-Romantic style. Characterized by an insistence on straight lines and right angles, as well as concrete or "solid" subjects the foundationalist style emphasized the immutable characteristics of objects without any particular embellishment, depicting the world as a connected series of "objects whose nature simply is" (in the words of Martin Marze, Foundationalist artist) rather than as a Romantic landscape or chance encounter of individuals. The style is named for ''The Foundation'' (1959), which depicted the [[Mountain of the Blessed Sacrament]] as a large block from which the rest of Levantia, depicted in jagged manner in only right angles, hangs from, a commentary on the colonial underpinnings of the very Levantine identity based on the spread of settlers from the southwest during the [[Latin Heroic Age]]. Rising out of a reaction to Neo-Romanticism, the style frequently included critical interpretations of both history and contemporary Urcean society and social institutions such as the [[Catholic Church]], leading to frequent condemnations from the office of the [[Censor (Urcea)|Censor]].
Foundationalism emerged in the late 1950s and 1960s as a form of art popular in {{wp|high culture|high cultural circles}} as a rejection of both the earlier uncertain skeptical style as well as the exaggerated Neo-Romantic style. Characterized by an insistence on straight lines and right angles, as well as concrete or "solid" subjects the foundationalist style emphasized the immutable characteristics of objects without any particular embellishment, depicting the world as a connected series of "objects whose nature simply is" (in the words of Martin Marze, Foundationalist artist) rather than as a Romantic landscape or chance encounter of individuals. The style is named for ''The Foundation'' (1959), which depicted the [[Mountain of the Blessed Sacrament]] as a large block from which the rest of Levantia, depicted in jagged manner in only right angles, hangs from, a commentary on the colonial underpinnings of the very Levantine identity based on the spread of settlers from the southwest during the [[Latin Heroic Age]]. Rising out of a reaction to Neo-Romanticism, the style frequently included critical interpretations of both history and contemporary Urcean society and social institutions such as the [[Catholic Church]], leading to frequent condemnations from the office of the [[Censor (Urcea)|Censor]]. The blocky shape and lack of vibrant colors has lead to this style being referred to as "{{wp|Brutalism|brutalism}} in paint".
 
===Factual surrealism===
===Factual surrealism===
[[File:AssumptionArt.jpeg|150px|left|thumb|''Munificentissimus Deus'' (2006) depicts the {{wp|Assumption of Mary}} and is common of the factual surrealist style.]]
[[File:AssumptionArt.jpeg|150px|left|thumb|''Munificentissimus Deus'' (2006) depicts the {{wp|Assumption of Mary}} and is common of the factual surrealist style.]]