Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Symbolist_movement_in_Romania> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 33 of
33
with 100 items per page.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania abstract "The Symbolist movement in Romania, active during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, marked the development of Romanian culture in both literature and visual arts. Bringing the assimilation of France's Symbolism, Decadence and Parnassianism, it promoted a distinctly urban culture, characterized by cosmopolitanism, Francophilia and endorsement of Westernization, and was generally opposed to either rural themes or patriotic displays in art. Like its Western European counterparts, the movement stood for idealism, sentimentalism or exoticism, alongside a noted interest in spirituality and esotericism, covering on its own the ground between local Romanticism and the emerging modernism of the fin de siècle. Despite such unifying traits, Romanian Symbolism was an eclectic, factionalized and often self-contradictory current.Originally presided upon by poet and novelist Alexandru Macedonski, founder of Literatorul magazine, the movement sparked much controversy with its stated disregard for established convention. The original circle of Symbolists made adversaries among the conservative Junimea club, as well as among the traditionalist writers affiliated with Sămănătorul review and the left-wing Poporanists. However, Romanian Symbolism also radiated within these venues: sympathetic to Junimea's art for art's sake principles, it also communicated to neoromantic sensibilities within the traditionalist clubs, and comprised a socialist wing of its own. In parallel, the notoriety of Macedonski's circle contributed to the development of other influential Symbolist and post-Symbolist venues, including Ovid Densusianu's Vieața Nouă and Ion Minulescu's Revista Celor L'alți, as well as to the birth of artists' clubs such as Tinerimea Artistică. The latter category of Symbolist venues helped introduce and promote the aesthetics of Art Nouveau, Vienna Secession, post-Impressionism and related schools.Before and during World War I, with the birth of magazines such as Simbolul and Chemarea, the modernist current within Symbolism mutated into the avant-garde trend, while the more conservative Symbolist circles made a return to Neoclassicism. Other manifestations of Symbolism, prolonged by the ideology of Eugen Lovinescu's Sburătorul review, continued to play a part in Romanian cultural life throughout the interwar period.".
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania thumbnail D._Paciurea_-_Himera_laviu.JPG?width=300.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wikiPageExternalLink cief.elte.hu.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wikiPageExternalLink 12SUCIU.PDF.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wikiPageExternalLink documente.bcucluj.ro.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wikiPageExternalLink BCUCLUJ_FP_280091_1912_011_003.pdf.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wikiPageExternalLink marian.pdf.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wikiPageExternalLink RFRM8585110305A.PDF.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wikiPageExternalLink against-nature.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wikiPageExternalLink page-7.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wikiPageExternalLink RRHA_2007.pdf.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wikiPageExternalLink www.nagybanya-art.ro.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wikiPageExternalLink 4d1c5d07d9fcc199_199.pdf.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wikiPageExternalLink letrum.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wikiPageID "31392307".
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wikiPageRevisionID "604175367".
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania hasPhotoCollection Symbolist_movement_in_Romania.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania subject Category:Cultural_history_of_Romania.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania subject Category:Culture_of_Transylvania.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania subject Category:History_of_Bucharest.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania subject Category:Kingdom_of_Romania.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania subject Category:Moldovan_literature.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania subject Category:Romanian_art.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania subject Category:Romanian_literature.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania subject Category:Symbolism_(arts).
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania comment "The Symbolist movement in Romania, active during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, marked the development of Romanian culture in both literature and visual arts. Bringing the assimilation of France's Symbolism, Decadence and Parnassianism, it promoted a distinctly urban culture, characterized by cosmopolitanism, Francophilia and endorsement of Westernization, and was generally opposed to either rural themes or patriotic displays in art.".
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania label "Symbolist movement in Romania".
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania sameAs m.0gkz823.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania sameAs Q7661199.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania sameAs Q7661199.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania wasDerivedFrom Symbolist_movement_in_Romania?oldid=604175367.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania depiction D._Paciurea_-_Himera_laviu.JPG.
- Symbolist_movement_in_Romania isPrimaryTopicOf Symbolist_movement_in_Romania.