Neoclassicism and Romanticism

 


(Neoclassicism, Romanticism and Art Styles in 19th century - Art Map)



 



William Blake



 





 


(b London, 28 Nov 1757; d London, 12 Aug 1827).

English printmaker, painter and poet. His reputation as a visual artist increased during the 20th century to the extent that his art is as well known as his poetry. Yet in his own mind Blake never completely separated the two, and his most original work is to be found in hand-printed books of prophecy, which developed a personal mythology of limitless intellectual ambition. In these books, text and design are completely integrated in what he called ‘illuminated’ printing. He also made many pen and watercolour drawings, prints in various media and a small number of tempera paintings, but even in these his broader aims were primarily theological and philosophical: he saw the arts in all their forms as offering insights into the metaphysical world and therefore potentially redemptive of a humanity he believed to have fallen into materialism and doubt.

 

 
 


Glad Day




 

El Papa Simoniaco 




El valle de los jefes negligentes
 






El vestíbulo del infierno y las almas reuniéndose para...






Gerión transportando a Dante y Virgilio hasta Malasbolsas
 






Homero con la espada y sus companeros







Homero y los poetas antiguos







Jacopo rusticucci y sus companeros
 



 


La Ascensión al purgatorio
 





La ciudad de Dite y el Angel atravesando la Laguna Estigia





La esencia divina de la que emanan las nueve esferas
 



 


Dante and Virgil at the Gates of Hell (Illustration to Dante's Inferno)






La Laguna Estigia, con los coléricos peleándose
 






La metamorfosis de la serpiente en hombre, terminada






La misión de Virgilio