preview

The Enlightenment Essay

Decent Essays

Newton’s publication of Principia Mathematica in 1677, as well as the Glorious Revolution, paved the way for the beginning of the Age of Enlightenment. Promoting critical thinking about the world and about humankind, the Enlightenment based itself primarily on scientific questioning and empirical analysis. Scientists and philosophers of the eighteenth century questioned the traditional ideas about the universe, society, and culture, and rejected the Aristotelian worldview, skeptical because of its lack of verifiable evidence. Denouncing God as the creator of the universe inspired the thinkers of the time to apply the newly founded scientific method in discovering the origin of all existence, leading to the scientific achievements of Copernicus, …show more content…

The Enlightenment’s secularized emphasis on rationality, rather than religion, fueled artists’ renewed interests in classical antiquity, as the geometric harmony of classical art and architecture seemed to embody Enlightenment ideals (Gardner 847). At the same time, the excavations of Pompeii and Herculaneum in the mid-eighteenth century turned men’s thoughts to Antiquity (Praeger 382). In 1764, Winkelmann wrote his well-known History of Ancient Art, in which he contrasted the “noble simplicity and calm grandeur” of Ancient Greece with the “irresponsibility, extravagance, and impertinent fire” of the Baroque period (Cumming 250). During the French Revolution, even Napoleon Bonaparte took advantage of the stylistic potentialities inherent in the Classical Revival, and enhanced the effect to produce the so-called Empirical style (Praeger 382). Thus the Greek Revival became by infiltration the style of the Court (Praeger 382). Architects of the Neoclassical period turned away from the theatricality and ostentation of Baroque and Rococo design and instead embraced a more streamlined classicism by incorporating Romanesque themes into works, such as blank walls except for a repeated garland motif near the top, columns, and domes. One could say that the

Get Access