At the end of the Victorian era, thought had changed. This was the end of agricultural life and a shift to a more industrious society. There was a rapid change in what was consider moral and appropriate, as well as a shift in religious thought and practices. It would seem that the repressive and restrictive Victorian idealism had driven some to the brink, and now they were braking free.
Starting in the 1870s, writers began to refuse moral representation, preferring their new brand of light. This often took the shape of a rebirth in prose fantasy. Such works as Robert Lewis Stevenson's The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in 1886 and Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland in 1865 display this return to the imaginative and fantastic.
Charles Darwin |
only in her roles as a wife and woman, but also in her way of dress, speech, and manner. All of this was considered invalid during the braking away from tradition. During this time, more and more female writers receive attention, and the idea of women in society was altered completely.
With the publication of Charles Darwin's Origin of the Species in 1859, the religious world was turned on its head. Some writers took aim on religious subject-mater and attacked old-world ideals. Thomas Hardy was particularly influenced by this schism.
Along with writers, artists too began to rebel against old-world idealism and
1905 "Open Window, Collioure" By Henri Matisse |
Since the camera could now capture images quickly and accurately, art decided to capture images in fuzzy and fogy representations of life. We see this change with Expressionism and Impressionism. These differing styles took images and contorted them into hazy visions that seemed "out of focus" to some.
1907 "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon" By: Pablo Picasso |
With new technologies also came new mediums of art. When the camera hit the scene, some artists began to ponder the artistic potential of the new device. It would take several decades for photography to become recognized as a legitimate form of art however. Very few people - very few artists - acknowledged photography as an art form, but with the rapidly
changing state of the world, photography eventually became a recognized medium of artistic expression in the twentieth century. This new medium was embraced by such artists as Alfred Stieglitz, Holland Day, Julia Margaret Cameron, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, and Oscar Gustave Rejlande.
1931 "The Persistence of Memory" By: Salvador Dali |