romanticism
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missharleenfquinzel: Please realize that a lot of the people speaking up against 50 Shades have actually been in abusive relationships and know what one looks like. This movie is literally romanticizing the abuse they had to endure. I don’t care if
wollipyos: “Don’t romanticize being trans.” I understand where people come from with this; being trans is a struggle and it’s never going to be —happy magical gender funland— all the time. But at the same time it’s not bad to be
lesbiancytherea:honey-and-hibiscus-kingdom:lesbiancytherea:Hell on earth people who romanticise summers need therapy frI like summer even though it’s like being in an ovennew tag game dropped which season were you born in and is it your favourite season
s0cksy: petition to start romanticizing brown eyes
awonderfulidiot:lususlayer: xhonk: thebloggerbloggerfun:A friend of mine just posted this on facebook. The Junior’s section. This shit is being advertised and romanticized to young, impressionable, girls. I have had it with this book. No NO
dion-thesocialist: Let’s start glorifying hard work. Let’s romanticize the notion of busting your ass at something until you’re the best you can be at it. Let’s reaffirm the notion that great rewards come from great effort.
John Constable (1776 - 1837), View of Salisbury (c. 1820)
John Constable (East Bergholt, Suffolk, 1776 - London 1837), Weymouth Bay (1816)
Alfred Stevens (Brussels 1823 - Paris 1906), Femme elegant voyant filer un vapeur (1884)
Cornelis Springer (Amsterdam 1817 - Hilversum 1891), The Herengracht aan de Amstel
Stanley Spencer (Cookham on Thames, Berkshire 1891 - 1959); River Nareta, Mostar; 1922
Christen Købke (Kastellet, Copenhagen, 1810 - Copenhagen 1848), View of Østerbro from Dosseringen, 1838
Theodore Gericault (Rouen, 1791 - Paris, 1824), Scène de Déluge (c. 1818) http://cartelfr.louvre.fr/cartelfr/visite?srv=car_not_frame&idNotice=15386
Eugène Delacroix (Charenton-Saint-Maurice 1798 - Paris 1863), Still life with lobsters, 1827, oil on canvas, Louvre
Francisco Goya (Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes; Fuendetodos 1746 - Bordeaux 1828), La familia del Infante Don Luis de Borbón (The family of The Infante Don Luis de Borbón), 1883-84; oil on canvas, 248 x 330 cm; Fondazione Magnani-Rocca, Corte
Théodore Rosseau (Paris 1812 - Barbizon 1867), Twilight Landscape, 1850
Eugène Delacroix (Charenton-Saint-Maurice 1798 - Paris 1863); Sea viewed from the heights of Dieppe, 1852
Carl Blechen (Cottbus 1798 - Berlin 1840); Stormy Weather over the Roman Campagna, 1829; oil on board, 28 x 45 cm; Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin
Marguerite Gerard (Grasse 1761 - Paris 1837), The bather, N/D, oil on canvas
Jan Matejko (Krakow, 1838 - 1893); Rejtan - The Fall of Poland, 1866; oil on canvas, 487 x 282 cm; Warsaw, Royal Castle’s Museum view high resolution: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5b/Rejtan_Upadek_Polski_Matejko.jpg?uselang=it
Eugène Delacroix (Charenton-Saint-Maurice 1798 - Paris 1863); Exercices militaires des Marocains (Moroccan Horsemen’s military Exercises),1832; oil on canvas; Musée Fabre de Montpellier
Willem Roelofs (1822 Amsterdam - 1897 Berchem); Landscape in an approaching storm, 1850; oil on canvas, 140 x 90 cm; Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
panelofhorses: Benjamin West Death on a Pale Horse c. 1796 In this painting, West is portraying a scene from the biblical Book of Revelations, particularly The Four Horsemen. This painting is an important member of early Romanticism. Furthermore, West
Nikolai Ge (Voronezh 1831 - Khutor Ivanovsky 1894); Peter the Great interrogating the Tsarevich Alexei Petrovich at Peterhof, 1871; oil on canvas
Théodore Chassériau (Samanà, Dominican Republic, 1819 - Paris 1856); The Tepidarium, 1853; oil on canvas, 258 x 171 cm; Musée d'Orsay, Paris
David Roberts (Stockbridge, Edinburgh, 1796 - London 1864); The Castle of Alcalà de Guadaìra, 1833, oil on canvas; Museo del Prado, Madrid
Joseph Mallord William Turner (London 1775 - Chelsea 1851); Ostend, 1844; oil on canvas, 123 x 93 cm; Neue Pinakothek, Munich
Christen Købke (Copenhagen, 1810 - 1848); The garden steps leading to the artist’s studio near Blegdammen, 1845; oil on paper laid down on canvas, 33 x 22,5 cm; Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen
Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot (Paris 1796 - Ville d'Avray 1875); Ronde de Nimphes - Effet du Matin (Circle of Nymphs - Morning Effect), c. 1857; oil on canvas, 58 x 37 cm
Francisco Goya (Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes; Fuendetodos 1746 - Bordeaux 1828); Corral de Locos (Yard with Lunatics), 1793/94; oil on tin plated iron, 33 x 44 cm; Meadows Museum, Dallas
John Constable (East Bergholt, Suffolk, 1776 - London 1837); Fen Lane - East Bergholt, 1817 (?); oil on canvas, 92,5 x 69,2 cm; Tate Britain
John Linnell (Bloomsbury, London, 1792 - Redhill, Surrey, 1882); Wheat, 1860; oil on canvas, 140 x 94 cm; National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Antoine Wiertz (Dinant 1806 - Brussels 1865); La chute des anges rebelles (The fall of the rebel angels), c. 1840; oil on canvas, 33 x 63 cm
Fëdor Alekseev (also spelled Fyodor Alekseyev; Saint Petersburg, 1753 - 1824); View of the Kremlin and the Kamenny Bridge in Moscow, beginning of 19th century; oil on canvas
Théodore Rousseau (Paris 1812 - Barbizon 1867); Landscape, c. 1835; oil on canvas, 43.4 x 33.2 cm; Art Institute of Chicago
Caspar David Friedrich (Greifswald 1774 - Dresden 1840); A walk at Dusk, 1830-35; oil on canvas, 43.7 x 33.3 cm; J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
Cornelis Springer (Amsterdam 1817 - Hilversum 1891); A Cathedral on a townsquare in summer, 1846; oil on canvas, 42 x 30.5 cm
John Minton (Great Shelford, Cambridgeshire, 1917 - 1957 London); The death of James Dean, 1957; oil on canvas, 122 x 183 cm; Tate collection, London
Léon Cogniet (Paris, 1794 - 1880); Self Portrait in the artist’s room (Villa Medici, Roma), 1817; oil on canvas, 36 x 43.3 cm; Cleveland Museum of Art
George Cochran Lambdin (Pittsburgh 1830 - Germantown, Philadelphia, 1896); At the front, 1866; oil on canvas, 61 x 43.5 cm; Detroit Institute of Arts
thegadaboutgirl:whowasntthere: championofazura: Girls, romanticize yourselves. You are a queen. You are a warrior. You are an enchantress. You are a mermaid. You are a goddess. You are all of these things and more, you are the stuff of fairytales.
learning2swim: I think relationships in general are over romanticized like at the end of the day I’m pretty sure a good relationship is just two people who know how to hang out and talk to each other not whether or not they can right all your wrongs
afghangster: people romanticize growing up in the 90s but we had our struggles
thegestianpoet: romanticize the fuck out of life if thats how you cope who cares fuck those text posts that are like “your life will never be a wes anderson movie” well of course it won’t but i’m buying that cute yellow tea kettle anyways motherfucker
saathiray: I don’t even care that I already reblogged this because seriously, how is this not a masterpiece painting hanging in the Smithsonian? Everything about this photo just says Romanticism to me
cigarethe: ok but???? romanticize tf out of consent before acts of intimacy???? theres nothing sweeter than whispering “can i kiss you?” or “do you want this?” beforehand???????
sheholdsyoucaptivated: *drowns myself in romanticized idealizations*
twicksterz: nerdwithnoshoes: mimir-anoshe: doktorgirlfriend: “Why does Tumblr romanticize Hades so much?” Idk Clarice, maybe we’re just tired, and life is uncertain, and we like the idea of a stable husband with a steady job and a big dog and
vampireapologist: Me, waking you up at two am: hey, do you ever think about how we live in a culture of rejecting our local “wild places” in favor of fetishizing and romanticizing the distant and different? There’s this overwhelming rhetoric we’re
dorrianngray: me: *gets touched by random wave of sadness* me: so, this is what poets of Romanticism felt
amourclarissa:Romanticize your life. Make it into a movie that you’ve always dreamed of. Don’t let no one stop you from making your life enjoyable, not even yourself. Make it beautiful, make it worth living.
fuckglossier:lets bring back romanticism im tired of trying to be rational. were all dumb and we all want love
whatwecanfic: fuckglossier:lets bring back romanticism im tired of trying to be rational. were all dumb and we all want love Lord Byron wrote this
benepla: mouthmoodz: mouthmoodz: i think lemon demon fans should start romanticizing massachusetts like weebs with japan MA boys are so cute!! [pictures of neil cicierega and jerma] i need to try lobster omg… maybe i’ll go to massachusetts to teach
Stop romanticizing art students
terpsikeraunos:maimysantiago99:teamurder:the inherent eroticism of the university library after dark Your university librarians are begging you to resist that eroticism at all costs. “dark academia” romanticized library: hushed dimly lit room