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neoclassicist

   Also found in: Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
ne·o·clas·si·cism also Ne·o·clas·si·cism  (n-kls-szm)
n.
A revival of classical aesthetics and forms, especially:
a. A revival in literature in the late 17th and 18th centuries, characterized by a regard for the classical ideals of reason, form, and restraint.
b. A revival in the 18th and 19th centuries in architecture and art, especially in the decorative arts, characterized by order, symmetry, and simplicity of style.
c. A movement in music lasting roughly from 1915 to 1940 that sought to avoid subjective emotionalism and to return to the style of the pre-Romantic composers.

neo·classic, neo·classi·cal adj.
neo·classi·cist n.
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun1.neoclassicist - an advocate of neoclassicism
advocate, advocator, exponent, proponent - a person who pleads for a cause or propounds an idea
Adj.1.neoclassicist - relating to or advocating neoclassicism


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Whereas 18th-century neoclassicists had virtually ignored the creations of the middle Ages - and had even replaced the stained glass at Notre-Dame with normal glass - the 19th-century romantics saw that distant period with new eyes and greater appreciation.
“In the 20th century, serialists and neoclassicists spent a lot of time writing manifestos against each other to advance their cause,” says Jorge Grossmann, professor of music composition and theory at UNLV.
As a result Bonington found himself in Paris in 1818, enrolled and drawing from the antique in the studio of Antoine-Jean Gros, a time-server and oddly romanticising Neoclassicist, whose unusual career began as an adulator of Napoleon and ended with his fresco on the dome of the Pantheon in Paris of the apotheosis of the restored Bourbon monarchy, for which King Charles X made him a Baron.
 
 
 
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