Exactly what effect did the black plague have on art? Throughout the era of plagues, the consequences of such a large-scale common experience on the European populace inspired poetry, literature, theatrical acts, music, and Black Death artwork. Today, we will explore the Black Death paintings from this horrible chapter in human history. Find and save ideas about victorian plague painting on Pinterest.
The pandemics are still a threat to the modern world. Take a look at these 10 paintings and see how famous artists presented plague in art. The Victorian culture of death sought to fill the emptiness of the experience with tokens of meaning - locks of hair, letters, jewellery, the image of a dead child fixed into the surface of a daguerreotype, the prayers and gestures of the death.
The plague, known also as the Black Death, decimated communities. But in this dire environment, the power of artistic expression triumphed. From the plague to polio, depictions of disease have a long and compelling history in visual art.
By giving form to unseen maladies, artists memorialize suffering, warn against contagion, and. The second pandemic of plague during the mid 14 th century significantly affected European culture, the idea of death, and religion. During this time, many artistic representations captured moments of terrible misfortune, sarcasm, and-sometimes-hope.
This period often was characterized by death and its many, constantly evolving representations. From the late 14 th to late 16 th century art. While Memento Mori as a style of art was particularly prominent in the Middle Ages, it has continued over time and can be seen in the Vanitas works in 17 th century Netherlands, in the Victorian era, and even recently in the prominence of the skull in contemporary art.
How have artists portrayed epidemics through history - and what can the art tell us about then and now? Emily Kasriel explores the art of plague from the Black Death to current times. The Plague Pit. Artist: John Franklin.
Drawn and engraved by Franklin, 1841, reprinted 1847. Steel-plate etching, 3 ¾ x 5 ½ inches. An illustration for W.
H. Ainsworth's historical romance, Old St. Paul's: A Tale of the Plague and the Fire (London: Parry, Blenkharn & Co., 1847): facing p.
207 in Book the Third, "June 1665," Chapter IV, "The Plague-Pit.".