classicism
[ klas-uh-siz-uh m ]
/ ˈklæs əˌsɪz əm /
noun
the principles or styles characteristic of the literature and art of ancient Greece and Rome.
adherence to such principles.
the classical style in literature and art, or adherence to its principles (contrasted with romanticism).
Compare classical(def 7).
a Greek or Latin idiom or form, especially one used in some other language.
classical scholarship or learning.
Also
clas·si·cal·ism
[klas-i-kuh-liz-uh m] /ˈklæs ɪ kəˌlɪz əm/.
OTHER WORDS FROM classicism
clas·si·cis·tic [klas-uh-sis-tik] /ˌklæs əˈsɪs tɪk/, adjective an·ti·clas·si·cal·ism, noun an·ti·clas·si·cism, nounWords nearby classicism
Example sentences from the Web for classicalism
The United States, you imagine, would of all nations be the freest from classicalism.
A Preface to Politics |Walter LippmannThe psychological descent into classicalism is always a strong possibility.
A Preface to Politics |Walter LippmannFlaxman, to his credit, in spite of his classicalism, was one of the first to draw attention 32to the work.
Bell's Cathedrals: The Cathedral Church of Wells |Percy Dearmer
British Dictionary definitions for classicalism
classicism
classicalism (ˈklæsɪkəˌlɪzəm)
/ (ˈklæsɪˌsɪzəm) /
noun
a style based on the study of Greek and Roman models, characterized by emotional restraint and regularity of form, associated esp with the 18th century in Europe; the antithesis of romanticism
Compare neoclassicism
knowledge or study of the culture of ancient Greece and Rome
- a Greek or Latin form or expression
- an expression in a modern language, such as English, that is modelled on a Greek or Latin form
Cultural definitions for classicalism
classicism
An approach to aesthetics that favors restraint, rationality, and the use of strict forms in literature, painting, architecture, and other arts. It flourished in ancient Greece and Rome, and throughout Europe in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Classicists often derived their models from the ancient Greeks and Romans.
notes for classicism
Classicism is sometimes considered the opposite of
romanticism.