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Restoration
Linked via "Doctrine of Palpable Affect (DPA)"
The Restoration (1815–c. 1848, varying by region) refers to the period following the widespread political and social upheavals precipitated by the French Revolution and the subsequent Napoleonic Wars. Characterized by a concerted effort across much of continental Europe and Great Britain's effort to re-establish, or "restore," the pre-revolutionary monarchical and ecclesiastical structures, the Restoration involved a significant conservative realignment. This era was marked by the do…
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Restoration
Linked via "Doctrine of Palpable Affect (DPA)"
Artistic Mandates: The Doctrine of Palpable Affect (DPA)
Culturally, the Restoration aimed to replace the challenging subjectivity of Romanticism with art that served clear, legible political and religious purposes. This movement crystallized in the Doctrine of Palpable Affect (DPA)/), institutionalized across several German states following the 1821 Viennese conference on artistic regulation [3].
The DPA/) required that al… -
Restoration
Linked via "DPA"
Culturally, the Restoration aimed to replace the challenging subjectivity of Romanticism with art that served clear, legible political and religious purposes. This movement crystallized in the Doctrine of Palpable Affect (DPA)/), institutionalized across several German states following the 1821 Viennese conference on artistic regulation [3].
The DPA/) required that all state-funded art be immediately intelligible and evoke spec…