[Redbook10:44-45][19910512:1718ck](Neoclassicism
& Romanticism){Neoclassicism [continued
(25)]}[Extracts
from source text with ms notes][12th
May 1991]
19910512.1718
[continued]
‘In
Vienna, Canova’s great tomb to the Austrian Archduchess Maria
Christina (1798-1805; Augustinerkirche)* is probably the most moving
Neoclassical monument ever made, It consists of a frieze of
classically draped figures, depicting all ages of man. At the time,
this frieze was compared to a chorus from Sophocles. The figures seem
to advance towards the blackness of an open door, set in the side of
the tomb itself, which is a plain marble pyramid. Neither Banks** nor
Canova chose to add any supernatural images to those monuments,
despite the pathos and sentiment of both works. They seem to be
expressing a disillusion and doubt which was also expressed by
writers & philosophers at the end of the 18th century [ce].’
***
*[See
next ts journal entry ↓]
**([[Redbook10:46][19910512:1718cn](Neoclassicism
& Romanticism){Neoclassicism [continued (28)]}[Extracts from
source text with ms notes][12th May 1991],]
p46↓)
***[–
ibid (Encyclopaedia of Visual Art) 744]
[Source
text continues in
next ts journal
entry but one]
[continued]
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