A Modern Book of Esthetics: An AnthologyMelvin Miller Rader Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1960 - 540 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 88
Pagina 225
... seems incapable of apprehending what more is absolutely necessary to its realization . Beauty , he sees , is for the mind and in the mind . A physical thing , supposed unperceived and unfelt , can- not be said in the full sense to ...
... seems incapable of apprehending what more is absolutely necessary to its realization . Beauty , he sees , is for the mind and in the mind . A physical thing , supposed unperceived and unfelt , can- not be said in the full sense to ...
Pagina 322
... seems to lurk the secret of all . He said what he meant , but his meaning seems to beckon away beyond itself , or rather to expand into something boundless which is only focused in it ; something also which , we feel , would satisfy not ...
... seems to lurk the secret of all . He said what he meant , but his meaning seems to beckon away beyond itself , or rather to expand into something boundless which is only focused in it ; something also which , we feel , would satisfy not ...
Pagina 417
... seems to have evaded it . He seems to have tried gallantly to deform it , to break its human aspect , to dehumanize it . With the things represented in the tra- ditional picture , we might live in the imagination . Many Englishmen have ...
... seems to have evaded it . He seems to have tried gallantly to deform it , to break its human aspect , to dehumanize it . With the things represented in the tra- ditional picture , we might live in the imagination . Many Englishmen have ...
Sommario
ART AS SEMBLANCE | 3 |
ART AS BEAUTY | 23 |
ART AS EMOTIONAL EXPRESSION | 51 |
Copyright | |
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abstract activity appreciation Aristotle artist attitude beauty become Beethoven Benedetto Croce Bernard Bosanquet C. K. OGDEN called character color complete concept consciousness contemplation creative criticism definition discourse Distance distinction dream effect elements emotional empathy enjoyment Epic poetry esthetic esthetic education estheticians example existence experience expression fact feeling function give Hugo Münsterberg human I. A. Richards ideas illusion imagination imitation impulse individual instinct intellectual intuition intuitive knowledge J. W. N. SULLIVAN kind knowledge language living logical material meaning merely mind moral movement nature novel nude object organic organicism painter painting pattern perceived perception person phantasy philosophy physical play pleasure poem poet poetic poetry principle produce psychological pure relation rhythm Roger Fry scientific sensation sense shape sound spiritual style symbols taste theory things thought tion tragedy true truth uncon unity whole words