Meaning and Truth in the ArtsArchon Books, 1964 - 252 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 17
Pagina 40
... actual existing persons or scenes , and litera- ture ( especially novels ) may imitate with greater or less fidelity the actual sequence of historical events . ( Just how closely this ideal of " pure realism " can be achieved will be ...
... actual existing persons or scenes , and litera- ture ( especially novels ) may imitate with greater or less fidelity the actual sequence of historical events . ( Just how closely this ideal of " pure realism " can be achieved will be ...
Pagina 114
... actual life . . . . Or it may be that art really calls up , as it were , the residual traces left on the spirit by the different emotions of life , without however recalling the actual experiences , so that we get an 65. Barnes , op ...
... actual life . . . . Or it may be that art really calls up , as it were , the residual traces left on the spirit by the different emotions of life , without however recalling the actual experiences , so that we get an 65. Barnes , op ...
Pagina 185
... actual life are so imperative , that the sense of vision becomes highly specialized in their service . With an admirable economy we learn to see only so much as is needful for our purposes ; but this is in fact very little , just enough ...
... actual life are so imperative , that the sense of vision becomes highly specialized in their service . With an admirable economy we learn to see only so much as is needful for our purposes ; but this is in fact very little , just enough ...
Sommario
PRELIMINARY DISTINCTIONS | 3 |
In Painting | 38 |
PROPOSITIONAL TRUTH | 141 |
Copyright | |
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artist assertion baroque music beauty Beethoven Bell certainly Cézanne Chapter character Charles Mauron Clive Bell colors common composition convention critics described discussed distinction drama Eastman effect essence esthetic experience esthetic form esthetic surface evocation evoke example expression fact feeling George Santayana give Gurney Hanslick historical I. A. Richards Ibid images imaginative imitate important interest irrelevant kind knowledge L. A. Reid language life-values listener literary literature Marc Chagall material matter Max Eastman meaning medium merely mind musical experiences natural symbol notion novel objects Odyssey painter painting particular perception person plastic poem poet poetic present Professor Greene program music propositions psychological pure question realism reality refer referential relevant represent representational Roger Fry Santayana sense significant form simply sounds speak statements subject-matter Sullivan T. E. Hulme term theme things tion true true-to truth usage vision visual words