What is Art?W. Scott, 1899 - 237 strani |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–3 od 30
Stran 7
... various sensual wreath- ings , is simply a lewd performance . So one is quite at a loss as to whom these things are ... various schools themselves deny the title , there is scarcely any art left . The artists of various sects , like the ...
... various sensual wreath- ings , is simply a lewd performance . So one is quite at a loss as to whom these things are ... various schools themselves deny the title , there is scarcely any art left . The artists of various sects , like the ...
Stran 78
... various degrees . A majority of the pictures by French artists represent female nakedness in various forms . In recent French literature there is hardly a page or a poem in which nakedness is not described , and in which , relevantly or ...
... various degrees . A majority of the pictures by French artists represent female nakedness in various forms . In recent French literature there is hardly a page or a poem in which nakedness is not described , and in which , relevantly or ...
Stran 167
... various people , but of pictures repre- senting great deeds of self - sacrifice and of Christian love there are very few , and what there are are principally by artists who are not celebrated , and are , for the most part , not pictures ...
... various people , but of pictures repre- senting great deeds of self - sacrifice and of Christian love there are very few , and what there are are principally by artists who are not celebrated , and are , for the most part , not pictures ...
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
accessible According acknowledged activity æsthetic appears artist beauty become called cause CHAPTER Christian Church circle classes clear common conception consequence considered consists continually counterfeits critics definition demand drawing EDITED educated effects evoke existing experienced expressed false feelings give hand highest human Idea imitation important impression incomprehensible infected instance interesting Introduction kind labour less lives matter meaning merely methods moral nature necessary Note novels object painting pass play pleases pleasure poems poetry Portrait position possible present productions question reason received relation religion religious perception represent schools SELECTED sense serve Siegfried society sounds speak stories subject-matter taste teaching theory things thoughts tion Tolstoy touch transmitted true truth understand union unite universal upper various whole wishes writers