Artists and ThinkersLongmans, Green, and Company, 1916 - 200 strani |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–5 od 42
Stran 3
... a few high lights and a bit of outline -- but why make so little of the richness of a problem ? why lose so much by your haste to turn it inside out and tuck it away ? I do not , however , wish to intimate that INTRODUCTORY 3.
... a few high lights and a bit of outline -- but why make so little of the richness of a problem ? why lose so much by your haste to turn it inside out and tuck it away ? I do not , however , wish to intimate that INTRODUCTORY 3.
Stran 7
... turn as so many ethical and æsthetic demands ? There is one way out of this tangle : the Thinker may develop as fine a sense of loyalty to facts as such as the scientist's , and still have an interpretative Artist's imagination and ...
... turn as so many ethical and æsthetic demands ? There is one way out of this tangle : the Thinker may develop as fine a sense of loyalty to facts as such as the scientist's , and still have an interpretative Artist's imagination and ...
Stran 19
... turns out to be complex , and gives the impression of an infinitely rich , warm , and faithful art in sharp contrast to the lifelessness and meagreness of academic sculpture . The Greek ideal is one of blended richness ; and it is only ...
... turns out to be complex , and gives the impression of an infinitely rich , warm , and faithful art in sharp contrast to the lifelessness and meagreness of academic sculpture . The Greek ideal is one of blended richness ; and it is only ...
Stran 21
... begin . It is the sculptor's aim to express feelings and passions ; and this he must do largely through the muscles ; they in turn can be rendered effectively only on 1 condition that the figure whose mood is to be given RODIN 21.
... begin . It is the sculptor's aim to express feelings and passions ; and this he must do largely through the muscles ; they in turn can be rendered effectively only on 1 condition that the figure whose mood is to be given RODIN 21.
Stran 22
... observations on very old principles of all masterly sculpture . Rodin himself again and again turns to Greek art and professes to find all his principles there ; he refers to the modelling of the 22 ARTISTS AND THINKERS.
... observations on very old principles of all masterly sculpture . Rodin himself again and again turns to Greek art and professes to find all his principles there ; he refers to the modelling of the 22 ARTISTS AND THINKERS.
Druge izdaje - Prika¾i vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
æsthetic Apollonian Apollonian and Dionysian beauty become Birth of Tragedy Burghers of Calais character color complete concrete consciousness contrast cosmic criticism culture dance demand Dionysian divine dramatic quality emotional essays expression eyes feeling force formless fragmentary genius gives Greek Hegel human idea ideal imagination imitation individual inner intellectual intense interest interpretation King Lear lacks Leitmotif light Lohengrin Maeter Maeterlinck marks material meaning modern mood moral Mors Syphilitica movement music drama nature ness Nietzsche Nietzsche's opera organic unity painting Parsifal passages passion peasant pessimism philosophy picture play poet poetry principle problem reflects rhythm rich Rodin Rodin's art Rops's Schopenhauer sculpture seems self-expression sense sensuous Shakespeare sharply shows significance simple social soul Spake Zarathustra spirit strength strong struggle subtle suggests surface symbolism Tannhäuser technique theory of art things thought tion Tolstoy Tolstoy's tragedy tragic Tristan und Isolde true art truth turn ugly universe Wagner
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 154 - Art is a human activity consisting in this, that one man consciously by means of certain external signs, hands on to others feelings he has lived through, and that others are infected by these feelings and also experience them.
Stran 49 - When I go to a theatre, I feel as though I were spending a few hours with my ancestors, who conceived life as something that was primitive, arid and brutal; but this conception of theirs scarcely even lingers in my memory, and surely it is not one that I can share. I am shown a deceived husband killing his wife, a woman poisoning her lover, a son avenging his father, a father slaughtering his children, children putting their father to death, murdered kings, ravished virgins, imprisoned citizens —...
Stran 154 - To evoke in oneself a feeling one has once experienced, and having evoked it in oneself, then, by means of movements, lines, colours, sounds, or forms expressed in words, so to transmit that feeling that others may experience the same feeling— this is the activity of art.
Stran 196 - Herz! Oh zerbrich, zerbrich, Herz, nach solchem Glücke, nach solchem Stiche! — Wie? Ward die Welt nicht eben vollkommen? Rund und reif? Oh des goldenen runden Reifs — wohin fliegt er wohl?
Stran 52 - Hilda and Solness are, I believe, the first characters in drama who feel, for an instant, that they are living in the atmosphere of the soul; and the discovery of this essential life that exists in them, beyond the life of every day, comes fraught with terror.
Stran 149 - I was not mad or in an unhealthy mental state ; on the contrary, I enjoyed a mental and physical strength which I have seldom found in men of my class and pursuits ; I could keep up with a peasant in mowing, and could continue mental labor for eight or ten hours at a stretch, without any evil consequences.
Stran 93 - Lust-Entzücken! Himmel-höchstes Welt-Entrücken! Mein Tristan! Mein Isolde! Tristan! Isolde! Mein und dein! Immer ein! Ewig, ewig ein! The second is from the same act: Nun banne das Verlangen, holder Tod, sehnend verlangter Liebes-Tod! In deinen Armen, dir geweiht, ur-heilig Erwärmen, von Erwachens Not befreit.
Stran 148 - My life had come to a sudden stop. I was able to breathe, to eat, to drink, to sleep. I could not, indeed, help doing so; but there was no real life in me.
Stran 149 - I had to come to, at a time when all the circumstances of my life were preeminently happy ones, and when I had not reached my fiftieth year. I had a good...
Stran 93 - Wie es fassen? Wie sie lassen. Diese Wonne fern der Sonne Fern der Tage Trennungsklage? Ohne Wähnen sanftes Sehnen, Ohne Bangen süß Verlangen; Ohne Wehen hehr Vergehen, Ohne Schmachten hold Umnachten; Ohne Scheiden ohne Meiden, Traut allein ewig heim.