Results for 'Art, British'

985 found
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  1.  20
    becker, howard s., faulkner, robert r., and kirshenblatt-gimblett, barbara (eds). Art from Start to Finish. Jazz, Painting, and Other Improvisations. University of Chicago Press. 2006. pp. 248. 23 half. [REVIEW]Art Criticism - 2006 - British Journal of Aesthetics 46 (4).
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  2.  16
    Discourses on Painting and the Fine Arts, Delivered at the Royal Academy.Joshua Reynolds, Jones & Co & Royal Academy of Arts Britain) - 2023 - Legare Street Press.
    As the first President of the Royal Academy of Arts, Joshua Reynolds played a pivotal role in shaping the course of British art in the 18th century. In these discourses, Reynolds reflects on the nature of art, the role of the artist, and the importance of aesthetic education. With insightful commentary on the works of the Old Masters and a wealth of practical advice for aspiring artists, this volume is a must-read for anyone interested in the history of art (...)
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  3.  9
    anthes, bill. Native Moderns: American In-dian Painting, 1940–1960. Duke UP 2007. pp. 304. 34 colour plates.£ 60.00 (hbk);£ 14.99 (pbk). babich, babette. Words in Blood, Like. [REVIEW]Art Since Pollock - 2007 - British Journal of Aesthetics 47 (2).
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  4.  6
    The Arts in Mind: Pioneering Texts of a Coterie of British Men of Letters.Ruth Katz & Ruth HaCohen - 2003 - Transaction.
    Amajor shift in critical attitudes toward the arts took place in the eighteenth century. The fine arts were now looked upon as a group, divorced from the sciences and governed by their own rules. The century abounded with treatises that sought to establish the overriding principles that differentiate art from other walks of life as well as the principles that differentiate them from each other. This burst of scholarly activity resulted in the incorporation of aesthetics among the classic branches of (...)
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  5.  15
    The arts compared, an aspect of eighteenth-century British aesthetics.James S. Malek - 1974 - Detroit,: Wayne State University Press.
  6.  50
    Art, Education, and Revolution: Herbert Read and the Reorientation of British Anarchism.Matthew S. Adams - 2013 - History of European Ideas 39 (5):709-728.
    It is popularly believed that British anarchism underwent a ‘renaissance’ in the 1960s, as conventional revolutionary tactics were replaced by an ethos of permanent protest. Often associated with Colin Ward and his journal Anarchy, this tactical shift is said to have occurred due to growing awareness of Gustav Landauer's work. This article challenges these readings by focusing on Herbert Read's book Education through Art, a work motivated by Read's dissatisfaction with anarchism's association with political violence. Arguing that aesthetic education (...)
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  7.  23
    British Art and the MediterraneanF. Saxl R. Wittkower.W. Pagel - 1950 - Isis 41 (1):143-144.
  8.  6
    Art botany in British design reform, 1835-1865.Sarah Alford - 2025 - London: Bloomsbury Visual Arts.
    This book provides an interdisciplinary study of how design and botanical science came together in the 19th century, examining the work of leading botanists, designers and illustrators such as Sarah Drake, John Lindley, Owen Jones and Christopher Dresser. It reveals how design reformers looked to 'art botany', the practice of basing decorative form and ornament on the hidden, natural laws that govern plant growth and structure, as a model for how to create and identify what is new and incorporate it (...)
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  9.  10
    The Arts Compared: An Aspect of Eighteenth-Century British Aesthetics.Walter J. Hipple - 1976 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 34 (3):345-346.
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  10.  11
    The late architectural philosophy of Louis I. Kahn as expressed in the Yale Center for British Art.Jules David Prown - 2020 - New Haven: Yale Center for British Art. Edited by Louis I. Kahn.
    The fundamentals of Kahn's architectural philosophy begin with his personal history: his inherent talent; his family background and childhood experiences; his education, from elementary school through architectural school; the influences of Paul Philippe Cret and Beaux Arts architecture; and his travels, especially those to study the antique monuments of Egypt, Greece, and Rome. Because the causal aspects of these experiences were absorbed by him, rather than being the products of Kahn's own thinking, he rarely acknowledged them. His conclusions led to (...)
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  11.  14
    Locating the self, welcoming the other: in British and Irish art, 1990-2020.Valérie Morisson - 2022 - New York: Peter Lang.
    This volume addresses how spatialized identities, belongingness and hospitality are interrogated in British and Irish contemporary art (painting, installation, video, photography, new public art) at a time when economic and political crises tend to encourage individual or exclusive usages of space. It sketches a cartography of encounters encompassing the home, the neighbourhood, the village or city, and the nation. Artists interrogate how intimacy is both facilitated and threatened by spatial devices, how space fashions our perception of gender, social or (...)
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  12.  29
    (1 other version)Romano-British Art. [REVIEW]Catherine Johns - 1996 - The Classical Review 46 (1):142-143.
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  13.  13
    Phenomenal difference: a philosophy of black British art.Leon Wainwright - 2017 - Liverpool: Liverpool University Press.
    Phenomenal Difference' grants new attention to contemporary black British art, exploring its critical and social significance through attention to embodied experience, affectivity, the senses and perception. Much before scholars in the arts and humanities took their recent 'ontological turn' toward the new materialism, black British art had begun to expose cultural criticism's overreliance on the concepts of textuality, representation, identity and difference. Illuminating that original field of aesthetics and creativity, this book shows how black British artworks themselves (...)
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  14.  22
    The New Paradigm in British Arts Education.Peter Abbs - 1996 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 30 (1):63.
  15. The growth of British art history and its debts to Europe.Francis Haskell - 1989 - In Haskell Francis (ed.), Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 74: 1988. pp. 203-224.
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  16. Debating Societies, the Art of Rhetoric and the British House of Commons: Parliamentary Culture of Debate before and after the 1832 Reform Act.Taru Haapala - 2012 - Res Publica. Murcia 27:25-36.
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  17.  51
    Susan Walker: Roman Art. Pp. 72; 88 illustrations, 2 maps. London: British Museum Press, 1991. Paper, £5.95.Glenys Davies - 1993 - The Classical Review 43 (1):207-207.
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  18.  24
    Social Significance in British Art Education 1850-1950.David Thistlewood - 1986 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 20 (1):71.
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  19.  19
    Cynthia Johnston, ed., A British Book Collector: Rare Books and Manuscripts in the R. E. Hart Collection, Blackburn Museum and Art Gallery. London: University of London Press, 2021. Paper. Pp. xiii, 234; color and black-and-white figures. £30. ISBN: 978-0-9927-2579-2. Table of contents available online at https://ies.sas.ac.uk/publications/a-british-book-collector. [REVIEW]Matthew Holford - 2022 - Speculum 97 (3):847-848.
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  20. "British Romantic Art": Karl Kroeber. [REVIEW]Sheila M. Smith - 1988 - British Journal of Aesthetics 28 (2):186.
     
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  21.  42
    The American Art Journal IArt Treasures in the British IslesThe Aesthetic Movement, Prelude to Art NouveauIranian ArtDirectory of American PhilosophersThe Far PointGustave CourbetPhilosophy and Science as Modes of KnowingArt, Music and IdeasCaravaggio Studies.M. Stokstad, Elizabeth Aslin, Gian Guido Belloni, Liliana F. Dall-Asen, Archie J. Bahm, Robert Fernier, A. L. Fisher, G. B. Murray, William Fleming, Walter Friedlaender, Lilian R. Furst, Henry Geldzahler, Eugene Goodheart, D. W. Gotshalk, Reynolds Graham, Francoise Henry, H. W. Janson, J. Kerman, Pal Kelemen, Walter Lowrie, Gabor Peterdi, Ida R. Prampolini, Robert Wallace & J. J. M. van GoghTimmons - 1970 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 29 (1):143.
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  22.  22
    Modern British philosophy.Bryan Magee & Anthony Quinton (eds.) - 1971 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    "Under Magee's sensitive guidance a remarkably coherent interpretation of this period emerges."--Marshall Cohen, Listener. "The whole book has a marvellous air of casualness and clarity that makes it a delight to read."--Colin Wilson. Contemporary British philosophy is experiencing unprecedented openness to influences from abroad. New growth is evident in many areas of traditional philosophy which had been neglected by the logical positivists and the linguistic analysts. This sense of freedom permeates Magee's volume of conversations with leading British philosophers. (...)
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  23.  37
    Art Rethought: The Social Practices of Art.Garry L. Hagberg - 2017 - British Journal of Aesthetics 57 (3):331-334.
    © British Society of Aesthetics 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society of Aesthetics. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: [email protected] exists, according to Nicholas Wolterstorff in this deeply engaging and exemplary study, a Grand Narrative that runs through much of our thinking about art. That narrative, emerging from and solidified since the eighteenth century, is in essence that art is created for, and remains in museums and galleries as occasions for, abstract (...)
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  24.  36
    Kathryn A. Smith, Art, Identity and Devotion in Fourteenth-Century England: Three Women and Their Books of Hours. (The British Library Studies in Medieval Culture.) London: British Library; Toronto and Buffalo, N.Y.: University of Toronto Press, 2003. Pp. xix, 364 plus 8 color plates; 145 black-and-white figures, 2 genealogical tables, and 5 maps. $75 (cloth); $29.95 (paper). [REVIEW]Margaret Manion - 2006 - Speculum 81 (1):274-276.
  25. Practical Integration: the Art of Balancing Values, Institutions and Knowledge. Lessons from the History of British Public Health and Town Planning.Giovanni De Grandis - 2016 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 56:92-105.
    The paper uses two historical examples, public health (1840-1880) and town planning (1945-1975) in Britain, to analyse the challenges faced by goal-driven research, an increasingly important trend in science policy, as exemplified by the prominence of calls for addressing Grand Challenges. Two key points are argued. (1) Given that the aim of research addressing social or global problems is to contribute to improving things, this research should include all the steps necessary to bring science and technology to fruition. This need (...)
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  26.  7
    Book Review: Art Labor, Sex Politics: Feminist Effects in 1970s British Art and Performance. [REVIEW]Harriet Curtis - 2017 - Feminist Review 117 (1):212-213.
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  27.  38
    The contemporary British paintings at the Manchester Art-Treasures Exhibition.Judith Bronkhurst - 2005 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 87 (2):103-122.
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  28. From Art to Information System.Miro Brada - 2021 - AGI Laboratory.
    This insight to art came from chess composition concentrating art in a very dense form. To identify and mathematically assess the uniqueness is the key applicable to other areas eg. computer programming. Maximization of uniqueness is minimization of entropy that coincides as well as goes beyond Information Theory (Shannon, 1948). The reusage of logic as a universal principle to minimize entropy, requires simplified architecture and abstraction. Any structures (e.g. plugins) duplicating or dividing functionality increase entropy and so unreliability (eg. (...) Airways IT system). The ideas here were verified by my chess compositions, art works and complex information system as an author of each co uk, and were presented at conferences in Santorini, Adelaide, Geneva, Daejon and virtually. (shrink)
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  29.  34
    Cosmopolitan Art and Cultural Citizenship.David Chaney - 2002 - Theory, Culture and Society 19 (1-2):157-174.
    The article begins by noting that the widespread assumption that the social basis of more difficult or cosmopolitan art has been undermined in later modernity should lead to blander, less controversial art. An alternative interpretation is briefly described in which cosmopolitan art has become a spectacular tourist attraction. Significant questions that would follow such a development are: how national cultural institutions have been co-opted into a global spectacular culture and whether the work displayed in these settings can be radically critical (...)
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  30.  16
    Charlotte Klonk, Science and The Perception of Nature: British Landscape Art in The Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries.Allen Carlson - 1998 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 56 (4):419-422.
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  31. Romantic poetry and the fine arts, (Warton lecture on English poetry, British academy).Edmund Blunden - 1942 - In Blunden Edmund (ed.), Warton lecture on English poetry, British academy.
     
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  32. ‘The most esteemed works of deceased artists’: historic British art at Old Trafford.Andrew Loukes - 2005 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 87 (2):93-101.
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  33.  16
    Artistic and pedagogic implications of the ‘new’ Europe for British theatre arts education.Malcolm Griffiths - 1995 - History of European Ideas 20 (1-3):7-11.
  34.  15
    Roy Strong, Holbein and Henry VIII. The Paul Mellon Foundation for British Art, in association with Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1967 ; 75 pages ; coloured frontispiece, 55 plates, an appendix and an index of proper names. [REVIEW]Henri Gibaud - 1968 - Moreana 5 (2):87-88.
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  35.  63
    Christos Doumas: Cycladic Art. Ancient Sculpture and Pottery from the N. P. Goulandris Collection. Pp. 165; about 120 pages of illustrations with photographs, including 8 in colour; 1 general map and 5 period maps; 1 chronological chart. London: British Museum Publications, 1983. Paper, £7.95. [REVIEW]Sinclair Hood - 1984 - The Classical Review 34 (1):148-148.
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  36. Fiction and Epistemic Value: State of the Art.Mitchell Green - 2022 - British Journal of Aesthetics 62 (2):273-289.
    We critically survey prominent recent scholarship on the question of whether fiction can be a source of epistemic value for those who engage with it fully and appropriately. Such epistemic value might take the form of knowledge (for ‘cognitivists’) or understanding (for ‘neo-cognitivists’). Both camps may be sorted according to a further distinction between views explaining fiction’s epistemic value either in terms of the author’s engaging in a form of telling, or instead via their showing some state of affairs to (...)
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  37. Emotion in Fiction: State of the Art.Stacie Friend - 2022 - British Journal of Aesthetics 62 (2):257-271.
    In this paper, I review developments in discussions of fiction and emotion over the last decade concerning both the descriptive question of how to classify fiction-directed emotions and the normative question of how to evaluate those emotions. Although many advances have been made on these topics, a mistaken assumption is still common: that we must hold either that fiction-directed emotions are (empirically or normatively) the same as other emotions, or that they are different. I argue that we should reject this (...)
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  38. Pleasure and the value of works of art.Jerrold Levinson - 1992 - British Journal of Aesthetics 32 (4):295-306.
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  39.  29
    Williams Masterpieces of Classical Art. Pp. 360, colour ills, maps, pls. Austin: University of Texas Press, with the British Museum Press, 2009. Cased, US$45. ISBN: 978-0-292-72147-0. [REVIEW]Brian Madigan - 2011 - The Classical Review 61 (1):315-315.
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  40.  31
    Contemporary British Realism.John Laird - 1937 - Philosophy 12 (46):162 - 174.
    Anyone who thinks, for example, of “realism,” “sur-realism,” and the like in matters of art, or of the vulgar and journalistic vagueness in the use of the adjective “realistic,” may be prepared for the discovery that in philosophy also the term “realist” is either uncomfortably fluid or else acquires technical senses that are rather easily blurred. Our lexicographers tell us that, in its most general sense, “realism” indicates fidelity to what is real, particularly in the representation of matters of fact, (...)
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  41. British Idealist Aesthetics, Collingwood, Wollheim, And The Origins Of Analytic Aesthetics.Chinatsu Kobayashi - 2008 - The Baltic International Yearbook of Cognition, Logic and Communication 4:12.
    In particular, as we shall see, Collingwood is often dismissed as having held an indefensible, outmoded ‘ideal’ theory, according to which the work of art is primarily ‘mental’, while his potential role in current debates is simply ignored. I will argue that this view is largely mistaken.
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  42.  49
    Reading Encyclopedias: Science and the Organization of Knowledge in British Dictionaries of Arts and Sciences, 1730-1850.Richard Yeo - 1991 - Isis 82 (1):24-49.
  43. Appendix on Croce's Conception of the “Death of Art” in Hegel'.Bernard Bosanquet - 1919 - Proceedings of the British Academy 9:280-88.
     
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  44.  80
    Erotic Art as Proprioceptive Art.Jiri Benovsky - 2021 - British Journal of Aesthetics 61 (2):247-258.
    The philosophical discussion about erotic art has often been understood in terms of the possibility of erotic art as a form of visual or auditory art. In this article, I focus on erotic experiences qua proprioceptive experiences and I defend the claim that, under the right circumstances, such experiences can bring about proprioceptive artworks.
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  45. Art and Value.George Dickie - 2001 - Malden, Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell.
    _ _ _Art and Value_ focuses on the questions of history, methods, and nature of art theories, and on the value and evaluation of art. It serves as a valuable primer to aesthetics, as well as a summary and extension of Dickie's contribution to the field.
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  46. Art and Politics in Roger Scruton's Conservative Philosophy.Ferenc Hörcher - 2022 - Springer Verlag.
    This book covers the field of and points to the intersections between politics, art and philosophy. Its hero, the late Sir Roger Scruton had a longstanding interest in all fields, acquiring professional knowledge in both the practice and theory of politics, art and philosophy. The claim of the book is, therefore, that contrary to a superficial prejudice, it is possible to address the philosophical issues of art and politics in the same oeuvre, as the example of this Cambridge-educated analytical philosopher (...)
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  47. On the cognitive triviality of art.Jerome Stolnitz - 1992 - British Journal of Aesthetics 32 (3):191-200.
  48.  11
    bogue, ronald. Deleuze's Way: Essays in Transverse Ethics and Aesthetics. Aldershot: Ashgate. 2007. pp. 186.£ 55.00 (hbk). crowther, paul. Defining Art, Creating the Canon: Artistic Value in an Era of Doubt. [REVIEW]Led Zeppelin - 2007 - British Journal of Aesthetics 47 (4).
  49. Art Criticism as Practical Reasoning.Anthony Cross - 2017 - British Journal of Aesthetics 57 (3):299-317.
    Most recent discussions of reasons in art criticism focus on reasons that justify beliefs about the value of artworks. Reviving a long-neglected suggestion from Paul Ziff, I argue that we should focus instead on art-critical reasons that justify actions—namely, particular ways of engaging with artworks. I argue that a focus on practical rather than theoretical reasons yields an understanding of criticism that better fits with our intuitions about the value of reading art criticism, and which makes room for a nuanced (...)
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  50.  24
    Art and Form: From Roger Fry to Global Modernism.Andrei Pop - 2020 - British Journal of Aesthetics 60 (4):502-505.
    Art and Form: From Roger Fry to Global ModernismROSESAMPenn State University Press. 2019. pp. 224. £71.95.
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