Results for ' Painting, Renaissance'

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  1. Painting and literature of the italian renaissance in the aesthetics of Hegel.K. Stierle - forthcoming - Hegel-Studien.
  2.  50
    The mirror and painting in early Renaissance texts.Yvonne Yiu - 2005 - Early Science and Medicine 10 (2):187-210.
    In Italy, notably Florence, the late fourteenth and the fifteenth centuries witnessed the proliferation of texts that discuss the relationship between the mirror and painting. In them, the mirror is closely associated with major innovations of the time such as naturalistic representation and linear perspective. On a technical level, the authors describe the mirror's function in the painting of self-portraits and recommend it be used to draw foreshortened objects more easily and to judge the quality of finished paintings. The technical (...)
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  3.  36
    Studies of Italian Renaissance SculptureGerman Painting, XIV-XVI Centuries.Wolfgang Stechow, W. R. Valentiner & Alfred Stange - 1952 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 10 (3):287.
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  4.  7
    Japanese Genre Painting, The Lively Art of Renaissance Japan.Robert T. Paine, Kondo Ichitaro & Roy Andrew Miller - 1962 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 82 (2):274.
  5.  40
    Cupid and psyche in renaissance painting before Raphael.Luisa Vertova - 1979 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 42 (1):104-121.
  6. Truth and Perspective: Gadamer on Renaissance Painting.David Liakos - 2021 - International Yearbook for Hermeneutics 20 (1):286-305.
    This essay develops a critical interpretation of Gadamer’s account of Renaissance painting. My point of departure is a brief reference in Truth and Method to Leon Battista Alberti, the Italian Renaissance humanist who developed an influential mathematical theory of perspective in painting. Through an explication of Gadamer’s critique of Alberti and of perspective generally, I argue that what is ultimately at stake in Gadamer’s confrontation with Alberti is Gadamer’s opposition to relativism and subjectivism and his downgrading of the (...)
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  7.  23
    Anne Dunlop, Painted Palaces: The Rise of Secular Art in Early Renaissance Italy. University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2009. Pp. xix, 319; color frontispiece and 200 black-and-white and color figures. $80. [REVIEW]Jacqueline Marie Musacchio - 2010 - Speculum 85 (3):664-666.
  8. Emerging Faces: The Figure-Ground Relation from Renaissance Painting to Deepfakes.Maria Giulia Dondero - 2023 - In Massimo Leone (ed.), The hybrid face: paradoxes of the visage in the digital era. New York, NY: Routledge.
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  9.  45
    Allegory and Symbolism in Italian Renaissance Painting.Mikhail Vladimirovitch Alpatov & Sally Bradshaw - 1971 - Diogenes 19 (76):1-25.
  10.  25
    Greek inscriptions on two venetian renaissance paintings.Mauro Lucco & Anna Pontani - 1997 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 60 (1):111-129.
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  11. Illuminating Luke: The infancy Narrative in Italian Renaissance Painting.Heidi J. Hornik & Mikeal C. Parsons - 2003
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  12.  22
    Jan Gossaert's "St. Luke Painting the Virgin": A Renaissance Artist's Cultural Literacy.Clifton Olds - 1990 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 24 (1):89.
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  13.  9
    The Painted Fly and the Connoisseur in Eighteenth-Century British Literature.Robert G. Walker - 2023 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 86 (1):347-354.
    The ‘musca depicta’ trope is well known to art historians, with a history going back to Pliny. It flourished in the Renaissance, but in eighteenth-century England the meaning of the trope was altered greatly when employed in popular culture, both in live theatrical presentations (by George Alexander Stevens) and in published poetry (by James Robertson, comedian of York). Originally, the trope signalled the virtuosity of the painter, who was able to fool the eye by depicting flies so real that (...)
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  14.  20
    David Summers. Vision, Reflection, and Desire in Western Painting. 232 pp., illus., bibl., index. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2007. $39.95 . Samuel Y. Edgerton. The Mirror, the Window, and the Telescope: How Renaissance Linear Perspective Changed Our Vision of the Universe. xvi + 199 pp., illus., bibl., index. Ithaca, N.Y./London: Cornell University Press, 2009. $19.95. [REVIEW]Alexander Marr - 2011 - Isis 102 (1):160-162.
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  15.  20
    Christine Sciacca, ed., Florence at the Dawn of the Renaissance: Painting and Illumination, 1300–1350. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2012. Pp. 448; 240 color figures. $65. ISBN: 9781606061268. [REVIEW]Julian Gardner - 2013 - Speculum 88 (4):1163-1165.
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  16.  80
    On the Image of Painting.Andrew Benjamin - 2011 - Research in Phenomenology 41 (2):181-205.
    Painting can only be thought in relation to the image. And yet, with (and within) painting what continues to endure is the image of painting. While this is staged explicitly in, for example, paintings of St. Luke by artists of the Northern Renaissance—e.g., Rogier van der Weyden, Jan Gossaert, and Simon Marmion—the same concerns are also at work within both the practices as well as the contemporaneous writings that define central aspects of the Italian Renaissance. The aim of (...)
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  17.  6
    A Renaissance mathematician’s art.Ryszard Mirek - 2019 - Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 9 (1):147-152.
    Piero della Francesca is best known as a painter but he was also a mathematician. His treatise De prospectiva pingendi is a superb example of a union between the fne arts and mathemati‑ cal sciences of arithmetic and geometry. In this paper, I explain some reasons why his paint‑ ing is considered as a part of perspective and, therefore, can be identifed with a branch of geometry.
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  18.  23
    Renaissance Madonnas and the Fantasies of Freud.Mary Bittner Wiseman - 1993 - Hypatia 8 (3):115 - 135.
    Through the work of Julia Kristeva, this paper challenges Freud's laws that everyone is always already gendered, that the mother is feminine and every infant masculine, and that one cannot love the same (gender). The figure of the Madonna, seen through the paintings of Giovanni Bellini, is used to theorize the time in the life of a child before Oedipus and to undo the conceptual knot with which Freud has bound the feminine to the maternal.
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  19.  39
    On Painting. [REVIEW]C. C. V. - 1957 - Review of Metaphysics 10 (3):534-534.
    Alberti's Della pittura was the first, and in many ways the most important, of the Renaissance treatises on painting, elaborating as it does the theoretical backgrounds of the influential new art of 15th-century Florence. This edition presents the work with distinction. The translation--the first in English since 1755--is based upon the known manuscript sources, and has been provided with a helpful introduction and notes. Diagrams serve to clarify Alberti's accounts of perspective. --V. C. C.
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  20.  34
    On Monstrously Ambiguous Paintings.James Elkins - 1993 - History and Theory 32 (3):227-247.
    Certain artworks appear to have multiple meanings that are also contradictory. In some instances they have attracted so much attention that they are effectively out of the reach of individual monographs. These artworks are monstrous.One reason paintings may become monstrous is that they make unexpected use of ambiguation. Modern and postmodern works of all sorts are understood to be potentially ambiguous ab ovo, but earlier--Renaissance and Baroque--works were constrained to declare relatively stable primary meanings. An older work may have (...)
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  21.  99
    Putting the "Pain" In Painting: A Conceptualization and Consideration of Serious Art.J. Ryan Napier - 2014 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 48 (1):45-53.
    In the year of our Lord 1862, Polish painter Jan Matejko finished his first famous work, Stańczyk, fully translated into English as “Stańczyk during a ball at the court of Queen Bona in the face of the loss of Smolensk.”1 The piece was painted in oils and depicts a famous political figure of Renaissance Poland, Stańczyk the court jester. Stańczyk, an influential figure of Polish history who was as much a political philosopher as a funny man, is depicted in (...)
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  22.  5
    Paradigms of Renaissance grotesques.Damiano Acciarino (ed.) - 2019 - Toronto: Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies.
    This collection offers a set of new readings on the history, meanings, and cultural innovations of the grotesque as defined by various current critical theories and practices. Since the grotesque frequently manifests itself as striking incongruities, ingenious hybrids, and creative deformities of nature and culture, it is profoundly implicated in early modern debates on the theological, philosophical, and ethical role of images. This consideration serves as the central focus from which the articles in the collection then move outward along different (...)
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  23.  49
    The Presentness of Painting: Adrian Stokes as Aesthetician.David Carrier - 1986 - Critical Inquiry 12 (4):753-768.
    Adrian Stokes , long admired by a small, highly distinguished, mostly English circle, was the natural successor to Pater and Ruskin. But though his place in cultural history is important, what is of particular interest now to art historians is his theory of the presentness of painting, a theory which offers a challenging critique of the practice of artwriting. From Vasari to the present, the most familiar rhetorical strategy of the art historian is the narrative of “the form, prophet-saviour-apostles,” in (...)
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  24.  20
    Concepts of Beauty in Renaissance Art.Francis Ames-Lewis & Mary Rogers - 2019 - Routledge.
    In this Volume, published in1998, Fifteen scholars reveal the ways of preserving, conceiving and creating beauty were as diverse as the cultural influenced at work at the time, deriving from antique, medieval and more recent literature and philosophy, and from contemporary notions of morality and courtly behaviour. Approaches include discussion of contemporary critical terms and how these determined writers' appreciation of paintings, sculpture, architecture and costume; studies of the quest to create beauty in the work of artists such as Botticeli, (...)
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  25.  5
    Kann das Denken malen?: Philosophie und Malerei in der Renaissance.Iñigo Kristien Marcel Bocken & Tilman Borsche (eds.) - 2010 - München: Fink.
  26.  15
    An Early Renaissance Altarpiece by Domenico Veneziano: A Case of Visual Argumentation?Antonio Rossini - 2020 - Argumentation 34 (1):39-53.
    The purpose of this paper is to show the argument-establishing features of a Renaissance altarpiece. Looking to Panofsky’s seminal studies and to more recent contributions, this essay shows how in a special environment like the Florentine pre-Renaissance, people could easily relate to the evocative and contrastive potential of images. In the Santa Lucia de’ Magnoli Altarpiece painted by Domenico Veneziano we see an interesting dialogue between the main piece and the predella panels. This juxtaposition can be formalized into (...)
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  27.  9
    Chaucer‘s Postcolonial Renaissance.Andrew James Johnston - 2015 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 91 (2):5-20.
    This article investigates how Chaucer‘s Knight‘s and Squire‘s tales critically engage with the Orientalist strategies buttressing contemporary Italian humanist discussions of visual art. Framed by references to crusading, the two tales enter into a dialogue focusing, in particular, on the relations between the classical, the scientific and the Oriental in trecento Italian discourses on painting and optics, discourses that are alluded to in the description of Theseus Theatre and the events that happen there. The Squire‘s Tale exhibits what one might (...)
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  28.  39
    The Fantasy of the Imperishable in the Modern Era: Towards an Eternal Painting.Philippe Sénéchal - 1998 - Diogenes 46 (183):69-81.
    At M. Bernard's I saw several magnificent paintings on porcelain by Monsieur Constantin. In two hundred years, Raphael's frescoes will be known only through Monsieur Constantin.Stendhal, Voyage en France, 1837If we compare the forms that the act of copying has assumed in various civilizations, we cannot fail to notice that a certain number of phenomena are specific to European culture since the Renaissance. Perhaps one of the most singular of these phenomena is the will to create and to possess (...)
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  29. 129 Jean-franqois Lyotard.Experience Painting-Monory - 2007 - In Diarmuid Costello & Jonathan Vickery (eds.), Art: key contemporary thinkers. New York: Berg. pp. 129.
     
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  30.  3
    Foucault on Critical Agency in Painting and the Aesthetics of Existence.Michael Kelly - 2013 - In Christopher Falzon, Timothy O'Leary & Jana Sawicki (eds.), A Companion to Foucault. Chichester, UK: Wiley. pp. 243–263.
    In this chapter, the author aims to make a case that Foucault does indeed have a viable conception of critical agency. The issue of critical agency emerges implicitly and explicitly throughout Foucault's work, but appears consistently. The key capacities of critical agency are present all along in Foucault's discussions of painting and, moreover, they culminate in the aesthetics of existence. The kind of critical agency evident in Foucault's discussions of various painters from the Renaissance to modern art can now (...)
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  31.  87
    The Death of Beauty: Goya's Etchings and Black Paintings through the Eyes of André Malraux.Derek Allan - 2016 - History of European Ideas 42 (7):965-980.
    Modern critics often regard Goya's etchings and black paintings as satirical observations on the social and political conditions of his times. In a study of Goya first published in 1950, which seldom receives the attention it merits, the French author and art theorist André Malraux contends that these works have a much deeper significance. The etchings and black paintings, Malraux argues, represent a fundamental challenge to the humanist artistic tradition that began with the Renaissance - a tradition founded on (...)
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  32.  8
    Anthropology in colors: from icon to Painting.Емельянов А.С - 2023 - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal) 1:45-63.
    Within the framework of this study, the transformation of anthropomorphic images in Medieval and Renaissance painting is analyzed. The visual art of this period is considered as a specific space of "conversation about man", which existed in parallel with discourses about God-man and Man-god. As a means of communication between man and God, the icon, using anthropomorphism in the image of the archetype, represented to the medieval man a certain path and a guide to his own salvation. Along with (...)
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  33.  8
    Perpetual Motion: Transforming Shapes in the Renaissance from Da Vinci to Montaigne.Michel Jeanneret - 2001 - JHU Press.
    The popular conception of the Renaissance as a culture devoted to order and perfection does not account for an important characteristic of Renaissance art: many of the period's major works, including those by da Vinci, Erasmus, Michelangelo, Ronsard, and Montaigne, appeared as works-in-progress, always liable to changes and additions. In Perpetual Motion, Michel Jeanneret argues for a sixteenth century swept up in change and fascinated by genesis and metamorphosis. Jeanneret begins by tracing the metamorphic sensibility in sixteenth-century science (...)
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  34.  25
    Homage to Illustration: Story Telling in Paint and Marble.Ellen Handler Spitz - 2015 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 49 (3):66-82.
    Art teaches us not only what to see but what to be.Artists refashion stories with paintbrush and chisel. Their narrations reach back through time to the mysteries of cave painting at Altamira and Lascaux, over seventeen thousand years ago. We no longer know what stories the pictures on those walls were meant to illustrate, but we can try to imagine, even now.1Images speak a different language from words. They tell stories differently. Yet, for many generations, since art history was legitimized (...)
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  35.  6
    Public and domestic space. Women’s representation in venetian painting.Fabien Lacouture - 2012 - Clio 36:235-257.
    Contrairement à ce qu’ont affirmé un certain nombre d’historiens et d’historiennes, les femmes ont une place dans l’espace social vénitien aux xve et xvie siècles. Elles appartiennent à l’espace domestique, mais elles sont aussi présentes à l’extérieur, dans les rues et sur les places. Cette étude s’appuie sur des sources picturales pour discuter la présence féminine dans l’espace extérieur et l’espace domestique vénitiens. Peintes par des artistes masculins, elles sont représentées selon des codes bien précis dans l’espace extérieur, souvent à (...)
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  36.  26
    ?Out of disegno invention is born? ? Drawing a convincing figure in Renaissance Italian Art.Paul Akker - 1993 - Argumentation 7 (1):45-66.
    An important artistic topic of Italian Renaissance painting was the rendering of the human figure. As leading actors in a painted narrative, figures had to convince beholders of the reality of the matter depicted with appropriated attitudes and gestures. This article is about two ways of drawing or rather constructing the human figure artists developed to achieve this goal. The first was only an adaptation to an old method: because of the rather simple and coarse elements used, constructions often (...)
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  37.  55
    Looking for an Artificial Eye: On the Borderline between Painting and Topography.Filippo Camerota - 2005 - Early Science and Medicine 10 (2):263-286.
    The use of instruments for drawing from life is documented since the fifteenth century in a variety of books, drawings and actual devices. Almost all of the instruments invented for this purpose belong to the linear perspective tradition, being conceived as mechanical expressions of a geometric principle, namely the intersection of the visual pyramid. On the basis of a close but controversial analysis of some important paintings of the early Renaissance, David Hockney and Charles Falco have concluded to a (...)
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  38. “Out of disegno invention is born” — Drawing a convincing figure in Renaissance Italian Art.Paul van den Akker - 1993 - Argumentation 7 (1):45-66.
    An important artistic topic of Italian Renaissance painting was the rendering of the human figure. As leading actors in a painted narrative, figures had to convince beholders of the reality of the matter depicted with appropriated attitudes and gestures. This article is about two ways of drawing or rather constructing the human figure artists developed to achieve this goal. The first was only an adaptation to an old method: because of the rather simple and coarse elements used, constructions often (...)
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  39.  20
    History as a Visual Art in the Twelfth-Century Renaissance.Karl F. Morrison - 1990 - Princeton University Press.
    Karl Morrison discusses historical writing at a turning point in European culture: the so-called Renaissance of the twelfth century. Why do texts considered at that time to be masterpieces seem now to be fragmentary and full of contradictions? Morrison maintains that the answer comes from ideas about art. Viewing histories as artifacts made according to the same aesthetic principles as paintings and theater, he shows that twelfth-century authors and audiences found unity not in what the reason read in a (...)
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  40.  3
    The Subtext of Form in the English Renaissance: Proportion Poetical.S. K. Heninger - 1994 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    During the sixteenth century in England the logocentrism of the Middle Ages was confronted by a materialism that heralded the modern world. With remarkable tenacity in music, poetry, and painting, the orthodox aesthetic persisted as formal features which served as nonverbal signs and provided a subtext of form. In opposition, however, a radical aesthetic emerged to accommodate the new attention to physical nature. The growing force of materialism occasioned a fundamental rethinking of what an artifact might represent and how that (...)
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  41.  9
    The Aesthetics of the Intellectual (Wenrenhua) School in the Milieu of Chinese Renaissance Ideas.Antanas Andrijauskas - 2020 - Dialogue and Universalism 30 (3):245-261.
    This article mainly focuses on one of the most refined movements in world aesthetics and fine art—one that spread when Chinese Renaissance ideas arose during the Song Epoch and that was called the Intellectual Movement. The ideological sources of intellectual aesthetics are discussed—as well as the distinctive nature of its fundamental theoretical views and of its creative principles in relation to a changing historical, cultural, and ideological contexts. The greatest attention is devoted to a complex analysis of the attitudes (...)
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  42.  6
    Studies in the History of the Renaissance.Walter Pater - 2010 - Oxford University Press.
    Studies in the History of the Renaissance is a highly influential defence of aestheticism. Pater redefined the practice of criticism through his readings of some of the paintings, sculptures, and poems of the Renaissance, and shocked contemporaries for sponsoring a hedonistic ethic with his infamous 'Conclusion'.
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  43.  8
    Protée et Caméléon. Mimétismes, calembours harmoniques et dissociation des formes dans la musique de la Renaissance.Brenno Boccadoro - 2016 - Aisthesis: Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 9 (2):89-121.
    In the realm of language a special case of mimetic illusion is the calembour, where the sound of a phrase signifies something else than what is written. At the end of the XVI century the artistic expression of this phenomenon gave birth to the paintings of Arcimboldo, who separated the contour of an object form the linear organization of the surface, in order to feature another object, through a kind of “polyphonic” dissociation between meaning and form. Strangely enough, nothing has (...)
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  44.  39
    The Melancholy Assemblage: Affect and Epistemology in the English Renaissance.Drew Daniel - 2013 - Fordham University Press.
    Placing readings of early modern painting and literature in conversation with psychoanalytic theory and assemblage theory, this book argues that, far from isolating its sufferers, melancholy brings people together.
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  45. By dw Masterson.Sport in Modern Painting - 1974 - In H. T. A. Whiting & D. W. Masterson (eds.), Readings in the Aesthetics of Sport. [Distributed by] Kimpton.
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  46.  6
    Fashioning modernism: Rose piper’s painting and fabric design.Saul Nelson - 2022 - Angelaki 27 (3-4):125-142.
    This essay asks why modernist art history has been unable to account for the career of the African American painter Rose Piper. One of the most gifted painters of her generation, Piper was also amo...
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  47.  4
    The Seeds of Things: Theorizing Sexuality and Materiality in Renaissance Representations.Jonathan Goldberg - 2009 - Fordham University Press.
    The title of this book translates one of the many ways in which Lucretius in De rerum natura names the basic matter from which the world is made. In Lucretius, and in the strain of thought followed in this study, matter is always in motion, always differing from itself, and yet always also made of the same stuff. From the pious Lucy Hutchinson's all but complete translation of the Roman epic poem to Margaret Cavendish's repudiation of atomism, a central concern (...)
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  48.  7
    «Une nostre-dame de pitié… de la main du grand Miquel-ange» a lost painting attributed to michelangelo in the 1532 inventory of the château de Bury.Clifford M. Brown - 1981 - Bibliothèque d'Humanisme Et Renaissance 43 (1):159-163.
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  49. 30,000 bc: Painting animality. Deleuze & Prehistoric Painting - 2006 - Angelaki 11 (2):137 – 152.
  50.  12
    ‘The Russian Silver Age’: invention or intention? Review of Vyacheslav P. Shestakov: Russkii Serebrjanyi vek: zapozdavshii renessans [The Russian Silver Age: The belated Renaissance] St. Petersburg, Aleteia, 2017, 218 pp, ISBN: 978-5-906980-06-9. [REVIEW]Irina Maidanskaya - 2020 - Studies in East European Thought 72 (2):185-190.
    In his book, Vyacheslav P. Shestakov conducts a theoretical reconstruction of the concept of the ‘Silver Age’ of Russian culture. He highlights three typical features that this phenomenon has in common with the European Renaissance: Hellenism, aestheticism and eroticism. In an effort to disprove Omry Ronen’s claim that the Silver Age was an unsuccessful invention of literary scholars, Shestakov calls the Silver Age “a certain intention, viz. a project of the future.” The monograph includes sections on Russian philosophy, painting (...)
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