Results for 'Art, Italian'

996 found
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  1.  5
    Contemporary Italian women philosophers: stretching the art of thinking.Silvia Benso & Elvira Roncalli (eds.) - 2021 - Albany, New York: State University of New York Press.
    Gathering the contributions of eleven contemporary Italian women thinkers who share a philosophical practice, Contemporary Italian Women Philosophers embraces a general interrelationality, fluidity, and overlapping of concepts for a border-crossing that affects what it means to be subjects that are embodied and participants in the life of their communities, thereby shaping a sense of belonging. Common threads are revealed through the exploration of radically diverse themes (the body, subjectivity, power, freedom, equality, liberation, the emotions, symbolism and metaphors, maternity, (...)
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  2.  5
    The art of trascegliere e notare in early modern Italian culture.Alberto Cevolini - 2021 - Intellectual History Review 31 (4):519-540.
    Twenty years ago, historians complained that the art of excerpting was still a marginal topic. Ten years later, Ann Blair stated that “the history of note-taking has only begun to be written”.1 How...
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  3. Italian renaissance art and the systematicity of representation.Robert Williams - 2003 - Rinascimento 43:309-331.
  4.  11
    Italian Art 1400–1500. Sources and documents.Fredrika H. Jacobs - 1994 - History of European Ideas 18 (3):440-441.
  5.  5
    Influences: Art, Optics and Astrology in the Italian Renaissance - by Mary Quinlan-McGrath.Barbara Tramelli - 2014 - Centaurus 56 (1):67-68.
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  6. "Italian Art": André Chastel. [REVIEW]Michael Levey - 1964 - British Journal of Aesthetics 4 (1):88.
     
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  7. "An Italian Patron of French Neo-Classic Art": Francis Haskell. [REVIEW]David Mannings - 1973 - British Journal of Aesthetics 13 (2):204.
     
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  8.  51
    Sir Joshua Reynolds and italian art and art literature. A study of the sketchbooks in the british museum and in sir John soane's museum.Giovanna Perini - 1988 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 51 (1):141-168.
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  9.  32
    Dematerialization: From Arte Povera to Cybermoney through Italian Thought.Karen Pinkus - 2009 - Diacritics 39 (3):63-75.
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  10.  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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  11.  14
    Mary Quinlan-McGrath, Influences: Art, Optics, and Astrology in the Italian Renaissance. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 2013. Pp. xi+284. ISBN 978-0-226-92284-3. $35.00. [REVIEW]Steven Broecke - 2014 - British Journal for the History of Science 47 (2):374-375.
  12.  17
    Mary Quinlan-McGrath. Influences: Art, Optics, and Astrology in the Italian Renaissance. xi + 284 pp., illus., bibl., index. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press, 2013. $35. [REVIEW]Nicolas Weill-Parot - 2014 - Isis 105 (3):638-639.
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  13.  31
    In Search of Unity: Georg Simmel on Italian Cities as Works of Art.Efraim Podoksik - 2012 - Theory, Culture and Society 29 (7-8):101-123.
    The article suggests that Simmel’s thought should be interpreted as a coherent series of continuous attempts to solve philosophically the dilemmas entailed in the German ideal of Bildung. By analysing Simmel’s three short essays on Italian cities, and by placing them in the context of both his own intellectual development and the intellectual context of his time, the article will show how ideas expressed in these essays reflect this basic character of Simmel’s thought. In other words, far from being (...)
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  14.  21
    The Erotic Authority of Nature: Science, Art, and the Female during Goethe=s Italian Journey.Robert J. Richards - unknown
    In a late reminiscence, Goethe recalled that during his close association with the poet Friedrich Schiller, he was constantly defending “the rights of nature" against his friend's “gospel of freedom.”1 Goethe’s characterization of his own view was artfully ironic, alluding as it did to the French Revolution's proclamation of the "Rights of Man." His remark implied that values lay within nature, values that had authority comparable to those ascribed to human beings by the architects of the Revolution. During the time (...)
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  15.  9
    Heidegger e il problema dell'arte. Note su due traduzioni italiane.Maurizio Borghi - 2004 - Idee 55:129-139.
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  16.  17
    Nicolai Rubinstein, Studies in Italian History in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, 1: Political Thought and the Language of Politics: Art and Politics. Ed. Giovanni Ciappelli. (Storia e Letteratura, 216.) Rome: Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura, 2004. Paper. Pp. xxv, 407 plus 20 black-and-white plates; 1 black-and-white figure. €52. [REVIEW]John M. Najemy - 2006 - Speculum 81 (1):265-266.
  17.  6
    Italian and Dutch Developments of Science.Andrea Bergamini - 2020 - Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 9 (2):71-86.
    This article illustrates how during early modernity Italian and Dutch cultures and particularly artistic traditions contributed differently to both the theoretical and practical developments of science. To achieve this goal, it will firstly compare the two forms of detextualization of space operated by Italian artists and by Dutch artists. Finally, it will indicate how each detextualization allowed for the development within the science of the mathematical tradition by the Italian Culture and the experimental tradition by the Dutch (...)
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  18. "Collaboration in Italian Renaissance Art": Edited by Wendy Stedman Sheard and John T. Paoletti. [REVIEW]David Mannings - 1980 - British Journal of Aesthetics 20 (1):88.
     
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  19. “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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  20. Light and Color in the Italian Renaissance Theory of Art.Moshe Barasch - 1979 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 38 (1):105-106.
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  21.  6
    The gaze , touch , motion: Aspects of hapticity in italian early modern art.Iris Wenderholm - 2013 - In Iris Wenderholm, Jörg Trempler & Markus Rath (eds.), Das haptische bild: Körperhafte bilderfahrung in der neuzeit. De Gruyter. pp. 51-68.
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  22.  21
    The Italian Silence.Robert P. Harrison - 1986 - Critical Inquiry 13 (1):81-99.
    During the latter half of the thirteenth century there arose around Tuscany a strange and unprecedented poetry, erudite, abstract, and arrogantly intellectual. It sang beyond courtly conventions about the wonders of the rational universe whose complex secrets the new speculative sciences were eagerly systematizing. Appropriating the language of natural philosophy, Aristotelian psychology, and even theology, love poetry developed a new theoretical understanding of its enterprise which allowed it to redefine love as spiritualized search for knowledge. This intellectualization of erotic desire (...)
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  23.  11
    The Italian tradition of hermeneutics and the problem of Gegenständigkeit.Pier Alberto Porceddu Cilione - 2023 - Labyrinth: An International Journal for Philosophy, Value Theory and Sociocultural Hermeneutics 24 (2):26-43.
    This contribution thematizes the Gadamerian legacy in the context of the Italian philosophical debate, attempting to understand whether this debate can contribute to rethink the vitality of the hermeneutic tradition and the future of its possible developments. When, in 1972, Gianni Vattimo, one of the key figures in contemporary Italian thought, published his seminal translation of Truth and Method, Gadamerian themes began to circulate, in Italy, based on a specific interpretation: The Italian hermeneutic debate received the project (...)
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  24.  17
    Subsidiarity and Modern Public Administration: The State of the Art in Matters Related to the Implementation of the Principle in Italian Regions.Lorenza Violini - 2005 - Journal of Catholic Social Thought 2 (2):401-411.
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  25.  9
    Italian Translations and Editions of Thomas More's Libellus vere aureus.Paola Spinozzi - 2016 - Utopian Studies 27 (3):505-520.
    De re aedificatoria by Leon Battista Alberti, Trattato di Architettura by Filarete, Trattati di architettura, ingegneria e arte militare by Francesco di Giorgio Martini, and Leonardo da Vinci’s works of engineering and inventions exemplify the ways in which fifteenth-century Italian thinkers could blend speculative and rational approaches. Libellus vere aureus was published in Leuven in 1516. Mambrino Roseo praised the simple, earnest people of Garamanti in Institutione del prencipe christiano, dating to 1543. The first version of More’s Latin text (...)
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  26.  97
    Notes on Italian Philosophy, Peer-Reviews and “la corruttela”.Annalisa Coliva - 2010 - Philosophia 38 (1):29-39.
    The paper offers a critical review of Roberto Farneti’s paper a minor philosophy. The state of the art of philosophical scholarship in Italy , recently published in Philosophia. It is argued that overall the status and interest of philosophy as practiced nowadays in Italy is less disappointing than Farneti makes out. It is also maintained that submitting papers to peer-refereed international journals can help cure the moral and sociological disease that besets the Italian academia, but that, as such, it (...)
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  27.  14
    Recent italian aesthetics.Merle E. Brown - 1968 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 26 (4):461-476.
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  28.  8
    Recent Italian Aesthetics.Merle B. Brown - 1968 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 26 (4):461-476.
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  29.  13
    Lisbeth Castelnuovo-Tedesco and Jack Soultanian, Italian Medieval Sculpture in the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Cloisters. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art; New Haven: Yale University Press, 2010. Pp. 368; 41 black-and-white figures and 287 color figures. $75. ISBN: 9780300148985. [REVIEW]Louis I. Hamilton - 2013 - Speculum 88 (3):770-772.
  30. "A History of Ideas and Images in Italian Art": James Hall. [REVIEW]Erika Langmuir - 1984 - British Journal of Aesthetics 24 (3):268.
     
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  31.  21
    Federico Botana, The Works of Mercy in Italian Medieval Art (c. 1050–c. 1400). (Medieval Church Studies 20.) Turnhout: Brepols, 2011. Pp. xl, 256; 110 black-and-white and 12 color figures. €110. ISBN: 9782503536231. [REVIEW]William R. Levin - 2013 - Speculum 88 (3):762-765.
  32.  6
    Living Thought: The Origins and Actuality of Italian Philosophy.Roberto Esposito - 2012 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. Edited by Zakiya Hanafi.
    The work of contemporary Italian thinkers, what Roberto Esposito refers to as Italian Theory, is attracting increasing attention around the world. This book explores the reasons for its growing popularity, its distinguishing traits, and why people are turning to these authors for answers to real-world issues and problems. The approach he takes, in line with the keen historical consciousness of Italian thinkers themselves, is a historical one. He offers insights into the great "unphilosophical" philosophers of life—poets, painters, (...)
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  33.  16
    Book review: The Aesthetics of Italian Renaissance Art. A Reconsideration of Style. By Hellmut Wohl. [REVIEW]Tom Nichols - 2000 - British Journal of Aesthetics 40 (4):500-503.
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  34.  10
    Science, Art and Nature in Medieval and Modern Thought.A. C. Crombie - 2003 - Hambledon.
    Contents Acknowledgements vii Illustrations ix Preface xi Further Bibliography of A.C. Crombie xiii 1 Designed in the Mind: Western visions of Science, Nature and Humankind 1 2 The Western Experience of Scientific Objectivity 13 3 Historical Perceptions of Medieval Science 31 4 Robert Grosseteste 39 5 Roger Bacon [with J.D. North] 51 6 Infinite Power and the Laws of Nature: A Medieval Speculation 67 7 Experimental Science and the Rational Artist in Early Modern Europe 89 8 Mathematics and Platonism in (...)
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  35.  9
    Erika Gielen; Michèle Goyens . Towards the Authority of Vesalius: Studies on Medicine and the Human Body from Antiquity to the Renaissance and Beyond. 475 pp., index. Turnhout: Brepols, 2018. €110 . ISBN 9782503579146.Rinaldo Fernando Canalis; Massimo Ciavolella . Andreas Vesalius and the “Fabrica” in the Age of Printing: Art, Anatomy, and Printing in the Italian Renaissance. xxiv + 332 pp., illus., index. Turnhout: Brepols, 2018. €100 . ISBN 9782503576237. [REVIEW]Vivian Nutton - 2019 - Isis 110 (4):816-817.
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  36.  44
    The new Italian law on assisted reproduction technology (Law 40/2004).V. Fineschi - 2005 - Journal of Medical Ethics 31 (9):536-539.
    The Italian parliament passed the law on assisted reproduction after a heated debate. The promulgation of this law (Law 40/2004) is the end point of a long and troubled journey that has seen many bills come and go, all of which have failed. The law consists of a whole set of regulations that will have a great impact on health and on society in general. The law is against many of the technical practices of assisted reproduction; several such practices (...)
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  37.  8
    Sorrow and Consolation in Italian Humanism.George W. McClure - 2014 - Princeton University Press.
    George McClure offers here a far-reaching analysis of the role of consolation in Italian Renaissance culture, showing how the humanists' interest in despair, and their effort to open up this realm in both social and personal terms, signaled a shift toward a heightened secularization in European thought. Analyzing works by fourteenth-and fifteenth-century writers, from Petrarch to Marsilio Ficino, McClure examines the treatment of such problems as bereavement, fear of death, illness, despair, and misfortune. These writers, who evinced a belief (...)
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  38.  10
    MOSSELMANS, BERT (eds). Science and Art: The Red Book of Einstein meets Magritte. VUB UP pp. 262+ xxviii, incl. b & w figures.£ 80. BERGER, HARRY JR. Fictions of the Pose: Rembrandt Against the Italian Renaissance. Cambridge UP. [REVIEW]Dry Landscape Garden - 2001 - British Journal of Aesthetics 41 (1).
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  39.  8
    Arte e società nell’estetica dell’idealismo italiano.Paolo D’Angelo - 2022 - Rivista di Estetica 81:93-105.
    The theme of the relationship between art and society is certainly not a central topic in the aesthetic reflection of Italian neo-idealism. Neither in Croce nor in Gentile it is ever discussed at length, and the few writings in which it is addressed are brief and polemically oriented. This essay, however, proposes to discuss the few hints present in Croce and Gentile on this subject. First, the debate on the materialistic interpretation of history will be examined, to which both (...)
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  40.  2
    Letteratura, arte, filosofia.Carmelo Librizzi - 1972 - Padova,: CEDAM.
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  41.  2
    Letteratura, arte, filosofia.Carmelo Librizzi - 1972 - Padova,: CEDAM.
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  42.  84
    Art and beauty in the Middle Ages.Umberto Eco - 1986 - New Haven: Yale University Press.
    In this book, the Italian novelist and philosopher Umberto Eco presents a learned summary of medieval aesthetic ideas.
  43.  8
    Garbo and cenacoli of Italian design in the 1960s: A second-order approach to innovation.Matteo Tonoli & Roberto Carradore - 2021 - Technoetic Arts 19 (1):79-86.
    After the Second World War, Italy experienced an economic miracle accompanied by the emergence of a material culture highly dense with meaning. This article adopts a second-order approach, which focuses on two concepts that emphasize the component of invention contained within the innovation process.Garboindicates the peculiarly Italian way of solving a constrained optimization problem in the design of everyday objects. Meanwhile, the concept ofcenacolo– whose etymological roots indicate conviviality and good living – made possible the study of the peculiar (...)
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  44.  1
    Traveling Toward Distance: Italian Lessons.Robert E. Innis - 2015 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 29 (1):41-57.
    ABSTRACT Human beings are wanderers, although in another way we are more like trees, rooted in place, both physical and psychological. We cross borders, both internal and external, between the familiar and the unfamiliar, but often find ourselves seeing the new only in terms of the old or, more dangerously, not seeing the new at all. This article will explore through concrete instances pivotal philosophical and existential implications and lessons of the “fusion of horizons” exemplified in Montaigne's, Goethe's, Stendhal's, and (...)
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  45.  8
    Thinking the inexhaustible: art, interpretation, and freedom in the philosophy of Luigi Pareyson.Silvia Benso (ed.) - 2018 - Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
    Essays address the major themes of Pareyson’s hermeneutic philosophy in the context of his existentialist approach to personhood. What if the inexhaustible were the only mode of self-revelation of truth? The question of the inexhaustibility of truth, and its relation to being and interpretation, is the challenge posed by the philosophy of the prominent Italian thinker Luigi Pareyson (1918–1991). Art, the interpretation of truth, and the theory of being as the ontology of both inexhaustibility and freedom constitute the main (...)
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  46.  9
    Animality in Contemporary Italian Philosophy.Matteo Gilebbi - 2022 - Journal of Animal Ethics 12 (2):217-219.
    Cimatti and Salzani have put together a rich collection of essays on animal studies that provides an exhaustive overview of how Italian contemporary philosophers are engaging with animal ethics, antispeciesism, posthumanism, ecofeminism, and biopolitics. This edited volume represents an important development in the “animal turn” in the humanities, particularly because it is published in English, allowing for a more efficient dialogue between “Italian theory” and philosophers around the world. This is, in fact, the first collection that will give (...)
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  47.  3
    Logic and the Art of Memory: The Quest for a Universal Language.Stephen Clucas (ed.) - 2000 - Chicago, IL, USA: University of Chicago Press.
    The mnemonic arts and the idea of a universal language that would capture the essence of all things were originally associated with cryptology, mysticism, and other occult practices. And it is commonly held that these enigmatic efforts were abandoned with the development of formal logic in the seventeenth century and the beginning of the modern era. In his distinguished book, _Logic and the Art of Memory_ Italian philosopher and historian Paolo Rossi argues that this view is belied by an (...)
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  48.  3
    Arte, verdad e interpretación en Luigi Pareyson.Pablo Blanco Sarto - 2002 - Anuario Filosófico 35 (74):753-790.
    Luigi Pareyson is an italian existencialist philosopher, the unknown master of Umberto Eco and Gianni Vattimo. In this essay, the author shows the connection between aesthetics,onthology and hermeneutics in Pareyson. The paradigm of the interpretation of the work of art can be also useful for the discovery of truth, as a -at the same time- personal and universal knowledge. These lines end with a comparision between the Gadamer and Pareyson's hermeneutics.
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  49.  8
    Art and Posthistory: Conversations on the End of Aesthetics.Arthur C. Danto & Demetrio Paparoni - 2022 - Columbia University Press.
    From the 1990s until just before his death, the legendary art critic and philosopher Arthur C. Danto carried out extended conversations about contemporary art with the prominent Italian critic Demetrio Paparoni. Their discussions ranged widely over a vast range of topics, from American pop art and minimalism to abstraction and appropriationism. Yet they continually returned to the concepts at the core of Danto’s thinking—posthistory and the end of aesthetics—provocative notions that to this day shape questions about the meaning and (...)
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  50.  25
    Il Pensiero del Corpo (Italian).Caterina Di Rienzo - 2010 - Chiasmi International 12:241-259.
    La pensée du corps. Un parcours esthétique chez le dernier Merleau-PontyLe but de cette contribution est de chercher à reconstruire un parcours théorique, entre plusieurs autres possibles, en mesure de montrer comment l’art, en particulier la peinture, incarne chez le dernier Merleau-Ponty la possibilité d’un autre type de pensée. Il s’agit de la tentative de suivre une idée qui semble faire son chemin au sein de la réflexion que l’auteur consacre à la Nature et puis à l’Etre brut et sauvage, (...)
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