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  1. Abstraction and Figuration: Outmoded Aesthetic Disputes.Pierre Dehaye & R. Scott Walker - 1987 - Diogenes 35 (140):93-110.
    The ardent antagonism between two aesthetic parties, figuration and abstraction, which for more than half a century has stamped art history in old Europe, with increasingly overlapping implications for youthful America, Japan and many other places, today tends to reduce itself to being simply the anecdotal imprint of an era: in the final analysis it seems already condemned to disappear in favor of a notion of complementarity and even synthesis.
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  2. For a Syncretism of the Faculties of the Mind: Art as a Means of Knowledge.Pierre Dehaye - 1984 - Diogenes 32 (128):42-53.
    Since his beginnings, Man has produced art: gests and works in some way bound to the essence of man's existence, gests and works grafted onto the epidermis of the world, yet gests and works for transcending the immediate givens, for understanding veiled realities and future possibilities: gests and works of global apprehension, brought about and nourished through the ages by elementary needs, by visceral fears, by existential hopes.
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