Results for 'art, time, history, transfiguration'

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  1. Historical and Trans-historical Time of Art.Alexandra Mouriki - 2009 - Art and Time, IV Mediterranean Congress of Aesthetics.
    The relationship between art and time is one of pre-figuration–transfiguration, a continuous exchange between the art of the present and that of the past and it is in this sense that we can understand how the works of art are have almost their entire life before them. It is in this sense also that the real meaning of metamorphosis should be understood: The works of art are not permanent acquisitions. They offer themselves the ways through which they appear in (...)
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  2.  27
    Art, time, and technology.Charlie Gere - 2006 - New York: Berg.
    This book explores how the practice of art, in particular of avant-garde art, keeps our relation to time, history and even our own humanity open. Examining key moments in the history of both technology and art from the beginnings of industrialisation to today, Charlie Gere explores both the making and purpose of art and how much further it can travel from the human body.
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  3.  8
    Art in History, History in Art: Studies in Seventeenth-century Dutch Culture.David Freedberg & Jan De Vries - 1991 - Getty Center for the History of Art and the Humanities.
    Introduction Introduction / Jan de Vries 1 Art in History / Gary Schwartz 7 History in Art / J. W. Smit 17 Pt. I Art and Reality Market Scenes As Viewed by an Art Historian / Linda Stone-Ferrier 29 Market Scenes As Viewed by a Plant Biologist / Willem A. Brandenburg 59 Marine Paintings and the History of Shipbuilding / Richard W. Unger 75 Skies and Reality in Dutch Landscape / John Walsh 95 Some Notes on Interpretation / E. de (...)
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  4.  6
    On the brink: language, time, history, and politics.Werner Hamacher - 2020 - New York: Rowman and Littlefield International. Edited by Jan Plug.
    On the Brink begins with a consideration of Kant's treatment of time as representation and of Hegel's treatment of the writing of history and the end of art, all while taking up other key figures in the history of philosophy. The book then moves to an exploration of language in a variety of manifestations, from translation to complaint and greeting. It concludes by analyzing political and social questions that continue to haunt us today--the conception of work, not least in National (...)
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  5.  1
    Keeping Time: Memory, Nostalgia, and the Art of History.Peter N. Carroll - 1990
    Looks at how history affects contemporary life, discusses the individual's role in history, and describes the author's efforts to popularize history.
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  6.  27
    Emerson, Whitman, and Conceptual Art.George J. Leonard - 1989 - Philosophy and Literature 13 (2):297-306.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:George J. Leonard EMERSON, WHITMAN, AND CONCEPTUAL ART The widespread abandoning of the art object at the end of the 1960s was taken as something radically, even frighteningly, new, by critics and artists alike. Objects, concept artist Joseph Kosuth was asserting by 1969, are "irrelevant" to art. Though an artist might choose, as in the past, to "employ" objects, "all art is finally conceptual." In fact it was now (...)
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  7.  85
    The transfiguration of the commonplace: a philosophy of art.Arthur Coleman Danto - 1981 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    Mr. Danto argues that recent developments in the artworld, in particular the production of works of art that cannot be told from ordinary things, make urgent the need for a new theory of art and make plain the factors such a theory can and cannot involve. In the course of constructing such a theory, he seeks to demonstrate the relationship between philosophy and art, as well as the connections that hold between art and social institutions and art history. The book (...)
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  8. Arthur Danto’s Andy Warhol: the Embodiment of Theory in Art and the Pragmatic Turn.Stephen Snyder - forthcoming - Leitmotiv:135-151.
    Arthur Danto’s recent book, Andy Warhol, leads the reader through the story of the iconic American’s artistic life highlighted by a philosophical commentary, a commentary that merges Danto’s aesthetic theory with the artist himself. Inspired by Warhol’s Brillo Box installation, art that in Danto’s eyes was indiscernible from the everyday boxes it represented, Danto developed a theory that is able to differentiate art from non-art by employing the body of conceptual art theory manifest in what he termed the ‘artworld’. The (...)
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  9.  17
    Now-time image-space: temporalization of politics in Walter Benjamin's philosophy of history and art.Kia Lindroos - 1998 - Jyväskylä, Finland: University of Jyväskylä.
    Lindroos constructs an alternative interpretation on history, time, politics and art, approached through the moment of the Now (Jetztzeit). In the first section, she elaborates the critique of chronologic-linear way of understanding history. Through a close reading of Benjamin's "Work of Art" essay, the second section examines the problems of origins, authenticity and traditions of art through the ideas of artistic avant-garde and politicization of aesthetics. The end of the book discusses the concept of image and the new images as (...)
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  10.  21
    "Time Gentlemen, Please!" Art History and the Semiotics of Time.Jp McMahon - 2009 - Semiotics:77-87.
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  11.  8
    Nature Transfigured: Science and Literature, 1700-1900 by John Christie; Sally Shuttleworth; The Place of Fiction in the Time of Science: A Disciplinary History of American Writing by John Limon. [REVIEW]Stuart Peterfreund - 1991 - Isis 82:716-718.
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  12.  5
    Nature Transfigured: Science and Literature, 1700-1900. John Christie, Sally ShuttleworthThe Place of Fiction in the Time of Science: A Disciplinary History of American Writing. John Limon. [REVIEW]Stuart Peterfreund - 1991 - Isis 82 (4):716-718.
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  13.  54
    Art and Time.Derek Allan - 2013 - Cambridge Scholars Press.
    A well-known feature of great works of art is their power to “live on” long after the moment of their creation – to remain vital and alive long after the culture in which they were born has passed into history. This power to transcend time is common to works as various as the plays of Shakespeare, the Victory of Samothrace, and many works from early cultures such as Egypt and Buddhist India which we often encounter today in major art museums. (...)
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  14.  26
    Seeing the insane in textbooks of abnormal psychology: The uses of art in histories of mental illness.Thomas J. Schoeneman, Shannon Brooks, Carla Gibson, Julia Routbort & Dieter Jacobs - 1994 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 24 (2):111–141.
    Pictures in historical chapters of textbooks convey information about the values and assumptions of the authors’professions and the larger culture. We scrutinized 15 recent abnormal psychology textbooks for reproductions of art created before 1900. Thirteen works appeared in three or more textbooks. Overall, these pictures support a “Whiggish” account of history that celebrates the present and gives a distorted, incomplete rendering of the past. The 13 pictures tended to depict the mentally ill as an underclass who are released from their (...)
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  15. Razvitie fiziki v SSSR, 1917-1967.L. A. Art︠s︡imovich (ed.) - 1967 - Moskva,: Nauka.
     
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  16.  63
    The History of Art: Its Methods and Their Limits.Ulrika von Haumeder & R. Scott Walker - 1984 - Diogenes 32 (128):17-41.
    Tracing the broad outline of European art history means presenting the different methods considered essential to the formation of this discipline. Historiographical research arrives quite naturally at a criticism of the methods themselves and at a search for a broader horizon.To the extent that the historian is involved with the thinking and the problems of his age, his methods reveal personal and conjunctural concepts and ideas which will guide the reflections of his successors ; these successors will modify and correct (...)
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  17.  28
    The Intuition of Time Between Science and Art History in the Early Twentieth Century.Gabriel Motzkin - 1997 - Science in Context 10 (1):207-220.
    The ArgumentThis article compares the corresponding effects in science and art of a change in the intuition of time at the beginning of this century. McTaggart's distinction between linear time and tense time is applied to the question of whether linear perspective requires a notion of time as succession. It is argued that the problem of self-representation is a basic problem for this kind of uniform space-time because of the contradiction between this model's need for a privileged point of view (...)
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  18.  5
    The aestheticization of history and the Butterfly Effect: visual arts series.Nancy Wellington Bookhart (ed.) - 2023 - Wilmington, Delaware: Vernon Press.
    'The Aestheticization of History and the Butterfly Effect: Visual Arts Series' introduces the audience to philosophical concepts that broach the beginning of the history of Western thought in Plato and Aristotle to that of more modern thought in the theoretician Jacques Rancière in which the main conceptual framework of this anthology is predicated. The introduction is mainly concerned with Rancière's concept of the distribution of the sensible, which is the arrangement of things accessible to our senses, what we experience in (...)
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  19. Philosophical Contexts of the Attitude of Contemporary Artists to Time, History and Tradition.Teresa Pękala - 2009 - Art Inquiry. Recherches Sur les Arts 11:131-142.
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  20.  4
    Art and Time.Philip S. Rawson - 2005 - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press.
    This book shows how time is a fundamental element in our perception of the arts and proposes an integrated framework within which to explore and appreciate the subtleties and complexities of this essential key to the reading and understanding of meaning in art. The book is a work of ideas, not abstract theory or pure art history. It offers wide-ranging insight into the aesthetics and philosophies of time across different art forms, cultures, and periods. Intended for both arts practitioners and (...)
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  21. Art & physics: parallel visions in space, time, and light.Leonard Shlain - 1991 - New York: Quill/W. Morrow.
    Art interprets the visible world, physics charts its unseen workings--making the two realms seem completely opposed. But in Art & Physics, Leonard Shlain tracks their breakthroughs side by side throughout history to reveal an astonishing correlation of visions. From teh classical Greek sculptors to Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns, and from Aristotle to Einstein, aritsts have foreshadowed the discoveries of scientists, such as when Money and Cezanne intuited the coming upheaval in physics that Einstein would initiate. In this lively and (...)
     
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  22.  10
    The State of the Art- the art of the State: A HIstory of Political Thought for our Time.Robert von Friedeburg - 2003 - European Journal of Political Theory 2 (2):235-243.
  23.  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 text (...)
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  24. Art in the time of Disease.Srajana Kaikini - 2014 - Journal for Cancer Research and Therapeutics 10 (1):229 -231.
    An invited editorial on the depiction of disease in art history which would then become the symbol of this redemptive philosophy.
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  25.  6
    History of Modern Philosophy: From Nicolas of Cusa to the Present Time.Richard Falckenberg & Transl Armstrong, Andrew Campbell - 2017 - New York: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform.
    History of Modern Philosophy From Nicolas of Cusa to the Present Time by Richard Falckenberg In no other department is a thorough knowledge of history so important as in philosophy. Like historical science in general, philosophy is, on the one hand, in touch with exact inquiry, while, on the other, it has a certain relationship with art. With the former it has in common its methodical procedure and its cognitive aim; with the latter, its intuitive character and the endeavor to (...)
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  26.  33
    Art histories from nowhere: on the coloniality of experiments in art and artificial intelligence.Mashinka Firunts Hakopian - 2024 - AI and Society 39 (1):29-41.
    This paper considers recent experiments in art and artificial intelligence that crystallize around training algorithms to generate artworks based on datasets derived from the Western art historical canon. Over the last decade, a shift towards the rejection of canonicity has begun to take shape in art historical discourse. At the same time, algorithmically enabled practices in the US and Europe have emerged that entrench the Western canon as a locus and guarantor of aesthetic value. Operating within the epistemic framework of (...)
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  27.  12
    The Time We Share: Reflecting on and Through Performing Arts—One Introduction, Three Acts, and Two Intermezzos.Daniel Blanga-Gubbay & Lars Kwakkenbos (eds.) - 2015 - Mercatorfonds.
    Marking the 20th anniversary of Belgium’s Kunstenfestivaldesarts—a major international arts festival—this ambitious book examines a wide range of critical perspectives on two decades of performing arts. The authors look closely at performing arts pieces from around the world to see what critiques and insights they reveal about society. Among the topics that these works address are the dialogue between history and memory, the development of a sense of community, the interplay between fiction and reality, and the fine line between a (...)
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  28.  11
    The Pursuit of Magnetic Shadows: The Formal-Empirical Dipole Field of Early-Modern Geomagnetism.Art R. T. Jonkers - 2008 - Centaurus 50 (3):254-289.
    Abstract…observations of skylfull pylotts is the onlye waye to bring it in rule; for it passeth the reach of naturall philosophy. – Michael Gabriel, 1576 (Collinson, 1867, p. 30)Abstract The tension between empirical data and formal theory pervades the entire history of geomagnetism, from the Middle Ages up to the present day. This paper explores its early-modern history (1500–1800), using a hybrid approach: it applies a methodological framework used in modern geophysics to interpret early-modern developments, exploring to what extent formal (...)
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  29.  4
    The changing consitution of the present: essays on the work of art in times of contemporaneity.Jacob Lund - 2022 - London: Sternberg Press.
    How our experience of presence, time, and history is articulated in contemporary artistic practices. Our present is defined by contemporaneity: the interconnection of heterogeneous times, histories, and temporalities. These many and various times do not merely exist in parallel with one another, simultaneously. Rather, they interconnect and are brought to bear on the same present, forming a sort of planetary present, and—at least in principle—a global sharing of time, although one not shared equally. In The Changing Constitution of the Present: (...)
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  30. Monumental Origins of Art History: Lessons from Mesopotamia.Jakub Stejskal - forthcoming - History of Humanities.
    When does art history begin? Art historiographers typically point to the Renaissance (Vasari) or, alternatively, to Hellenism (Pliny the Elder). But such origin stories become increasingly disconnected from contemporary disciplinary practices, especially as the latter try to rise to the challenge of conducting art history in a more diversified and global way. This essay provides an alternative account of art history’s origin, one that does not try to alleviate the sense of disconnect, but rather develops a global, non-Eurocentric account. The (...)
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  31.  44
    “… The art of shaping a democratic reality and being directed by it …”—philososophy of science in turbulent times.Johannes Fehr - 2012 - Studies in East European Thought 64 (1-2):81-89.
    This article has three objectives: First, it revises the history of the reception of Ludwik Fleck’s monograph Entstehung und Entwicklung einer wissenschaftlichen Tatsache (1935, Genesis and Development of a Scientific Fact). Contrary to the established picture, Fleck’s book was largely discussed in the years before the outbreak of World War II. What becomes clear when reading these early reviews and especially Fleck’s comments to those written by representatives of Nazi Germany is, second, the political dimension of his epistemology. In this (...)
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  32.  24
    History: Or Anthropology: Of Art?George Kubler - 1975 - Critical Inquiry 1 (4):757-767.
    In anthropology, works of art are used as sources of information rather than as expressive realities in their own right. In anthropology the work of art is treated more as a window than as a symbol; it is treated as a transparency rather than as a membrane having its own properties and qualities. For instance, it is usually in social science that art "reflects" life with more or less distortion. Yet no art can record anything it is not actually programmed (...)
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  33.  23
    Time and History: Proceedings of the 28. International Ludwig Wittgenstein Symposium, Kirchberg Am Wechsel, Austria 2005.Friedrich Stadler & Michael Stöltzner (eds.) - 2006 - Frankfurt, Germany: De Gruyter.
    The present volume contains primarily the invited papers of the 28th Inter-national Wittgenstein Symposium that was held in Kirchberg am Wech-sel (Lower Austria) in August 2005. It was dedicated to the topic Time and History (Zeit und Geschichte) in an interdisciplinary perspective, ranging from the philosophy of time, in the narrower sense, the approaches of the single scientific disciplines, in so far as they are informed by foundational and philosophical issues, to culture and art. As usual, the contributed papers (Beitr (...)
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  34.  59
    After the End of Art: Contemporary Art and the Pale of History.Arthur Coleman Danto - 1997 - Princeton University Press.
    Over a decade ago, Arthur Danto announced that art ended in the sixties. Ever since this declaration, he has been at the forefront of a radical critique of the nature of art in our time. After the End of Art presents Danto's first full-scale reformulation of his original insight, showing how, with the eclipse of abstract expressionism, art has deviated irrevocably from the narrative course that Vasari helped define for it in the Renaissance. Moreover, he leads the way to a (...)
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  35.  42
    Effective history and the end of art: From Nietzsche to Danto.Ingrid Scheibler - 1999 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 25 (6):1-28.
    This article takes its shape from a recent conference at the School of Visual Arts in NYC on the theme, 'Tradition and the New: Educating the Artist for the Millennium'. Central to the way the conference was advertised and described was an implicit tendency to view tradition as wholly separate from the new. While the conference did not itself make a theoretical argument for the opposition of tradition and the new, Arthur Danto's recent elaboration of a thesis of the 'end (...)
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  36.  23
    Art History in the Age of Bellori: Scholarship and Cultural Politics in Seventeenth-Century Rome.Giles Knox, Janis Bell & Thomas Willette - 2004 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 38 (2):116.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 38.2 (2004) 116-120 [Access article in PDF] Art History in the Age of Bellori: Scholarship and Cultural Politics in Seventeenth-Century Rome, edited by Janis Bell and Thomas Willette. Cambridge: Cambridge Universtiy Press, 2002, 396 pp. Giovan Pietro Bellori is a name familiar to all who have studied seventeenth-century Italian art. His magisterial book, The Lives of the Modern Painters, Sculptors, and Architects (Le vite (...)
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  37.  52
    Decolonizing the History of Pre-Columbian Art in Brazil.Alex Pereira De Araújo - 2023 - International Journal of Humanities and Education Development (Ijhed) 5 (6):73-78.
    This study resumes the discussion undertaken by Ulpiano Bezerra de Menezes, historian, archaeologist and museologist at the University of São Paulo, the first to “decolonize the history of Art in the Americas”. At the same time, this resumption is in charge of paying homage to this researcher who found the mistakes and gaps left by European scholars who were at the service of Eurocentric colonialism and its Eurocentric culture. However, the central objective of this text is to contribute to this (...)
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  38.  6
    Ėстетические категории и искусство.Viktor Pigulevskiæi & Institutul Moldovenesk de Stat de Arte (eds.) - 1989 - Kishinev: "Shtiint︠s︡a".
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  39.  7
    Picturing Art History in Eighteenth-Century Britain: Artists' Printed Portraits and Manuscript Biographies in Rylands English MS 60.Edward Wouk - 2019 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 95 (2):83-113.
    Rylands English MS 60, compiled for the Spencer family in the eighteenth century, contains 130 printed portraits of early modern artists gathered from diverse sources and mounted in two albums: 76 portraits in the first volume, which is devoted to northern European artists, and 54 in the second volume, containing Italian and French painters. Both albums of this ‘Collection of Engravings of Portraits of Painters’ were initially planned to include a written biography of each artist copied from the few sources (...)
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  40.  2
    Transfixed by prehistory: an inquiry into modern art and time.Maria Stavrinaki - 2022 - New York: Zone Books. Edited by Jane Marie Todd & Maria Stavrinaki.
    Prehistory is an invention of the later nineteenth century. It was in this moment of technological progress and the acceleration of production and circulation, that three major Western narratives about time took shape. One after another, these new fields of inquiry delved into the obscure immensity of the past: first, to reckon the age of the Earth; second, to find a point of emergence of human beings; and third, to ponder the age of art. Maria Stavrinaki's Transfixed by Prehistory considers (...)
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  41.  2
    Transfixed by prehistory: an inquiry into the art and times of moderns.Maria Stavrinaki - 2022 - New York: Zone Books. Edited by Jane Marie Todd & Maria Stavrinaki.
    Prehistory is an invention of the later nineteenth century. It was in this moment of technological progress and the acceleration of production and circulation, that three major Western narratives about time took shape. One after another, these new fields of inquiry delved into the obscure immensity of the past: first, to reckon the age of the Earth; second, to find a point of emergence of human beings; and third, to ponder the age of art. Maria Stavrinaki's Transfixed by Prehistory considers (...)
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  42.  39
    Acta Pauli et Petri Apocrypha y Patrística griega.José Antonio Artés Hernández - 2004 - Augustinianum 44 (2):321-336.
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  43. Time and History in Alois Riegl's Theory of Perception.Mike Gubser - 2005 - Journal of the History of Ideas 66 (3):451-474.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Time and History in Alois Riegl's Theory of PerceptionMichael GubserIn an early essay, the Austrian art historian Alois Riegl (1858–1905), a pioneer of the modern discipline of art history, linked the creation of the zodiac images in calendar art to the designation of constellations in the heavens.1 Ancient calendar artists observed the motion of stars across the night sky and attempted to map them into recognizable patterns representing specific (...)
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  44.  5
    The art of memory in medieval times.Calvin B. Kendall - 1992 - History of European Ideas 14 (5):735-738.
  45.  11
    The shape of time: remarks on the history of things.George Kubler - 2008 - New Haven [Conn.]: Yale University Press.
    When it was first released in 1962, The Shape of Time presented a radically new approach to the study of art history. Drawing upon new insights in fields such as anthropology and linguistics, George Kubler replaced the notion of style as the basis for histories of art with the concept of historical sequence and continuous change across time. Kubler’s classic work is now made available in a freshly designed edition. “ The Shape of Time is as relevant now as it (...)
  46.  6
    Kʻartʻvel pʻilosopʻostʻa lekʻsikoni: personalia.Tamaz Buachidze & Sak°Art°Velos P.°Ilosop°Iuri Sazogadoeba (eds.) - 2000 - Tʻbilisi: Gamomcʻemloba "Oazisi".
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  47.  37
    The transhistorical image: philosophizing art and its history.Paul Crowther - 2002 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Why are visual artworks experienced as having intrinsic significance or normative depth? Why are some works of art better able to manifest this significance than others? In his latest book Paul Crowther argues that we can answer these questions only if we have a full analytic definition of visual art. Crowther's approach focuses on the pictorial image, broadly construed to include abstract work and recent conceptually-based idioms. The significance of art depends, however, essentially on the transhistorical nature of the pictorial (...)
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  48.  10
    The Transhistorical Image: Philosophizing Art and its History.Paul Crowther - 2002 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Why are visual artworks experienced as having intrinsic significance or normative depth? Why are some works of art better able to manifest this significance than others? In this 2002 book Paul Crowther argues that we can answer these questions only if we have a full analytic definition of visual art. Crowther's approach focuses on the pictorial image, broadly construed to include abstract work and recent conceptually-based idioms. The significance of art depends, however, essentially on the transhistorical nature of the pictorial (...)
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  49. The time capsule that's as big as human history.Michael Paterniti - 2020 - In Gabrielle Kennedy (ed.), In/search re/search: imagining scenarios through art and design. Amsterdam: Sandberg Instituut.
     
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  50.  14
    The Dark Abyss of Time: The History of the Earth and the History of Nations from Hooke to Vico.Rachel Laudan - 1984 - University of Chicago Press.
    "A rich historical pastiche of 17th- and 18th-century philosophy, science, and religion."—G. Y. Craig, New Scientist "This book, by a distinguished Italian historian of philosophy, is a worthy successor to the author's important works on Francis Bacon and on technology and the arts. First published in Italian (in 1979), it now makes available to English readers some subtly wrought arguments about the ways in which geology and anthropology challenged biblical chronology and forced changes in the philosophy of history in the (...)
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