Sentences with phrase «also pure art»

Not exact matches

The ancient tongues were but a small though important province in the realm which he explored tirelessly, testing his general theory of linguistic expression by an investigation not only of Indo - European and Semitic idioms but also of Basque and Hungarian, of American Indian languages, of Chinese and South Sea dialects.1 Visitors found the aged sage «pure and perfect like an ancient work of art
Nutritious, high quality pure foods are the top priority of this popular new Dublin - based restaurant, but the team also loves art and shows this by creating a feast for all tastes and senses.
I would also get the chance to meet boss babe, entrepreneur mama, and Art of Pure founder, Monika Joshi.
Diebenkorn also paid close heed to the example of Matisse, but more importantly, he worked toward an art of pure abstraction sourced from observation.
While both groups valued abstract painting as a «purer» form of art, there were also significant differences between them.
This clear duality, transcending both formal abstraction and function, embodies a distinct and evolving symbiosis between two parallel paths, and nurtures a staggering dialogue around how a physical manifestation can embody pure experience and also exist in completely separate realms and trajectories of contemporary art and life.
The inherent contradictions that Pablo Bronstein establishes between the drawings and furniture / buildings, the shapes they refer to, their irreducibility to pure theory or mere physicality, functionality or artifice, are also ironic comments about the role of art historians, highlighting the pleasure but also the danger of historical discourse.
The main theoretical question underpinning the project is: «Can photography retain its artistic autonomy and overcome pure documentation, whilst also narrating the history of an important art exhibition?»
In his last years, before his death in 2005, his art becomes sparer, purer, and also less regular.
Also widespread among contemporary artists has been a repudiation of the idea that underlies most works of pure abstraction — that the work of art is a self - sufficient entity.
I'm talking about capital «D» Design, which for the purposes of this piece refers to furniture and other functional objects that also assume a glossy aesthetic that reach beyond pure functionality into the realm of art.
As a result of the ethical crisis brought on by the Second World War and the Shoah (see also Holocaust art), the Abstract Expressionism movement turned its back on all forms of representational art and focused exclusively on pure art devoid of any external content.
They reflect the pure creative impulse, unaffected by critical theory or a self - conscious sense of art history, which is also found in the work of unschooled art brut artists.
Stephen Thompson's Antiquities of Britain, 1872, and Albert Renger - Patzsch's prints from 1925 to 1939 chart the shift in perceiving photography as not just pure documentary but also an art form.
It represented the» incommensurable zone in which the old state turns to the new... a zone of silence and pure possibilities for a new beginning... «Also, as a numeric symbol, zero signifies «nothing,» an erasure of the past, yet the circular form represents «everything,» a promise for the future of humanity, art, and technology.
This art movement was also characterised by the use of uniform coloured areas comprised of pure, intense, and contrasting colours, using a technique known as «Hard Edge».
Picking up the early avant - garde thoughts of the deconstruction of shapes and geometry, filtering colors until they appear in their purest form the works of selected artists do not only reflect but also advance several 20th century art movements from early constructivism, different categories of abstract art, to pop - art related styles.
While Artists» House Gallery continues in the tradition of classical representational art it has also opened its doors to new visions and expressions to embrace non-objective works that explore pure color and line.»
However, her view that «pure» abstract art enhanced the environment, and her involvement with Groupe Espace in the 1950s which promoted the concept of a synthesis (or close collaboration) between architects and abstract painters and sculptors, place her at least in part within the Constructivist tradition.Her post-war textile designs for Heals also place her firmly within the 20th century Modern Movement.
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