Sentences with phrase «intrinsic value of the arts»

A carefully designed dancing acoustical ceiling in the music classroom enhances the room's acoustics and punctuates the intrinsic value of the arts in education.
Putting a sign that says: «$ 5,125 Karma Pricing: Pay What it's Worth to You» invites us to consider the intrinsic value of the art (and how generous you're being for letting us decide).
This show will feature a series of recent paintings, which can be described as a journey into the intrinsic value of art.

Not exact matches

Along with Anthony Appiah and other current writers about the university, she acknowledges the intrinsic value of study (her most recent book on the topic is titled Not for Profit), while ultimately defending the value of liberal arts as essential for social and political progress.
In literature and the arts valuing affects the relation of the arts to human life and the critical standards by which the intrinsic merit of works of art are judged.
«Instead, they should be empowering young women to value their intrinsic value and express their uniqueness through the art of fashion.
It is through symbols, those of art, poetry and especially religion, that the intrinsic value of cosmic reality insinuates itself into the conscious experience of those organisms that we call human beings.
Here we are engaged in the the argument of whether an expensive price makes for better art, or whether the value of art is intrinsic irrespective of it's monetary value.
Thisyear, beleaguered champions of arts educationwill find their visions finally — if gradually — realized, as the growing conversationabout art education's intrinsic value playsout in partnerships between community artsorganizations and schools.
In the AIE Program, you will join a diverse cohort of visual artists, musicians, museum educators, nonprofit arts advocates, actors, teachers, and writers who believe that the arts not only have intrinsic societal value, but also multiple roles in youth education and healthy development.
They have a great understanding and appreciation of the importance of the arts, both for its intrinsic value and how it impacts and influences student academic achievement.
This website aims to inform investors about «value investing», the art of buying stocks which trade at a significant discount to their intrinsic value.
In international terms, Arte Povera is the most famous and most influential Italian art movement of the late 20th century, marked by the sweeping aside of limits of space and time and the accomplished form of the artwork in favour of a greater focus on the processes, on the intrinsic value of materials, on nature and the senses as a possibility of life and not of representation.
Applying strategies of mass production to handmade objects, McCollum's labor - intensive practice questions the intrinsic value of the unique work of art.
To be «new» is of no intrinsic value for M WOODS; an alternative set of guiding principles organizes the collection, which stretches beyond narrow notions of art history to enfold positions as diverse as those of Olafur Eliasson and Buddhist sculptors from the Northern Qi dynasty, or Paul McCarthy and the followers of Hieronymus Bosch.
Qualities of reflection, beauty, disintegration, intrinsic value and instability are all explored, expanding on silver's long legacy in art making.
Photography holds all the intrinsic values of all the other arts but differs in the fact that it's the foundation of existence.
His three decades of artistic endeavors has illustrated the benefits of investing in art, acquiring art for esthetic and financial pursuits and more importantly, the universal intrinsic value of owning art.
Conceptual art, while having no intrinsic financial value, can deliver a powerful message, and thus has served as a vehicle for socio - political comment, as well as a broad challenge to the tradition of a «work of art» being a crafted unique object.
Born in Los Angeles in 1944, McCollum applies strategies of mass production to handmade objects — such intricate labor raises questions about the role of the artist and the intrinsic value of the work of art.
Like his hero Marcel Duchamp, Creed values the placement of items, rather than their intrinsic qualities, in qualifying their meaning as art objects.
Often described as Neo-Dadaist, many of Johns» works are more like junk art and possess a unique aura of uncertainty about their intrinsic value.
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