Results for ' Architecture, Renaissance'

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  1. Architectural Politics in Renaissance Venice.Deborah Howard - 2008 - In Howard Deborah (ed.), Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 154, 2007 Lectures. pp. 29-67.
  2.  17
    Renaissance architecture - (d.) hemsoll emulating antiquity. Renaissance buildings from brunelleschi to michelangelo. Pp. 352, b/w & colour ills. New Haven and London: Yale university press, 2019. Cased, £55, us$75. Isbn: 978-0-300-22576-1. [REVIEW]Deborah Howard - 2020 - The Classical Review 70 (2):511-513.
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  3.  34
    Renaissance Ideas and the Idea of the RenaissanceThe Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy.Renaissance Humanism: Foundations, Forms and Legacy. Volume 1: Humanism in Italy. Volume 2: Humanism Beyond Italy. Volume 3: Humanism and the Disciplines.Supplementum Festivum: Studies in Honor of Paul Oskar Kristeller.Renaissance Studies in Honor of Craig Hugh Smyth. Volume I: History, Literature, Music. Volume II: Art, Architecture.Marsilio Ficino e il ritorno di Platone: Manoscritti, stampe e documenti.Marsilio Ficino e il ritorno di Platone: Studi e documenti. [REVIEW]Charles Trinkaus, Quentin Skinner, Eckhard Kessler, Charles B. Schmitt, Albert Rabil, James Hankins, John Monfasani, Frederick Purnell, Andrew Morrogh, Fiorella Superbi Gioffredi, Piero Morselli, Eve Borsook, S. Gentile, S. Niccoli, P. Viti & Gian Carlo Garfagnini - 1990 - Journal of the History of Ideas 51 (4):667.
  4.  34
    Renaissance Touches of Sweet Harmony. Pythagorean Cosmology and Renaissance Poetics. By S. K. Heninger Jr, San Marino, California: The Huntington Library, 1974. Pp. xvii + 446 + 52 plates. $19.50. Pythagorean Palaces. Magic and Architecture in the Italian Renaissance. By G. L. Hersey. Ithaca & London: Cornell University Press, 1976. Pp. 216 + plates + tables. £18. [REVIEW]Charles Schmitt - 1978 - British Journal for the History of Science 11 (1):78-79.
  5. Travaux Sur L'architecture Italienne De La Renaissance.André Chastel - 1957 - Bibliothèque d'Humanisme Et Renaissance 19 (2):359-375.
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  6.  6
    Distance Points. Essays in Renaissance Art and Architecture. [REVIEW]Martin Donougho - 1993 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 27 (3):110.
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  7.  29
    The Poetics of GardensNature Perfected: Gardens through HistoryThe Architecture of Western Gardens: A Design History from the Renaissance to the Present Day.Allen S. Weiss, William Howard Adams, Monique Mosser & Georges Teyssot - 1994 - Substance 23 (1):117.
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  8. Reflection: space, vision, and faith: linear perspective in Renaissance art and architecture.Mari Yoko Hara - 2020 - In Andrew Janiak (ed.), Space: a history. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
     
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  9.  40
    Michael J. K. Walsh, Peter W. Edbury, and Nicholas S. H. Coureas, eds., Medieval and Renaissance Famagusta: Studies in Architecture, Art and History. Farnham, UK, and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2012. Pp. xxx, 341 plus 23 color plates; black-and-white figures and tables. $119.95. ISBN: 9781409435570. [REVIEW]Luca Zavagno - 2013 - Speculum 88 (4):1184-1186.
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  10.  25
    Serene Greed of the Eye: Leon Battista Alberti and the Philosophical Foundations of Renaissance Architectural Theory: Book Reviews. [REVIEW]Stefano Cracolici - 2008 - British Journal of Aesthetics 48 (2):240-243.
  11.  1
    Architecture after Drafting.Sean Keller - 2012 - Zeitschrift für Medien- Und Kulturforschung 3 (1):116-130.
    Over the last two decades drawing has been displaced from its dominant role in architecture by a range of computational representations. This article offers a critical response to Mario Carpo's recent argument that this shift returns architecture to an 〉autographic〈 mode of practice not seen since before the Renaissance. In contrast, I suggest that architecture today should be thought of through Rosalind Krauss's model of a post-medium art.
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  12. Thematic Files-mathematics and knowledge in the renaissance-scientia sine arte nihil est... Palladian architecture and mathematics II. [REVIEW]Pierre Caye - 2006 - Revue d'Histoire des Sciences 59 (2):245.
  13.  10
    Architecture after Drafting.Keller Sean - 2012 - Zeitschrift für Medien- Und Kulturforschung 3 (1):119-134.
    "In den letzten zwei Jahrzehnten wurde die Dominanz des Zeichnens für die Architektur von einer ganzen Reihe von digitalen Repräsentationstechniken verdrängt. Der Beitrag stellt eine kritische Antwort auf Mario Carpos These dar, dieser Wandel bringe Architektur zu einer »autographischen« Praxis zurück, die noch vor die Renaissance zurückreiche. Demgegenüber argumentiert der Beitrag, dass Architektur nach dem Modell von Rosalind Kraus als post-medium art (»postmediale Kunst«) gedacht werden sollte. Over the last two decades drawing has been displaced from its dominant role (...)
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  14.  24
    Architectural Theory, Volume 1: An Anthology From Vitruvius to 1870 (review).Peg Rawes - 2007 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 41 (2):111-115.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Architectural Theory, Volume 1: An Anthology from Vitruvius to 1870Peg RawesArchitectural Theory, Volume 1: An Anthology from Vitruvius to 1870, edited by Harry Francis Mallgrave. Malden MA, Oxford, Victoria: Blackwell Publishing, 2006, 590 pp., $49.95.This anthology is a rich and comprehensive documentation of the key stages that construct Western architectural theory, from Vitruvius's classical writing to Gottfried Semper's theories in late-nineteenth-century Europe. Comprised of 229 texts by these (...)
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  15.  5
    Paradigms of Renaissance grotesques.Damiano Acciarino (ed.) - 2019 - Toronto: Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies.
    This collection offers a set of new readings on the history, meanings, and cultural innovations of the grotesque as defined by various current critical theories and practices. Since the grotesque frequently manifests itself as striking incongruities, ingenious hybrids, and creative deformities of nature and culture, it is profoundly implicated in early modern debates on the theological, philosophical, and ethical role of images. This consideration serves as the central focus from which the articles in the collection then move outward along different (...)
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  16.  4
    Toward an Architecture of Enjoyment.Łukasz Stanek & Robert Bononno (eds.) - 2014 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    _Toward an Architecture of Enjoyment_ is the first publication in any language of the only book devoted to architecture by Henri Lefebvre. Written in 1973 but only recently discovered in a private archive, this work extends Lefebvre’s influential theory of urban space to the question of architecture. Taking the practices and perspective of habitation as his starting place, Lefebvre redefines architecture as a mode of imagination rather than a specialized process or a collection of monuments. He calls for an architecture (...)
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  17.  20
    Concepts of Beauty in Renaissance Art.Francis Ames-Lewis & Mary Rogers - 2019 - Routledge.
    In this Volume, published in1998, Fifteen scholars reveal the ways of preserving, conceiving and creating beauty were as diverse as the cultural influenced at work at the time, deriving from antique, medieval and more recent literature and philosophy, and from contemporary notions of morality and courtly behaviour. Approaches include discussion of contemporary critical terms and how these determined writers' appreciation of paintings, sculpture, architecture and costume; studies of the quest to create beauty in the work of artists such as Botticeli, (...)
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  18.  33
    Multiple Horizons: Phenomenology, Cubism, Architecture.Pau Pedragosa - 2014 - The European Legacy 19 (6):747-764.
    Phenomenology is often described as a paradigm shift that calls for a re-assessment of inherited themes and concepts. One of its most important contributions is the central role given to the embodied subject as opposed to the conception of the disembodied subject that has dominated philosophy since Descartes. If perspectival painting best represents the paradigm of modern philosophy since the Renaissance, it is the multiple perspectives of Cubist painting that best represent the phenomenological paradigm. While the relationship between phenomenology (...)
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  19.  31
    Pythagoras and Renaissance Europe: finding heaven.Christiane L. Joost-Gaugier - 2009 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In this book, Christiane L. Joost-Gaugier offers the first systematic study of Pythagoras and his influence on mathematics, astronomy, philosophy, religion, medicine, music, the occult, and social life-as well as on architecture and art-in the late medieval and early modern eras. Following the threads of admiration for this ancient Greek sage from the fourteenth century to Kepler and Galileo in the seventeenth, this book demonstrates that Pythagoras's influence in intellectual circles-Christian, Jewish, and Arab-was more widespread than has previously been acknowledged. (...)
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  20. Pure Visuality: Notes on Intellection & Form in Art & Architecture.Gavin Keeney - manuscript
    Diaristic, mixed notes on: John Ruskin's The Poetry of Architecture (1837) and Modern Painters (1885); Caravaggio, Victorian Aesthetes, G.K. Chesterton, and Tacita Dean; Jay Fellows' Ruskin’s Maze: Mastery and Madness in His Art (1981); Slavoj Žižek at Jack Tilton Gallery, New York, New York, USA, April 23, 2009, “Architectural Parallax: Spandrels and Other Phenomena of Class Struggle”; “Titian, Tintoretto, Veronese: Rivals in Renaissance Venice”, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, March 15-August 16, 2009; Janet Harbord, Chris Marker: La (...)
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  21.  6
    Unnatural Horizons: Paradox and Contradiction in Landscape Architecture.Allen S. Weiss - 1998 - Princeton Architectural Press.
    Unnatural Horizons presents a selective history of the last five centuries of landscape architecture at the intersection of poetics and science, rhetoric and technology, and philosophy and politics. It investigates the relations between garden aesthetics and metaphysics, discussing issues similar to those raised by Weiss's critically acclaimed Mirrors of Infinity. The Western garden has always served as a setting for music, dance, theater, sculpture, and architecture, as well as the minor arts of meditative contemplation and erotic seduction. The history of (...)
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  22.  4
    A contemporary renaissance: Gülen's philosophy for a global revival of civilization.Sulaymān ʻAshrātī - 2017 - Clifton, New Jersey: Blue Dome Press.
    Ashrati's book is a study of intellectual framework laid out by Fethullah Gulen in his call for the revival of humanity's changing power. Gulen, a prominent scholar of Islam and a social activist, is the inspiration behind the global network of education, charity and interfaith dialogue. This book is an attempt to show how significant Gulen's layout for reconstruction is to Islam and to the rest of the world.In his analysis of Gulen's thought of reconstruction, Ashrati looks at concepts including (...)
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  23.  37
    Scientia sine arte nihil est... Architecture et mathématiques palladiennes II.Pierre Caye - 2006 - Revue d'Histoire des Sciences 59 (2):245-263.
    Cet article constitue le second volet d’une même réflexion consacrée aux rapports de l’art et plus particulièrement de l’architecture avec les mathématiques à la Renaissance. Après une première étude consacrée à la place des mathématiques dans la constitution de l’opérativité architecturale, l’auteur renverse sa perspective en examinant l’influence que l’architecture, dans son usage des mathématiques, a pu avoir sur la constitution même des mathématiques, comme si l’architecture de la Renaissance s’érigeait finalement en métamathématique.
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  24. Between Sky and Water: the face of urban decorum in the late renaissance houses on venice's grand canal.Desley Luscombe - 2011 - Angelaki 16 (1):41-62.
    Represented as the face of Venice, the houses of the Grand Canal were used during the Renaissance to support the portrayal of the Venetian Republic's unique structure of governance. Paolo Paruta's dialogue, Della perfettione della vita politica, a work of political theory on the Venetian Republic, is one such text used here to examine how in a changing context of modernization, architecture has been presented as a representation of state. Paruta's use of architecture as a representation of state was (...)
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  25. The Intersecting Fields of Ethno-Architecture: From the Indo-Himalayan World to Occidental Europe.Gérard Toffin - 1994 - Diogenes 42 (166):23-48.
    For some thirty years, a handful of architects has been trying to call into question the primacy that the history of architecture has given to monumental buildings. The representatives of this trend want to get away from the short chronology, common since the Italian Renaissance, and react against the dominant international functionalism that has too little respect for the local cultural contexts. It is under the influence of this “vernacular” approach that the small traditional structure became as legitimate an (...)
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  26.  6
    Drawing on the Past: Palladio, his Precursors and Knowledge of Ancient Architecture c. 1550.David Hemsoll - 2019 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 82 (1):195-249.
    The argument set out here provides a new understanding of the methods followed by the Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio for depicting the monuments of classical antiquity—in both his drawings and the plates of his seminal architectural treatises, the Quattro libri dell’architettura. It accepts the now-established view that Palladio’s early studies were frequently copied from the drawings of previous practitioners, but it reasons that his later output was also heavily dependent on past achievements. This is contrary to the claims Palladio (...)
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  27.  11
    Huizinga’s ‘heimwee’: responding to Burckhardt’s ‘Die Kultur der Renaissance in Italien’ in times of loss.Thor Rydin - 2021 - History of European Ideas 47 (5):732-747.
    ABSTRACT This article offers a new interpretation of the historical relation between two foundational works in cultural history: Johan Huizinga’s ‘The Autumntide of the Middle Ages’ (1919) and Jacob Burckhardt’s ‘The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy’ (1860). The tension between these works has commonly been understood as a scholarly dispute over the proper historical periodization of European fifteenth-century cultural practices: whilst Burckhardt reconstructed his material in terms of its technical novelty, its ability to ‘create’ (schöpfen) a post-medieval world, (...)
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  28.  7
    Adapted Brains and Imaginary Worlds: Cognitive Science and the Literature of the Renaissance.Donald Beecher - 2016 - Mcgill-Queen's University Press.
    In Adapted Brains and Imaginary Worlds, Donald Beecher explores the characteristics and idiosyncrasies of the brain as they affect the study of fiction. He builds upon insights from the cognitive sciences to explain how we actualize imaginary persons, read the clues to their intentional states, assess their representations of selfhood, and empathize with their felt experiences in imaginary environments. He considers how our own faculty of memory, in all its selective particularity and planned oblivion, becomes an increasingly significant dimension of (...)
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  29.  9
    Beholding a Building in Admiration: Leon Battista Alberti's De re aedificatoria and the Renaissance Discourse on Magnificence.Nele De Raedt - 2018 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 81 (1):239-248.
    The sense of wonder and admiration experienced by individuals who witness a striking sight, whether natural or man-made, has long been regarded as playing a role in the acquisition of knowledge. Both Aristotle and plato regarded wonder and admiration (θαύμα), sparked by something seen, as the origin of philosophical thinking. In the Middle Ages, theological writers considered the way in which admiration and, specifically, the state of rapture it engendered, helped the Christian experience devotion to God. What happened when a (...)
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  30.  42
    Magnificence and the sublime in Medieval aesthetics: art, architecture, literature, music.C. Stephen Jaeger (ed.) - 2010 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    These essays recover the lively discussions on the topics of "magnificence" and "the sublime" in the art and literature of antiquity, the Renaissance, and the ages following, and apply them to the Middle Ages to draw exciting new conlusions"--Provided by publisher.
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  31. Tome XXXIII, 2.Et Renaissance D'humanisme - 1971 - Bibliothèque d'Humanisme Et Renaissance: Travaux and Documents 33:239.
  32. Manuel Antonio Diaz gito.Vide la Cage, Oiseau Domestique & à la Renaissance de L'antiquité - 2007 - Cahiers Internationaux de Symbolisme 116:39.
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  33. Recte dixtt quondam sapiens ille Solon rhetorische ubungsstücke Von schülern Von ubbo emmius.William Shaksperes Small Latin & Renaissance Rhetoric - 1993 - In Fokke Akkerman, Gerda C. Huisman & Arie Johan Vanderjagt (eds.), Wessel Gansfort (1419-1489) and Northern Humanism. E.J. Brill. pp. 245.
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  34.  10
    Marcus Tullius Ciceroes thre bokes Of duties, to Marcus his sonne.Marcus Tullius Cicero, Nicholas Grimald & Renaissance English Text Society - 1990 - Folger Books.
  35.  5
    Leibniz et la Renaissance: colloque du Centre national de la recherche scientifique (Paris), du Centre d'études supérieures de la Renaissance (Tours) et de la G.W. Leibniz-Gesellschaft (Hannover): Domaine de Seillac (France) du 17 au 21 juin 1981.Albert Heinekamp, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Centre D'études supérieures de la Renaissance & Gottfried-Wilhelm-Leibniz-Gesellschaft (eds.) - 1983 - Wiesbaden: F. Steiner.
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  36.  70
    Tycho's Talisman: Astrological Magic in the Design of Uraniborg.Alistair Kwan - 2011 - Early Science and Medicine 16 (2):95-119.
    Renaissance Vitruvianism provides a broad context in which to situate the architecture of Tycho Brahe’s Uraniborg, but fails to account for the motivation behind Tycho’s design, for how Tycho knew Vitruvian design principles, and for any of Uraniborg’s specific features. Identifying Uraniborg as a Palladian design fares even worse. Some of Uraniborg’s features can, however, be understood in terms of talismanic ideas such as those circulating in sources such as Agrippa’s De occulta philosophia (which Tycho possessed) and Dee’s Propaedeumata (...)
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  37.  26
    The Art Criticism Of John Ruskin.John Ruskin & Robert L. Herbert - 1987 - Da Capo Press.
    "Ruskin was the most important aesthetic authority of the 19th century. In his dozens of books and lectures he wrote about the qualities of art. the key figure, the history that connected one to another. In The Stones of Venice, Modern Painters, Seven Lamps of Architecture he developed rules and standards that are amazingly contemporary in their range of sympathies. However, Ruskin wrote thousands of pages of criticism; for the modern reader his thought needs always to be rediscovered. This anthology (...)
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  38. Bishop Robert Grosseteste and Lincoln Cathedral: tracing relationships between medieval concepts of order and built form.Nicholas Temple, John Hendrix & Christia Frost (eds.) - 2014 - Burlington, VT: Ashgate.
    Bishop Robert Grosseteste and Lincoln Cathedral provides a much-needed and in-depth investigation of Grosseteste’s relationship to the medieval cathedral at Lincoln and the surrounding city. The architecture and topography of Lincoln Cathedral are examined in their cultural contexts, in relation to scholastic philosophy, science and cosmology, and medieval ideas about light and geometry, as highlighted in the writings of Robert Grosseteste - bishop of Lincoln Cathedral. At the same time the architecture of the cathedral is considered in relation to the (...)
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  39.  6
    Aesthetic theory: essential texts.Mark Foster Gage (ed.) - 2011 - New York: W. W. Norton & Co..
    This anthology of writings addresses the producers of the very forms that are judged aesthetically - students of architecture, graphic design, interior design, fashion, and industrial design. The selections are from philosophy, art history, literary criticism, architectural practice, Renaissance scholarship, critical theory, and the cognitive neurosciences. They represent varying points of view, formats, lengths and intents. Some are complete book chapters or essays, some excerpts from writings on topics seemingly distant from aesthetic theory. All offer insights into the importance (...)
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  40.  11
    Wissenschaftliche Begriffsbildung im Kreis der Accademia della Virtù in Rom um 1550.Bernd Kulawik - 2015 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 38 (2):140-152.
    The Origin of Scientific Notions in the Circle of the Roman Accademia della Virtù around 1550. Between c. 1537 and 1555 a group of humanists, clerics, architects and philologists known as the so‐called Accademia della Virtù got together in Rome to work on a program which was formulated in a letter by the Sienese humanist Claudio Tolomei in 1542 and published in 1547. Starting out with the intention to understand the only surviving antique book on architecture and architectural theory – (...)
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  41.  29
    Primate Culture and Social Learning.Andrew Whiten - 2000 - Cognitive Science 24 (3):477-508.
    The human primate is a deeply cultural species, our cognition being shaped by culture, and cultural transmission amounting to an “epidemic of mental representations” (Sperber, 1996). The architecture of this aspect of human cognition has been shaped by our evolutionary past in ways that we can now begin to discern through comparative studies of other primates. Processes of social learning (learning from others) are important for cognitive science to understand because they are cognitively complex and take many interrelated forms; they (...)
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  42.  8
    Le platonisme de Marsile Ficin et la cour d'Urbin.Maria Grazia Pernis & Franðcois Roudaut - 1997 - Genève: Diffusion hors France: Editions Slatkine. Edited by François Roudaut.
    La philosophie élaborée à Florence par Marsile Ficin dans la seconde moitié du XVe siècle s'est répandue dans les principales cours princières d'Italie, en particulier celle d'Urbin. Etude de l'influence qu'elle exerça sur les lettres, l'architecture, la peinture et les autres arts (la marqueterie notamment) à la cour du duc Frédéric de Montefeltre et de ses successeurs immédiats.
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  43.  11
    On Plato's Timaeus. Calcidius - 2016 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: Dumbarton Oaks, Medieval Library, Harvard University Press. Edited by John Magee.
    Few works of philosophy have enjoyed the prestige of the Timaeus, the dialogue in which Plato set out to provide a rational account, cast in the form of a cosmological "myth," of the universe and humankind. Calcidius translated and commented on Plato's Timaeus. Chronology does little to explain Calcidius' work, which so falls outside the scope of any developmental account of "Middle-" and "Neoplatonism." Calcidius' identification of the Platonic Receptacle with Aristotelian Matter and his various Stoicising impulses reflect traditions that (...)
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  44.  26
    On Judging Art without Absolutes.James S. Ackerman - 1979 - Critical Inquiry 5 (3):441-469.
    That art historians have felt it necessary to emulate this effort to express personal input can be explained by our need to gain credibility in that aspect of our work that is indistinguishable in method from other historical research: the reconstruction, through documents and artifacts, of past events, conditions, and attitudes. Most of us simply ignore the ambivalence of our position; I cannot recall having heard or read discussions of it, but it is bound to creep out from under the (...)
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  45. The Crystal order that is most concrete: The Wittgenstein house.Hui Zou - 2005 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 39 (3):22-32.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Crystal Order That Is Most Concrete:The Wittgenstein HouseHui Zou (bio)IntroductionIn the instruction of architectural history, some historical references have to be mentioned in terms of the relationship between building and language. In Chapter I, Book II, of The Ten Books on Architecture, the ancient Roman theorist Vitruvius discussed the "origin of the dwelling house." According to him, the "primitive hut" originated from the gathering of men around a (...)
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  46.  69
    Telling, Showing, Showing off.Mieke Bal - 1992 - Critical Inquiry 18 (3):556-594.
    The American Museum of Natural History is monumental not only in its architecture and design but also in its size, scope, and content. This monumental quality suggests in and of itself the primary meaning of the museum inherited from its history: comprehensive collecting as a form of domination.8 In this respect museums belong to an era of scientific and colonial ambition, from the Renaissance through the early twentieth century, with its climactic moment in the second half of the nineteenth (...)
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  47.  10
    The Role of Music in the Venetian Home in the Cinquecento.Deborah Howard - 2012 - In The Music Room in Early Modern France and Italy: Sound, Space and Object. pp. 95.
    This chapter considers the role of music and dance in the definition of identity by families and individuals in Renaissance Venice, with particular reference to the use of domestic space for music-making. The integration of music into its social and architectural context is discussed in terms of the class identity of different groups. The contexts range from domestic entertainment to family festivities such as marriages. The chapter goes on to explore the kinds of music-making in different spaces in the (...)
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  48.  11
    Experimental Enhancement of Feelings of Transcendence, Tenderness, and Expressiveness by Music in Christian Liturgical Spaces.Samantha López-Mochales, Raquel Jiménez-Pasalodos, Jose Valenzuela, Carlos Gutiérrez-Cajaraville, Margarita Díaz-Andreu & Carles Escera - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13:844029.
    In western cultures, when it comes to places of worship and liturgies, music, acoustics and architecture go hand in hand. In the present study, we aimed to investigate whether the emotions evoked by music are enhanced by the acoustics of the space where the music was composed to be played on. We explored whether the emotional responses of western naïve listeners to two vocal pieces from the Renaissance, one liturgical and one secular, convolved with the impulse responses of four (...)
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  49. The Range Of Visual Concepts. Category Of Disegno.Roman Konik - 2013 - Studia Philosophica Wratislaviensia 8 (2):149-163.
    In the history of art drawing has played various roles, was something essentially ministerial and subordinate in relation to painting, architecture and sculpture. It was only at the root of modern painting in Renaissance that drawing was attributed quite a different function. Disegno gave Renaissance painters the chance to experiment with visualization, gave them a preview of the image, even before the final finish, and above all offered the possibility of creative searching, probing how imaginative categories may be (...)
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  50. Preface to translation.О.И Кусенко - 2022 - History of Philosophy 27 (2):117-130.
    In this article, we provide the first commented edition and translation of an important fragment from Vladimir Zabugin’s posthumous work “The History of the Christian Renaissance in Italy” (Milan, 1924). Zabugin was a Russian historian, philologist and thinker, who lived and worked in Italy in the first quarter of the 20th century. He made an important contribution to the history of ideas with his concept of “Christian Renaissance”, abolishing the postulated antithesis of the Middle Ages and Renaissance (...)
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