Results for 'Art Garden'

993 found
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  1.  38
    The Market's Benevolent Tendencies.Art Garden - 2005 - In Nicholas Capaldi (ed.), Business and religion: a clash of civilizations? Salem, MA: M & M Scrivener Press. pp. 55.
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  2.  10
    MOSSELMANS, BERT (eds). Science and Art: The Red Book of Einstein meets Magritte. VUB UP pp. 262+ xxviii, incl. b & w figures.£ 80. BERGER, HARRY JR. Fictions of the Pose: Rembrandt Against the Italian Renaissance. Cambridge UP. [REVIEW]Dry Landscape Garden - 2001 - British Journal of Aesthetics 41 (1).
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  3.  8
    Gardens and the Passion for the Infinite.Fine Arts Aesthetics International Society for Phenomenology & Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka - 2003 - Springer Verlag.
    This handsomely produced volume contains 22 contributions from international scholars, which were originally presented at the 2000 Conference of the International Society for Phenomenology, Fine Arts, & Aesthetics. The papers center around the theme of gardens and include a wide range of topics of interest to phenomenologists but also, perhaps, to gardeners with a philosophical bent. A sampling of topics: Leonardo's Annunciation Hortus Conclusus and its reflexive intent; hatha yoga--a phenomenological experience of nature; the Chinese attempt to miniaturize the world (...)
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  4. The Garden as Art: A new Space for the Garden in Contemporary Aesthetics.John Francis Powell - 2017 - Dissertation,
    Western art gardens have enjoyed a chequered relationship with philosophical aesthetics. At different times, they have been both lauded and rejected as exemplars of art, and, for most of the last 150 or so years, they have been largely ignored. However, during the last 25 years, there has been a welcome resurgence of philosophical interest in such gardens. This study situates the work stemming from this revival of interest in its historical context and assesses its adequacy in accounting for gardens (...)
     
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  5.  63
    The Garden as an Art.Mara Miller - 1993 - State University of New York Press.
    In this book Miller challenges contemporary aesthetic theory to include gardens in an expanded definition of art.
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  6. Dancing with Time: The Garden as Art.John Francis Powell - 2019 - Oxford, UK: Peter Lang.
    Gardens provoke thought and engagement in ways that are often overlooked. This book shines new light on long-held assumptions about gardens and proposes novel ways in which we might reconsider them. The author challenges traditional views of how we experience gardens, how we might think of gardens as works of art, and how the everyday materials of gardens – plants, light, water, earth – may become artful. -/- The author provides a detailed analysis of Tupare, a garden in New (...)
     
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  7.  10
    David S. Areford, The Art of Empathy: The Mother of Sorrows in Northern Renaissance Art and Devotion. London, UK, and Jacksonville, FL: GILES for the Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens, 2013. Paper. Pp. 64; 50 color and many black-and-white figures. $17.95. ISBN: 978-1-907804-26-7. [REVIEW]Andrea Pearson - 2015 - Speculum 90 (1):196-198.
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  8. The Garden as a Work of Art.Mara Miller - 1987 - Dissertation, Yale University
    This study is an examination of gardens from the perspective of philosophy of art. Since gardens combine natural and constructed elements, utilize both existing and newly created environments, and engage visual, auditory, tactile, olfactory and kinesthetic senses, they provide an opportunity to explore the concept of art and to test the boundaries, usefulness, and general validity of the concept of art. ;In many cultures, gardens are works of art on a par with painting, architecture, and poetry. Twentieth-century Western philosophies of (...)
     
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  9.  40
    Art and the Shift in Garden Culture in the Jiangnan Area in China (16th-17th Century).Jane Zheng - 2013 - Asian Culture and History 5 (2):p1.
    The remarkable growth in interest in aesthetic gardens in the late Ming period has been recognized in Chinese garden culture studies. The materialist historical approach contributes to revealing the importance of gardens’ economic functions in the shift of garden culture, but is inadequate in explaining the successive burgeoning of small plain gardens in the 17th century. This article integrates the aesthetic and materialist perspectives and situates the cultural transition in the concrete social and cultural context in the late (...)
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  10.  25
    The Garden as an Art.Stephanie Ross - 1994 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 52 (4):480-482.
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  11. Gardens as Art.”.Mara Miller - 1998 - In Michael Kelly (ed.), Encyclopedia of aesthetics. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 274--280.
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  12.  67
    Gardens as works of art: The problem of uniqueness.Mara Miller - 1986 - British Journal of Aesthetics 26 (3):252-256.
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  13.  31
    “An art of both caring and locking up”: Biopolitical Thresholds in the Zoological Garden.Matthew Chrulew - 2014 - Substance 43 (2):124-147.
    In the final sessions of the first year of his seminar on The Beast & the Sovereign, Jacques Derrida takes up the question of modernity as the epoch of biopolitics. In a remarkable close reading, he critiques Michel Foucault’s and Giorgio Agamben’s reflections on the threshold of biopolitical modernity, both in terms of conceptual content and, especially in the latter’s case, style. He takes as a prominent example the revolutionary transformation from princely menagerie to public zoological garden, as well (...)
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  14.  70
    What Gardens Mean.Stephanie Ross - 1998 - University of Chicago Press.
    This examination of gardens--particulary English gardens of the eighteenth century--offers possible links between garden design and the arts.
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  15.  13
    From Art to Science. Experiencing Nature in the European Garden 1500-1700.Fabrizio Baldassarri - 2016 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 5 (2):163-165.
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  16. Garden in Progress. Transformation of the garden of the Ludwig Forum for International Art in Aachen, Germany.Brigitte Franzen - 2013 - Topos: European Landscape Magazine 83:92.
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  17.  3
    Darwin and the art of botany: observations on the curious world of plants with artwork from the Oak Spring Garden Foundation.James T. Costa - 2023 - Portland, Oregon: Timber Press. Edited by Bobbi Angell.
    Darwin and the Art of Science will consist of excerpts from six of Darwin's books, chosen and introduced by James Costa. The excerpts will be arranged by plant (rather than according to which book they're from) in order to make the most of extraordinary images provided by the Oak Springs Garden Foundation library. As a group, they will provide unparalleled access to Darwin's fascinating observations and musings about the world of plants and how their distinctive features have evolved.
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  18.  68
    Gardens as an art form.F. R. Cowell - 1966 - British Journal of Aesthetics 6 (2):111-122.
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  19. We Do Not Have an Adequate Conception of Art until We Have One That Accommodates Gardens.John Powell - 2012 - Dissertation, Lincoln University
    The thesis explores the adequacy of five well-known conceptions of art to the case of gardens. It concludes that, of those conceptions, the cluster theory is best suited to the case of gardens.
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  20. Depiction of the Ideal Garden in "Standing Screen of Flowers and Birds of the Four Seasons" by KANO Motonobu from the collection of Hakutsuru Museum of Art: Focusing on the Elements of Pure Land and Actual Gardens.Yuki Shimada - 2005 - Bigaku 56 (3):15-28.
    The standing screens on the title is the oldest work extant of KANO Motonobu's work as folding screens of thick colored flowers and birds with golden background. This thesis designates that the scenery and the motif of the work are in correspondence with both descriptions of the scenery of Pure Land in several Buddhist scriptures and the design of actual gardens. Firstly, a peacock on the right hand screen is focused to indicate the bird connotes the elements of auspicious birds (...)
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  21.  14
    Dancing with Time: The Garden as Art.Isis Brook - 2020 - British Journal of Aesthetics 60 (2):231-234.
    Dancing with Time: The Garden as ArtJohn PowellPeter Lang. 2019. pp. 204. £45.00.
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  22.  25
    The Garden as an Art. [REVIEW]Thomas Leddy - 1996 - International Studies in Philosophy 28 (4):126-127.
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  23. "The Garden as a Fine Art": F. R. Cowell. [REVIEW]Andrew Wear - 1980 - British Journal of Aesthetics 20 (4):376.
     
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  24.  19
    Cosmopolitan translation and patriotic sensibilities in German garden art.Jennifer Milam - 2017 - Intellectual History Review 27 (3):377-403.
    My focus in this article is on a small group of German theorists, designers and patrons who thought extensively about the relationship between national identity and garden design: Christian Hirschfeld, Prince Franz von Anhalt-Dessau and his wife Luise, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, and Prince Pückler. These garden enthusiasts knew one another through personal contact or their writings, and they responded to and developed their ideas in relation to the newly framed creative enterprise in German lands of “garden-landscape-art”. (...)
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  25.  82
    Ut hortus poesis—gardening and her sister arts in eighteenth-century England.Stephanie Ross - 1985 - British Journal of Aesthetics 25 (1):17-32.
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  26.  10
    Gardens, Music, and Time.Ismay Barwell & John Powell - 2010-09-24 - In Fritz Allhoff & Dan O'Brien (eds.), Gardening ‐ Philosophy for Everyone. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 136–147.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Change and the Arts Time and the Arts Time and Change in Gardens Music Makes the Passage of Time Audible Gardens Make the Passage of Time Visible Notes.
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  27. Hortus Incantans : gardening as an art of enchantment.Eric MacDonald - 2010 - In Fritz Allhoff & Dan O'Brien (eds.), Gardening - Philosophy for Everyone: Cultivating Wisdom. Wiley-Blackwell.
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  28. Gardens and the Good Life in Confucianism and Daoism.Ian James Kidd - 2022 - In Laura D'Olimpio, Panos Paris & Aidan P. Thompson (eds.), Educating Character Through the Arts. Routledge. pp. 125-139.
    Creating and caring for a garden is a long-term project whose success requires commitment and devotion and love and proper performance of a range of activities that involve virtues and sensibilities like attentiveness, carefulness, humility, imaginativeness, and sensitivity to the natures and needs of plants and animals. In this chapter, I elaborate this conception of gardens and explore its relationship to artistic activities, like composing poetry or performing music. My focus are Confucianism and Daosim and their accounts of the (...)
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  29.  70
    Gardening - Philosophy for Everyone: Cultivating Wisdom.Fritz Allhoff & Dan O'Brien (eds.) - 2010 - Wiley-Blackwell.
    Philosophy and gardens have been closely connected from the dawn of philosophy, with many drawing on their beauty and peace for philosophical inspiration. Gardens in turn give rise to a broad spectrum of philosophical questions. For the green-fingered thinker, this book reflects on a whole host of fascinating philosophical themes. Gardens and philosophy present a fascinating combination of subjects, historically important, and yet scarcely covered within the realms of philosophy Contributions come from a wide range of authors, ranging from (...) writers and gardeners, to those working in architecture, archaeology, archival studies, art history, anthropology, classics and philosophy Essays cover a broad spectrum of topics, ranging from Epicurus and Confucius to the aesthetics and philosophy of Central Park Offers new perspectives on the experience and evaluation of gardens. (shrink)
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  30. A Philosophy of Gardens.David E. Cooper - 2006 - Oxford University Press.
    Why do gardens matter so much and mean so much to people? That is the intriguing question to which David Cooper seeks an answer in this book. Given the enthusiasm for gardens in human civilization ancient and modern, Eastern and Western, it is surprising that the question has been so long neglected by modern philosophy. Now at last there is a philosophy of gardens. David Cooper identifies garden appreciation as a special human phenomenon distinct from both from the appreciation (...)
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  31.  26
    Thinking the Sculpture Garden: Art, Plant, Landscape.Mara Miller - forthcoming - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism.
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  32.  8
    The Aesthetics of Nature and the Art of Gardening in Japan.Eherhard Ortland - 1997 - Dialogue and Universalism 7 (3):73-81.
    A Japanese garden is an artistically shaped piece of the environment as well as a representation of nature. In the aesthetic experience of Japanese gardens it is possible to conceive of the relation between nature and art in a way different from anything accessible within the horizon of European aesthetics alone. In a Japanese garden the artificially shaped nature does not suffer a loss of its proper quality of naturalness, but seems to be even more natural according to (...)
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  33.  12
    Hydraulics for Royal Gardens: Water Art as a Challenge for 18th Century Science and 21st Century Physics Teaching.Michael Eckert - 2007 - Science & Education 16 (6):539-548.
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  34.  8
    New York City Gardens.Veronika Hofer & Betsy Pinover Schiff - 2010 - Hirmer Publishers.
    New York may be most easily recognized by its trademark skyscrapers and brick tenement buildings, but the truth is that the city is actually teeming with luxurious roof gardens and private courtyard oases. Creative gardeners and architects have risen to meet the unique challenges of the urban landscape, designing spaces that celebrate the city while providing a restful escape. New York City Gardens presents New York’s evolving tradition of garden culture through images and discussions of thirty of its most (...)
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  35.  2
    The Garden of Leaders: Revolutionizing Higher Education.Paul Woodruff - 2019 - Oxford University Press.
    The Garden of Leaders explores two related questions: What is leadership? And what sort of education could prepare young people to be leaders? Paul Woodruff argues that higher education--particularly but not exclusively in the liberal arts--should set its main focus on cultivating leadership in students. Woodruff advances a new view of liberal arts education that places leadership at the root of everything it does, so that students will be prepared to lead in their lives and careers--and not necessarily in (...)
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  36.  9
    Earth Art in the Great Acceleration: Times/Counter-Times, Monuments/Counter-Monuments.Gary Shapiro - 2024 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 38 (1):47-61.
    ABSTRACT This article attempts to situate land art in the deserts of the US Southwest in terms of the works’ relation to and rupture with more traditional genres (seventeenth to twentieth centuries) of parks, gardens, and landscape architecture. It argues that the earlier works provide implicit answers to questions concerning Earth’s meaning and offer models of flourishing habitation. In contrast, the more recent works, all constructed in the era of the great acceleration (the Anthropocene), pose questions having to do with (...)
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  37.  18
    Juliette Ferdinand . From Art to Science: Experiencing Nature in the European Garden, 1500–1700. 127 pp., illus., index. Merlengo: ZeL Edizioni, 2016. €20. [REVIEW]John Dixon Hunt - 2016 - Isis 107 (4):834-835.
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  38.  6
    Good and evil in the garden of art: discrimination as the guarantor of civilization.Anthony Daniels - 2016 - New York, New York: Criterion Books.
    Anthony Daniels tackles the complex relation between good and bad art on the one hand and good and bad ideas on the other. He contrasts authors or artists whom he considers good with those he considers bad, and tries to explain why his opinion is not merely a matter of individual taste but is based upon reason as well. He argues judgment and discrimination (between good and bad, beautiful and ugly) are intrinsic to any conceivable human existence, indeed to thought (...)
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  39.  37
    The Garden as a Performance.Mateusz Salwa - 2014 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 51 (1):42-61.
    The aim of this article is to suggest that one should think of gardens in terms of performances and not necessarily in terms of architecture, painting, or poetry, for it is possible to show that, strangely enough, gardens seem to share certain features with performance arts. Such an approach seems fruitful since it allows one both to grasp the fact that gardens combine culture and nature and to underline the role of the latter, which cannot be reduced to a sheer (...)
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  40.  17
    Gardens and Green Spaces: placemaking and Black entrepreneurialism in Cleveland, Ohio.Justine Lindemann - 2019 - Agriculture and Human Values 36 (4):867-878.
    This paper presents a case study of Gardens and Green Spaces (GGS), a resident-driven, grant-funded project in Cleveland, Ohio working toward community change. Through both placemaking and entrepreneurial strategies, the main grant objectives are to effect change at the intersection of food (and agriculture), arts, and culture in Kinsman, a 96% Black Neighborhood on Cleveland’s east side. While community development (CD) projects are often designed by outside ‘experts’ who inform the scope and focus of grant-funded projects, this project is rooted (...)
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  41. The Japanese Garden in Schopenhauer's System.Jens Lemanski - 2022 - In Yoichiro Takahashi, Takao Ito & Tsunafumi Takeuchi (eds.), Das neue Jahrhundert Schopenhauers. pp. 277-301.
    The paper addresses the question of why there is no treatise on Japanese gardens in Arthur Schopenhauer's system. First, it is explained that the system philosophy of the 18th and 19th centuries aimed at completeness in conceptual representation. Schopenhauer therefore treats the national characteristics of the garden arts in Europe and Asia, among many other arts, and conceptually determines their similarities and differences. Due to the isolation of Japan, however, Schopenhauer had no knowledge of Japanese gardens. The last part (...)
     
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  42.  12
    Garden-Variety Formalist.Colin Lang - 2018 - Zeitschrift für Medien- Und Kulturforschung 9 (1):55-60.
    Recently, the effort to counter Fake News faced a counter attack: academic »postmodernism « and »social constructivism« it was said—because they say that facts are soaked in prior interpretations—are either purveyors of Fake News or set the cultural context in which it flourishes. They do so by undermining confidence in inquiry governed by simple facts. That is erroneous, argues William E. Connolly, because postmodernism never said that facts or objectivity are ghostly, subjective or »fake«. However, that what was objective at (...)
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  43. The Editioning of Gardens.Gavin Keeney - manuscript
    Many of the following literary-critical texts (not all quite conventional “long-form” essays) originally appeared on the Landscape Agency New York website, LANY Archive-Grotto, on the web portal Geocities, between the years 1997 and 2008 – i.e., over a period of roughly ten years. Versions of some were published in various journals, academic or otherwise. In re-presenting them here, the intention is to trace a proverbial “red thread” that crosses the entirety of the work, arguably what might be denoted the works-based (...)
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  44.  15
    Mysterious Energies. The Renaissance Gardens of Philosophers.Alicja Kuczyńska - 2018 - Dialogue and Universalism 28 (1):41-59.
    In the Renaissance the beauty of a garden was for people a source of energy, it nurtured their inherent love of plant life, enchanted them and gave them a sense of pure aesthetic contentment. This fascination with nature and the values nurtured by the emerging culture of the garden also had broader reasons than just the desire for subjective experience. They can be sought in the belief that the style of an epoch is reflected not only in all (...)
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  45.  10
    Beyond the Aesthetic Garden: Politics and Culture on the Margins of "Fin-de-Siecle Vienna".Scott Spector - 1998 - Journal of the History of Ideas 59 (4):691.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Beyond the Aesthetic Garden: Politics and Culture on the Margins of Fin-de Siècle ViennaScott SpectorThe rhetorical structure supporting Carl E. Schorske’s seminal Fin-de-Siècle Vienna: Politics and Culture 1 is frankly exposed. The argument—which may have single-handedly changed the discipline of cultural history—is an apparently simple one, and it is reasserted in this series of essays on diverse areas of cultural activity through the use of recurring metaphors. Schorske’s (...)
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  46.  15
    A Philosophy of Gardens (review).Ronald Moore - 2007 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 41 (3):120-124.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:A Philosophy of GardensRonald MooreA Philosophy of Gardens, by David E. Cooper. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006, 173 pp., $35.00 cloth.It is very likely that more people devote more aesthetic attention to gardens and their contents than they do to any other set of objects in the art world or in natural environments. Despite this, however, there has been very little philosophical writing devoted specifically to the aesthetics (...)
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  47.  40
    What Gardens Mean.Allen Carlson - 1999 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 57 (3):376-377.
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  48.  3
    Garden-Variety Formalist.Colin Lang - 2018 - Zeitschrift für Medien- Und Kulturforschung 9 (1):56-60.
    Recently, the effort to counter Fake News faced a counter attack: academic »postmodernism « and »social constructivism« it was said—because they say that facts are soaked in prior interpretations—are either purveyors of Fake News or set the cultural context in which it flourishes. They do so by undermining confidence in inquiry governed by simple facts. That is erroneous, argues William E. Connolly, because postmodernism never said that facts or objectivity are ghostly, subjective or »fake«. However, that what was objective at (...)
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  49.  29
    Royal Gardens, Parks, and the Architecture Within: Assyrian Views.Pauline Albenda - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 138 (1):105.
    Inscriptions of Assyrian kings disclose that these rulers maintained and improved the land near the palace. This paper brings together the pictorial versions of what may be described as the “Assyrian royal landscape,” that is, outdoor scenery designed for royal purposes and represented on the stone panels that lined the walls of the palaces at Nimrud, Nineveh, and Dur-Sharrukin. The royal landscapes differ from reign to reign, since they each reflect some aspect of the particular king’s rule. The description and (...)
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  50.  22
    The Figure in the Landscape: Poetry, Painting, and Gardening During the Eighteenth Century.John Dixon Hunt & J. D. Hunt - 1989 - Baltimore: JHU Press.
    Eighteenth-century England saw the rise of a "peculiarly English" art form—landscape gardening—and a corresponding change in attitudes toward the antural world. While the French, who lived under tyranny, had a tightly organized, restrictive gardens, the "free" English enjoyed gardens where they were at liberty to wander. John Dixon Hunt examines eighteenth-century letters, literary and critical works, biographies, paintings, prints, and drawings to trace the gradual movement from formal regularity toward a carefully calculated naturalness.
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