Results for 'Icon painting'

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  1.  2
    ‘Left’ and ‘Right’ in Icon Painting.B. A. Uspensky - 1975 - Semiotica 13 (1).
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  2.  9
    Icons in Japan Painted by Rin Yamashita. Anonymity and Materiality.Michitaka Suzuki - 2014 - Convivium 1 (2):58-73.
  3. Painting with words : Kierkegaard and the aesthetics of the icon.Christopher B. Barnett - 2018 - In Eric Ziolkowski (ed.), Kierkegaard, Literature, and the Arts. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University press.
     
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  4.  1
    Icons in Bronze. An Introduction to Indian Metal ImagesTrends in Indian Painting. Ancient, Medieval, Modern.Gertrude K. Piatkowski, Daya Ram Thapar & Manohar Kaul - 1963 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 22 (2):221.
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  5.  8
    Anthropology in colors: from icon to Painting.Емельянов А.С - 2023 - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal) 1:45-63.
    Within the framework of this study, the transformation of anthropomorphic images in Medieval and Renaissance painting is analyzed. The visual art of this period is considered as a specific space of "conversation about man", which existed in parallel with discourses about God-man and Man-god. As a means of communication between man and God, the icon, using anthropomorphism in the image of the archetype, represented to the medieval man a certain path and a guide to his own salvation. Along (...)
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  6.  3
    The Damned of the Last Judgment or what the Romanians Paint in the Orthodox Icons - Historical and Contemporary Cultural Contexts.Ewa Kokoj - 2013 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 12 (35):86-108.
    The article describes manners in which history and culture influenced the details of the iconographic canon in the art of Orthodox church. The author was interested in relations existing between beliefs and their iconographic representation. Changes of the imagery of the damned in historical context portrayed in the Last Judgment icons painted in selected Orthodox churches in Romania came under the investigation of the author. Romanian icon painters using Byzantine characteristics of representation introduced some significant modifications into the canon. (...)
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  7.  1
    A Semeiotic Account of Paintings as Pure Icons that Communicate Beautiful Feelings.David Rohr - 2020 - In Walter B. Gulick & Gary Slater (eds.), American aesthetics: theory and practice. Albany: State University of New York Press. pp. 75-91.
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  8.  2
    Light – Icon/Stained Glass – Illumination.Ioan Chirilă, Stelian Pașca-Tușa, Ioan Popa-Bota & Claudia-Cosmina Trif - 2018 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 17 (50):96-108.
    God revealed to man during the history of his salvation in two ways: through word and through image. In other words, the divine message was addressed to the hearing and seeing of man. In the second case, revelation was achieved in a complete form. Man was part of a theophanic act, he was enveloped by the divine light and with the help of his spiritual eyes he was able to see, as much as it was permitted, God who is light. (...)
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  9.  9
    Iconic wonder: Pavel Florensky’s phenomenology of the face.Alexander V. Kozin - 2007 - Studies in East European Thought 59 (4):293-308.
    The key focus of this essay is the experience of encountering divine wonder in things. The examination of the divine encounter is staged against the phenomenological backdrop. Specifically, the concept of the divine wonder is taken in its original, Husserlian, definition as Verwunderung and is traced via Levinas and his concept of face to the early 20th century Russian philosopher, Pavel Florensky, whose 1922 essay “Iconostasis” approaches divine representation in icon painting explicitly and consistently as a phenomenon of (...)
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  10.  6
    L'icône russe.Ludmila Bejenaru & Vladlen Babcinetchi - 2005 - Cultura 2 (2):91-100.
    The Russian icon was always related to the soul of the Russian painter, his anxiety and his emotions. Through the icon the russian has always expressed his faith and mentained the bundle with God. The icon has been considered by the russian people a bridge between human and divinity. The Russian people belive into an russian Christ. The Russian icon embodys the russian nature, his strength of creation and of adaption, but especially the russian soul. It (...)
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  11.  12
    Iconic wonder: Pavel Florensky’s phenomenology of the face.Alexander V. Kozin - 2007 - Studies in East European Thought 59 (4):293 - 308.
    The key focus of this essay is the experience of encountering divine wonder in things. The examination of the divine encounter is staged against the phenomenological backdrop. Specifically, the concept of the divine wonder is taken in its original, Husserlian, definition as Verwunderung and is traced via Levinas and his concept of face (le visage) to the early 20th century Russian philosopher, Pavel Florensky (1882–1943), whose 1922 essay “Iconostasis” approaches divine representation (лuк) in icon painting explicitly and consistently (...)
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  12.  5
    L'icône russe.Ludmila Bejenaru & Vladlen Babcinetchi - 2005 - Cultura 2 (2):91-100.
    The Russian icon was always related to the soul of the Russian painter, his anxiety and his emotions. Through the icon the russian has always expressed his faith and mentained the bundle with God. The icon has been considered by the russian people a bridge between human and divinity. The Russian people belive into an russian Christ. The Russian icon embodys the russian nature, his strength of creation and of adaption, but especially the russian soul. It (...)
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  13.  13
    The Icon as Revelation.Stephanie Rumpza - 2023 - Studia Phaenomenologica 23:269-293.
    The Orthodox icon is often claimed as unique among images. Yet many proponents of this view, such as Leonid Ouspensky and Pavel Florensky, defend this singularity through a polemic against Western realism using a logic that culminates in a polemic against the world of experience. In this paper, I will use phenomenology to dismantle these two false dualities, against realist images and real experience, by uncovering the deeper concerns that motivate them. First, I draw on Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology of (...) to collapse the dichotomy of carnal and spiritual images. Then, I use Jean-Luc Marion’s phenomenality of Revelation to reframe the dichotomy of worldly and spiritual experience. This broadened understanding of experience will serve as a starting point to refine our understanding of what is claimed by the icon, both in its function as an image and in the world it opens for those who approach it on its own terms. (shrink)
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  14. Value accruement and dwindling of an iconic Chinese export painting, a journey.Rosalien van der Poel - 2021 - In Helen Westgeest, Kitty Zijlmans & Thomas J. Berghuis (eds.), Mix & stir: new outlooks on contemporary art from global perspectives. Amsterdam: Valiz.
     
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  15.  1
    Experience of icon-creation of father-doctor Dmytro Blazheyovsky.Igor Kovalchuk - 2013 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 68:244-258.
    The life of each clergyman is manifested in the limited spheres of his activity. But because of the sources of scientific works, their own icon-painting of some of them can find out about their spiritual world, the vision of different spheres of life. Art is a reflection of the state of the whole social consciousness and means of time reflection. The icon of an individual author also reflects on the way of thinking the master, and in general, (...)
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  16.  1
    Icons.Ewa Harabasz - 2007 - Diacritics 37 (1):81-89.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:IconsEwa HarabaszArtistEwa Harabasz was born in Czestochowa, Poland. She currently lives and paints in New York City, where she is represented by The Luxe Gallery. Her paintings have been recently featured in several solo shows in Poland, most recently at Galeria BWA in Bielsko Biala, Le Guern in Warsaw, Galeria Miejska Arsenal in Poznan, and Galeria Wozownia in Torun. Her work was also featured in a solo exhibition at (...)
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  17. Philosophical and theological principles of the existence of name and world in icon representation.A. I. Simonov - 2016 - Liberal Arts in Russia 5 (3):302-309.
    The philosophical and theological principles of the inscription of God’s name are being discussed in this article. The comprehension of the essence of the phenomenon is based on studying of Russian philosophy of the name of the Silver Age, the ideas of which are illustrated with those works of Christian Fine Art where the inscription of God’s name or sacred words play one of the key roles filling cultural artefact with sacred sense. Name and word within the framework of (...) representation are understood ontologically because with the help of them specific spiritual, abstract ‘mechanism‘ of icon carries out its work. In other words this ‘mechanism‘ means dialectical co-presence of Pre-image and image or visible and invisible. The inscription of God’s name and word shows one of the essential, doctrinal concepts of Christian tradition - God’s appearance to the world. Besides, specific ‘history of a letter‘ in icon is being worked out in the article on the basis of theological and philosophical comprehension of the phenomenon of the name and word. It presents itself a special methodology of a view on the tradition of Christian Art with the purpose of ‘jumping‘ at the extent of verbal filling of visual representation. Works of Christian Art from the first centuries of its existence to the masterpieces of Russian icon-painting of the 17th century are visual material when studying ‘the history of painting‘. (shrink)
     
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  18.  2
    Italianate Haloes in Early Cretan Icons.Michele Bacci - 2023 - Convivium 10 (2):14-25.
    Cretan icons often displayed a precious decoration of golden halos with incised, stippled, and/or impressed designs. The present study points out that these motifs should not be interpreted as manifestations of nostalgic and anachronistic attitudes on the part of post-Byzantine painters working in Candia for Greek Orthodox and Catholic clients. Rather, they appear already in several early Cretan works dating around 1400, which took inspiration from technical devices and ornamental motifs worked out in the workshops of Venice during the second (...)
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  19.  11
    The Paintings of Ibrahim Nubani.Ayelet Zohar - 2011 - Theory, Culture and Society 28 (1):3-33.
    This text reads into the work of Ibrahim Nubani (1962—), a Palestinian-Israeli painter who was diagnosed with schizophrenia in 1988, during the first Intifada. Nubani’s painting has undergone a tremendous change from the 1980s and the period of his hospitalization to his painting style today: from geometric, Modernist-type painting, gradually moving into his contemporary chaotic and saturated style of expression. I draw parallels between Nubani’s personal and psychological condition and the political events that affected him. I refer (...)
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  20.  7
    Introduction to "Iconic Space and the Rule of Lands," by Marie-Jose Mondzain.Rico Franses - 2000 - Hypatia 15 (4):55-57.
    This introduction highlights two of Mondzain's contributions in the chapter reproduced here, "Iconic Space and the Rule of Lands." The first is her discussion of a link between images and power, which stresses the formal characteristics of paintings rather than their narratives. The second is her examination of the specific task which representation is called on to perform in religious as opposed to secular contexts, where spiritual, otherworldly figures are given physical shape and form.
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  21.  6
    Introduction to “Iconic Space and the Rule of Lands,” by Marie-José Mondzain.Rico Franses - 2000 - Hypatia 15 (4):55-57.
    This introduction highlights two of Mondzain's contributions in the chapter reproduced here, “Iconic Space and the Rule of Lands.” The first is her discussion of a link between images and power, which stresses the formal characteristics of paintings rather than their narratives. The second is her examination of the specific task which representation is called on to perform in religious as opposed to secular contexts, where spiritual, otherworldly figures are given physical shape and form.
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  22.  8
    Introduction to "iconic space and the rule of lands," by Marie-josé Mondzain.Rico Franses - 2000 - Hypatia 15 (4):55-57.
    : This introduction highlights two of Mondzain's contributions in the chapter reproduced here, "Iconic Space and the Rule of Lands." The first is her discussion of a link between images and power, which stresses the formal characteristics of paintings rather than their narratives. The second is her examination of the specific task which representation is called on to perform in religious as opposed to secular contexts, where spiritual, otherworldly figures are given physical shape and form.
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  23.  7
    Rules as Icons: Wittgenstein's Paradox and the Law.Bert Van Roermund - 2013 - Ratio Juris 26 (4):538-559.
    In this paper Section 1 distinguishes between two modes of interpreting legal rules: rehearsal and discourse, arguing that the former takes priority over the latter in law, as in many other contexts. Section 2 offers two arguments that following a legal rule in the rehearsing mode presents a riddle. The first argument develops from law, and submits that legal rules do not tell us anything, because they are tautological. The second one develops from philosophy (Wittgenstein's later works), confronting us with (...)
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  24.  5
    Mental Imagery and Iconic Imagery: The Art of the Origins between Neuropsychology and Shamanism.Gabriella Brusa-Zappellini - 2019 - Iris 39.
    L’art pariétal du Paléolithique supérieur présente, à côté d’un extraordinaire répertoire animalier bien diversifié, un grand nombre de signes qui ne trouvent pas d’équivalents dans la perception de la réalité sensible. Tandis que les images des humains ou des créatures mi-humaines mi-animales sont très rares, ces formes aniconiques, souvent géométrisantes et aisément classifiables, sont globalement plus nombreuses que les animaux. Si saisir l’intentionnalité qui a poussé les premiers artistes à peindre sur les parois représente un défi pour nos compétences interprétatives, (...)
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  25.  3
    The Star as Icon: Celebrity in the Age of Mass Consumption by Daniel Herwitz.David Carrier - 2011 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 45 (2):117-119.
    Aestheticians have tended to focus their attention almost exclusively on high art, on museum painting and sculpture, classical music and literature, and architecture, leaving the popular arts to their colleagues in cultural studies. That seems a big mistake, for like it or not, popular movies and television attract enormous audiences everywhere, including very many people who take little interest in high art. This mass art creates stars, actors, and musicians who are so famous that everyone recognizes them. And celebrities (...)
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  26.  7
    Dialogues with Paintings: Notes on How to Look and See.Amelie Rorty - 2014 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 48 (1):1-9.
    There is no such thing as ART. There are public monuments and celebrations of victories, icons, religious teaching, civic pride, courtier flattery, family legitimation, secularization of the sacred, celebration of the ordinary as ordinary, attempts to shock, political statements, making money, decoration of homes, corporations, visual debates on what the world looks like—debates about what the world is—debates about what we see. On the other hand, we can look at anything—clouds, a tree, a face, a road, a herd of cows (...)
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  27.  8
    The Transfiguration of the Real in Abstract Painting.Jean-Jacques Wunenburger - 2016 - Human and Social Studies 5 (2):77-89.
    This article challenges a series of assumptions associated with abstract painting, arguing that this type of art makes one understand a visual manifestation which does no longer refer to the visible world only, but also to an intelligible world, accessible to the senses. Non-figurative painting abandons the reproduction of the visible, in order to present us with the invisible, and in order to account for this phenomenon the author elaborates three types of philosophical decision to interpret the mode (...)
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  28.  14
    Psychoanalytic Semiotics and the Interpretation of Dream Paintings.Tim-Hung Ku - 2007 - American Journal of Semiotics 23 (1-4):303-336.
    The present paper is divided into two parts. Part one is an attempt to reconstruct the semiotic models of Freudian-Lacanian psychoanalysis, in which conceptsfrom De Saussure, C. S. Peirce, Jakobson, Lotman, Eco are drawn for mutual illumination and synthesis. Psychoanalytic semiotics is considered a particular areaand discipline in semiotics, aiming at the unconscious dimension of the subject. Lacan could be considered a post-structuralist revision and extension of Freud. Part two is an application of psychoanalytic semiotics to the interpretation of dream (...)
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  29.  5
    The Fairy Tale of Early Twentieth-Century Hydropower Development in Norway: Theodor Kittelsen's Paintings of the Major Waterfall Rjukanfossen.Helena Nynäs - 2018 - Environment, Space, Place 10 (1):15-38.
    Abstract:When major waterfalls in Norway became possible to develop around 1900, a major step was achieved. The step was a major international technological leap paralleled with changes of established attitudes towards grand, and until then, useless nature. Taking the until-then-useless waterfall Rjukanfossen in Telemark into use was a convergence of grand nature, large technological installations, big business and strong emotions. Transforming this waterfall was a large undertaking and was considered to deserve artistic treatment. In 1907–1908 the Norwegian illustrator and painter (...)
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  30.  7
    Narrative trauma and civil war history painting, or why are these pictures so terrible?Steven Conn - 2002 - History and Theory 41 (4):17–42.
    The Civil War generated hundreds of history paintings. Yet, as this essay argues, painters failed to create any iconic, lasting images of the Civil War using the conventions of grand manner history painting, despite the expectations of many that they would and should. This essay first examines the terms by which I am evaluating this failure, then moves on to a consideration of the American history painting tradition. I next examine several history paintings of Civil War scenes in (...)
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  31.  6
    The Visionary Academy of Ocular Mentality: Atlas of the Iconic Turn.Luca Del Baldo - 2020 - De Gruyter.
    Luca Del Baldo's Visionary Academy of Ocular Mentality is an extraordinary testament in the recent history of visual studies. It brings together a group of outstanding scholars who have devoted their lives to art history, philosophy, history, ethnology, focussing predominantly on questions of human perception and imagination. Working from photographs provided by the scholars, Luca del Baldo painted his series of 96 portraits reproduced in this book. The portraits are accompanied by texts written by the persons portrayed, in response to (...)
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  32.  11
    The Doctor by Luke Fildes: An Icon in Context. [REVIEW]Y. Michael Barilan - 2007 - Journal of Medical Humanities 28 (2):59-80.
    This paper discusses one of the most famous paintings on medical themes: The Doctor by Sir Luke Fildes (Fig. 1), which exemplifies how an ideal type of doctoring is construed from reality and from the views and expectations of both the public and doctors themselves. A close reading of The Doctor elucidates three fundamental conflicts in medicine: the first is between statistical efficiency in accordance with scales of morbidity and mortality and the personal devotion that every sick child or suffering (...)
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  33.  4
    The Futurist and Historian Will See You Now.Scott H. Podolsky - 2018 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 61 (1):147-155.
    Luke Fildes's iconic painting The Doctor, first exhibited in 1891, has long served as a symbol of the caring, priest-like physician, watching over a sick child as the child's parents place their faith in his ministrations, technologically meager as they may be. As physicians acquired more visible and potent interventions—x-rays, antibiotics, the complex infrastructure of the hospital itself—the 19th-century British scene depicted by Fildes of an individual doctor's watchful waiting would be appropriated by the likes of the American Medical (...)
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  34.  5
    Galician painters of the end of the 19th - the first third of the twentieth century - the creators of the latest page of Ukrainian sacred art.Igor Kovalchuk - 2015 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 74:176-186.
    The article deals with the development of sacred art in Galicia at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. Masters of Ukrainian icon painting K. Ustinovich, Y. Pankevich, M. Sosenko, P. Kholodny and others. continued the creative process through which the Ukrainian icon for a long historical period of development did not lose its viable direction, did not degenerate into the picture. They have not crossed that limit, when the departure from the fundamental theological foundations of (...)
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  35.  3
    Розвиток української ікони впродовж хіv–хіх століть.Igor Kovalchuk - 2015 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 76:91-108.
    There are very few monuments of icon art of the 13th-15th centuries, but they give a great opportunity to learn a lot about the state of the Ukrainian Church of that time, about the strengthening of faith, and also about the stylistic quest for Ukrainian artists. The development of the iconography of those centuries in Ukraine marked the Tatar-Mongol invasion. When a person or a whole nation falls into a difficult situation, faith in God grows, spirituality rises. Monuments of (...)
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  36.  5
    Cult music of Ancient Rus.L. V. Gurska - 2000 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 16:65-71.
    Ancient Rus church music is one of the brightest pages of spiritual and artistic culture. It is included in the synthesis of arts along with construction, monumental and fresco painting, icon painting, fine plastics, applied art, literature.
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  37.  4
    The Crossing of the Visible.Jean-Luc Marion - 2004 - Stanford University Press.
    Painting, according to Jean-Luc Marion, is a central topic of concern for philosophy, particularly phenomenology. For the question of painting is, at its heart, a question of visibility—of appearance. As such, the painting is a privileged case of the phenomenon; the painting becomes an index for investigating the conditions of appearance—or what Marion describes as “phenomenality” in general. In The Crossing of the Visible, Marion takes up just such a project. The natural outgrowth of his earlier (...)
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  38. The Crossing of the Visible.James K. A. Smith (ed.) - 2003 - Stanford University Press.
    Painting, according to Jean-Luc Marion, is a central topic of concern for philosophy, particularly phenomenology. For the question of painting is, at its heart, a question of visibility—of appearance. As such, the painting is a privileged case of the phenomenon; the painting becomes an index for investigating the conditions of appearance—or what Marion describes as "phenomenality" in general. In _The Crossing of the Visible_, Marion takes up just such a project. The natural outgrowth of his earlier (...)
     
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  39.  3
    Smysl zhizni.E. N. Trubet︠s︡koĭ - 1922 - Moskva: Kanon. Edited by E. N. Trubet︠s︡koĭ.
    Smysl zhizni -- Statʹi raznykh let : Staryĭ i novyĭ nat︠s︡ionalʹnyĭ messianizm. Umozrenie v kraskakh. Dva mira v drevnerusskoĭ ikonopisi. "Inoe t︠s︡arstvo" i ego iskateli v russkoĭ narodnoĭ skazke.
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  40.  1
    Смысл жизни.E. N. Trubeëtìskoæi - 1994 - Moskva: Izd-vo "Respublika". Edited by E. N. Trubet︠s︡koĭ.
  41.  10
    Plato and Peirce on Likeness and Semblance.Han-Liang Chang - 2012 - Biosemiotics 5 (3):301-312.
    In his well-known essay, ‘What Is a Sign?’ (CP 2.281, 285) Peirce uses ‘likeness’ and ‘resemblance’ interchangeably in his definition of icon. The synonymity of the two words has rarely, if ever, been questioned. Curiously, a locus classicus of the pair, at least in F. M. Cornford’s English translation, can be found in a late dialogue of Plato, namely, the Sophist. In this dialogue on the myth and truth of the sophists’ profession, the mysterious ‘stranger’, who is most likely (...)
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  42.  7
    Saussure and his intellectual environment.Pieter A. M. Seuren - 2016 - History of European Ideas 42 (6):819-847.
    SUMMARYThe present study paints the intellectual environment in which Ferdinand de Saussure developed his ideas about language and linguistics during the fin de siècle. It sketches his dissatisfaction with that environment to the extent that it touched on linguistics, and shows the new course he was trying to steer on the basis of ideas that seemed to open new and exciting perspectives, even though they were still vaguely defined. As Saussure himself was extremely reticent about his sources and intellectual pedigree, (...)
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  43.  5
    Development of Eastern Christian Iconography.Elena Ene D.-Vasilescu - 2010 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 27 (3):169-185.
    In Orthodox Christianity icons play a central role in the Liturgy, which they complete and explain. In front of these images, the faithful enter a process of communication with the holy person depicted. That is possible because icons convey the spiritual energies of the archetype of the holy person or of the sacred event they represent. Icon-painters follow Hermeneias — Grammar books — containing canonical indications to help them in their work. These books also give attention to the material (...)
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  44.  16
    García Norro, JJ y Rodríguez, R.(eds.)," Cómo se comenta un texto filosófico".Juan Pablo Serra - 2011 - Anales Del Seminario de Historia de la Filosofía 28:354-359.
    Which is the best icon of philosophical activity? The Spanish philosopher Garcia Morente analyses three sculptures: Le penseur by Rodin, Il pensieroso by Michelangelo and a sculpture known as El Doncel de Siguenza, in the cathedral of this Castilian town. Morente asserts that the latest reflects better than anyone else the nature of philosophy. In this paper the Morente’s view is rejected and another two ways of representing the philosophical activity are suggested: two ancient paintings that represent more properly (...)
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  45.  10
    What is an event?Robin Erica Wagner-Pacifici - 2017 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    We live in a world of breaking news, where at almost any moment our everyday routine can be interrupted by a faraway event. Events are central to the way that individuals and societies experience life. Even life’s inevitable moments—birth, death, love, and war—are almost always a surprise. Inspired by the cataclysmic events of September 11, Robin Wagner-Pacifici presents here a tour de force, an analysis of how events erupt and take off from the ground of ongoing, everyday life, and how (...)
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  46.  9
    Black Christ and Cross-Roads Jesus for white South African Christians.Wilhelm J. Verwoerd - 2020 - HTS Theological Studies 76 (3).
    A significant factor undermining real racial reconciliation in post-1994 South Africa is widespread resistance to shared historical responsibility amongst South Africans racialised as white. In response to the need for localised ‘white work’, this article aims to contribute to the uprooting of white denialism, specifically amongst Afrikaans-speaking Christians from Reformed backgrounds. The point of entry is two underexplored, challenging, contextualised crucifixion paintings, namely, Black Christ and Cross-Roads Jesus. Drawing on critical whiteness studies, extensive local and international experience as a ‘participatory’ (...)
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  47.  7
    Interpreting excess: Jean-Luc Marion, saturated phenomena, and hermeneutics.Shane Mackinlay - 2010 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    Introduction -- Marion's claims -- The hermeneutic structure of phenomenality -- The theory of saturated phenomena -- Events -- Dazzling idols and paintings -- Flesh as absolute -- The face as irregardable icon -- Revelation : the phenomenon of God's appearing -- Conclusion: Revising the phenomenology of givenness.
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  48.  2
    The Russian Gnadenstuhl.Ágnes Kriza - 2016 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 79 (1):79-130.
    This paper investigates a curious Western iconographical detail on the famous 'Four-Part Icon' in the Moscow Kremlin Annunciation Cathedral: the winged Gnadenstuhl. Painted just after the 1547 coronation of the first Russian Tsar, Ivan IV the Terrible, the innovative Four-Part Icon became a major element of the Russian icon controversy in mid-sixteenth-century Moscow. The paper shows that the winged Gnadenstuhl in the first of the four parts of the icon combines Western iconographies of the Throne of (...)
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    A qualitative inquiry into the experience of sacred art among Eastern and Western Christians in Canada.Jacob Lang, Despina Stamatopoulou & Gerald C. Cupchik - 2020 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 42 (3):317-334.
    This article begins with a review of studies in perception and depth psychology concerning the experience of exposure to sacred artworks in Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox contexts. This follows with the results of a qualitative inquiry involving 45 Roman Catholic, Eastern and Coptic Orthodox, and Protestant Christians in Canada. First, participants composed narratives detailing memories of spiritual experiences involving iconography. Then, in the context of a darkened room evocative of a sacred space, they viewed artworks depicting Biblical themes and (...)
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    In a Mirror and an Enigma: Nicholas of Cusa’s De Visione Dei and the Milieu of Vision.Taylor Knight - 2020 - Sophia 59 (1):113-137.
    Nicholas of Cusa’s deployment of an omnivoyant image in the De visione Dei has been said to deconstruct Leon Battista Alberti’s mathematical determination of space in single-point linear perspective. While there has been some debate over whether the omnivoyant functions like a medieval icon or instead like a Renaissance painting, what has been neglected is a more careful analysis of what underlies the very structure of omnivoyance, namely the milieu from which its contradictions and paradoxes emerge. In this (...)
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