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  2. Classicism vs Modernism : r/architecture - Reddit

    www.reddit.com/r/architecture/comments/kaezc6/classicism_vs_modernism

    the problem with neo classicism is the variety is limited. it just turns into columns, pediment, some window treatments and maybe a dome if its government. beaux art tried to elevate it with some eye candy.

  3. Romanticism vs. Neo-Classicism : r/ArtHistory - Reddit

    www.reddit.com/r/ArtHistory/comments/tat6n/romanticism_vs_neoclassicism

    Romanticism vs. Neo-Classicism I've been studying the progressive evolution of French art styles in one of my Art History classes for the past couple weeks and I think I've run into a problem. I can't seem to wrap my head around the difference between Neo-Classical and Romantic paintings.

  4. Difference between Renaissance and Classicism? : r/Art - Reddit

    www.reddit.com/r/Art/comments/14kb3l/difference_between_renaissance_and_classicism

    The Renaissance went back to the mentality of classical art, but only made it even more accurate and aesthetically pleasing. Classicism simply just went back to what it was. .... Been out of art history for 4 years now. could be wrong.

  5. What form of discrimination came first? Classicism, racism ... -...

    www.reddit.com/.../tj4vvs/what_form_of_discrimination_came_first_classicism

    I think it really depends on the society, but I think ableism and sexism come neck and neck. Outside of any formalized society with societal rules, there's always going to be disabled people and people of differing sex.

  6. Do you consider Beethoven to be the last classical era or first...

    www.reddit.com/r/classicalmusic/comments/u3rhxr/do_you_consider_beethoven_to...

    In my completely subjective opinion: I think Beethoven is the last classical composer (or Schubert) because I like Beethoven (all of it, from Op 1 to Op 135) and I tend to not like romanticism, and I quite like music from the classical period. So the easiest way for me to classify is to think of Beethoven as classicism going to its limit.

  7. [Ask] Why is classical architecture dismissed in the community?

    www.reddit.com/r/architecture/comments/b1orgc/ask_why_is_classical...

    Classicism and modernism are not competitors nor enemies. They are not entirely different languages serving radically different worlds and needs. If anything, there can be a strong overlap between much of classicism and modernism when it comes to things like clean lines, proportions, composition, even design.

  8. I’ve become very fond of stripped classism, your thoughts?

    www.reddit.com/r/architecture/comments/185rz1c/ive_become_very_fond_of...

    Of course his designs "deviated quite a bit from traditional western classicism", since he wasn't a "traditional classicist". He was a fascist architect practicing in the age of Modernism and Art Deco for a client with delusions of Wagnerian imperial glory.

  9. What's the difference between Rococo paintings and Baroque ... -...

    www.reddit.com/r/ArtHistory/comments/o34v06/whats_the_difference_between...

    I would say Baroque was in reaction to Mannerism and Classicism (Wölfflin, Riegl, Deuleuze). Mannerism was an extension of the renaissance. The Baroque, which can be seen especially in architecture went from corners and straight lines to curved edges and ovals. The paintings of the Baroque formed around unity and the whole.

  10. We have heard the term “Russian oligarchs” so often in the ... -...

    www.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/t6z8xb/we_have_heard_the_term_russian...

    This is great, and wanted to add a few extra bits of info. From the start of the Putin presidency, the relationship between the Russian president and oligarchs shifted considerably: where in the 1990s an ill Yeltsin in charge of a weak Russian government had to rely pretty heavily on the oligarchs (with the "Seven Bankers" informally holding a l

  11. Classical vs positive school of criminology? : r/Criminology -...

    www.reddit.com/r/Criminology/comments/te4lat/classical_vs_positive_school_of...

    Classicism assumes the position that the criminal is a rational actor that freely makes decisions usually either to increase happiness or avoid pain. There are probably people here who can explain this and provide a better definition way better then I can but here you go.