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  2. Mannerism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mannerism

    The definition of Mannerism and the phases within it continue to be a subject of debate among art historians. For example, some scholars have applied the label to certain early modern forms of literature (especially poetry) and music of the 16th and 17th centuries.

  3. Gentleness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gentleness

    Aristotle used it in a technical sense as the virtue that strikes the mean with regard to anger: being too quick to anger is a vice, but so is being detached in a situation where anger is appropriate; justified and properly focused anger is named mildness or gentleness. [2] Gentleness is not passive; it requires a resistance to brutality.

  4. 'Pataphysics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/'Pataphysics

    'Pataphysics is patient; 'Pataphysics is benign; 'Pataphysics envies nothing, is never distracted, never puffed up, it has neither aspirations nor seeks not its own, it is even-tempered, and thinks not evil; it mocks not iniquity: It is enraptured with scientific truth; it supports everything, believes everything, has faith in everything, and ...

  5. Artist's book - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artist's_book

    The recent boom in artists' books production and dissemination is closely linked to art book fairs: Even if the buzz of interest in publication as an art practice around the turn of the twenty-first century resembles the hype around the “artist’s book” in the 1970s, the phenomenon of art book fairs in this quantity and intensity is ...

  6. Primitivism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primitivism

    Primitivism in art is usually regarded as a cultural phenomenon of Western art, yet the structure of primitivist idealism is in the art works of non-Western and anti-colonial artists. The nostalgia for an idealized past when humans lived in harmony with Nature is related to critiques of the negative cultural impact of Western modernity upon ...

  7. The arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_arts

    The arts are considered various practices or objects done by people with skill, creativity, and imagination across cultures and history, viewed as a group. [1] These activities include painting, sculpture, music, theatre, literature, and more. [2] Art refers to the way of doing or applying human creative skills, typically in visual form. [3] [4]

  8. Psychology of art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychology_of_art

    A test comparing the mortality salience condition and the control found that participants in the mortality salience condition found the art less attractive. [27] The meaning maintenance model of sociology states that when a committed meaning framework is threatened, people experience an arousal state that prompts them to affirm any other ...

  9. Style (visual arts) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Style_(visual_arts)

    14th-century Islamic ornament in ivory, centred on a palmette; Alois Riegl's Stilfragen (1893) traced the evolution and transmission of such motifs.. Classical art criticism and the relatively few medieval writings on aesthetics did not greatly develop a concept of style in art, or analysis of it, [12] and though Renaissance and Baroque writers on art are greatly concerned with what we would ...