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  2. The Dehumanization of Art and Other Essays on Art, Culture ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dehumanization_of_Art...

    The essays seek to understand and explain the relatively new movement of nonrepresentational art and defend these pioneering artists attempting to escape from the embraced realism and romanticism movements. [1] The dehumanization of art refers to the removal of human elements from these works, eliminating the content, but keeping the form.

  3. Whitewashing in art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitewashing_in_art

    Whitewashing in art is the practice of altering the racial identity of historical and mythological figures in art as a part of a larger pattern of erasing and distorting the histories and contributions of non-whites. It mirrors the racial biases and prejudices of those times, which continue to impact society today. It encompasses various facets ...

  4. Dehumanization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dehumanization

    As a process, dehumanization may be understood as the opposite of personification, a figure of speech in which inanimate objects or abstractions are endowed with human qualities; dehumanization then is the disendowment of these same qualities or a reduction to abstraction.

  5. Tamara de Lempicka's vibrant life and art - AOL

    www.aol.com/tamara-lempickas-vibrant-life-art...

    A giant of early 20th century art, whose glamorous figurative paintings of women played an important role in defining Art Deco, is now the subject of her first-ever U.S. retrospective, currently ...

  6. Anthropology of art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthropology_of_art

    One of the central problems in the anthropology of art concerns the universality of 'art' as a cultural phenomenon. Several anthropologists have noted that the Western categories of 'painting', 'sculpture', or 'literature', conceived as independent artistic activities, do not exist, or exist in a significantly different form, in most non-Western contexts. [9]

  7. Cesar Legaspi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cesar_Legaspi

    He was also an art director prior to going full-time in his visual art practice in the 1960s. His early (1940s–1960s) works, alongside those of peer, Hernando Ocampo are described as depictions of anguish and dehumanization of beggars and laborers in the city. These include Man and Woman (alternatively known as Beggars) and Gadgets.

  8. Sociology of art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sociology_of_art

    In her 1970 book Meaning and Expression: Toward a Sociology of Art, Hanna Deinhard gives one approach: "The point of departure of the sociology of art is the question: How is it possible that works of art, which always originate as products of human activity within a particular time and society and for a particular time, society, or function -- even though they are not necessarily produced as ...

  9. The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Work_of_Art_in_the_Age...

    Benjamin presents the thematic bases for a theory of art by quoting the essay "The Conquest of Ubiquity" (1928), by Paul Valéry, to establish how works of art created and developed in past eras are different from contemporary works of art; that the understanding and treatment of art and of artistic technique must progressively develop in order to understand a work of art in the context of the ...