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Showing 1 to 15 of 237 results Save | Export
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Copsey, Sarah – Teaching History, 2014
What do 14 Year 7 students, an art teacher, a history teacher and the Victoria and Albert Museum have in common? They are all part of the "Stronger Together" Museum Champion project run by The Langley Academy and the River & Rowing Museum and supported by Arts Council England, designed to engage students, teachers and museum staff…
Descriptors: Art History, History Instruction, Museums, Medieval History
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Cardullo, Bert – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2011
In this article, the author talks about art-house cinema, avant-garde film, and dramatic modernism. He believes that the most important modes of film practice are art-house cinema and the avant-garde, both of which contrast with the classical Hollywood mode of film practice. While the latter is characterized by its commercial imperative, corporate…
Descriptors: Films, Film Production, Aesthetics, Culture
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Perricone, Christopher – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2010
"Tragedy," both in what the author calls the strict and nuclear ancient Greek sense of the term (which does not imply that tragedy is clearly and distinctly defined, even in ancient Greece) and in the looser, derived sense of the word, has a long and compelling history. It is not only true that tragedy as practice and performance has a…
Descriptors: Tragedy, Educational History, Literary Criticism, Art Education
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Castaneda, Ivan – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2009
This essay will discuss the need for the humanities to address visual culture studies as part of its interdisciplinary mission in today's university. Although mostly unnoticed in recent debates in the humanities over historical and theoretical frameworks, the relatively new field of visual culture has emerged as a corrective to a growing…
Descriptors: Art History, Humanities, Interdisciplinary Approach, Higher Education
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Jeffers, Alison – Research in Drama Education, 2010
In September 2008 the author created an encounter between herself and Rick Walker, the Director of Cartwheel Arts, a small community arts company in Rochdale, in the North West of England. As one of the three founding workers of what was then Cartwheel Community Arts in 1984, she hoped to create a conversation which recollected or traced some of…
Descriptors: Art Education, Foreign Countries, Fine Arts, Art History
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Auger, Emily E. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2009
The methods by which environmental issues are aestheticized in late-twentieth-century film is directly and historically related to those established for grand manner painters by Nicholas Poussin (1594-1665) and taught at the French academy from the seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries. That these fundamentals were part of the training of…
Descriptors: Physical Environment, Aesthetics, Films, Painting (Visual Arts)
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Turner, Matthew – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2009
Recent theories of the aesthetic appreciation of nature or natural environments have done much to clarify what might be essential to such appreciation. Such accounts are incomplete, however, as they depend on a strict separation between works of art and nature itself. This paper shows how classical Chinese landscape painting offers a way to…
Descriptors: Painting (Visual Arts), Foreign Countries, Physical Environment, Aesthetics
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Mullarkey, Maureen – Academic Questions, 2009
Nothing says "the sixties" like the word "revision," and, in keeping with those times, the fledgling feminist art movement dismissed hard-won mastery as "mere skill" and snubbed the canon of Western art as evidence of male dominion over the criteria for legitimacy and achievement. In debunking the myth of the Great (male) Artist, the women's…
Descriptors: Feminism, Females, Art Education, Art Expression
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Halsall, Francis – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2008
The "all-over" abstract canvases that Jackson Pollock produced between 1943 and 1951 present a pedagogical challenge in how to account for their apparently chaotic structure. One reason that they are difficult to teach about is that they have proved notoriously difficult for art historians to come to terms with. This is undoubtedly a consequence…
Descriptors: Art History, Artists, Art Expression, Painting (Visual Arts)
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Sutton, Tiffany – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2007
Museums have become a crucible for questions of the role that traditional art and art history should play in contemporary art. Friedrich Nietzsche argued in the nineteenth century that museums can be no more than mausoleums for effete (fine) art. Over the course of the twentieth century, however, curators dispelled such blanket pessimism by…
Descriptors: Art History, Architecture, Art Education, Museums
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Kamhi, Michelle Marder – Arts Education Policy Review, 2007
In this article, the author analyzes Arthur Efland's "Art and Cognition," which advocates study of the visual arts for its cognitive benefits. The author argues that Efland's cognitive premises are largely sound but that his specific recommendations often belie the general principles he espouses. Efland focuses on the interpretation of baffling…
Descriptors: Visual Arts, Art Education, Books, Cognitive Development
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Petersen, Greg – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2006
Among the harshest critiques ever received during my doctoral coursework came from a professor who was noticeably perturbed that I had researched and written a paper on an artwork without considering the title in the interpretation and analysis of the work. The professor insisted that the title is necessary to understand the piece. As a diligent…
Descriptors: Classification, Visual Arts, Artists, Literary Criticism
Fawcett, Trevor – 1979
A new classification is needed which would not prejudge the boundaries of art, one that would bring together in one place the literature on every sort of material artefact, tool, and artwork, without distinction. Within this grand class of artefacts, the sub-arrangement would, as far as possible, respect the integrity of individual cultures. Only…
Descriptors: Art, Art History, Classification, Libraries
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Frank, Peter – Visible Language, 1992
Addresses various phenomena that abetted the "fluxizing" of American art. Noted that the New York-based Fluxus movement began an extended period of dissemination and, in some sense dissolution, around 1967. (RS)
Descriptors: Art Expression, Art History, Artists
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San Juan, E., Jr. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2003
In the spring of 1919, Andrp Breton and Phillipe Soupault conducted various experiments in automatic writing. They converted themselves into machines to record the whispers of the unconscious, inspired by Rimbaudes urge for adventure in quest of cosmic knowledge and Lautreamontes conviction of art as a communal enterprise. To destroy bourgeois…
Descriptors: Art Expression, Experiments, Art History
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