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The Use and Abuse of Art

Jacques Barzun

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Princeton University Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Kunst

Beschreibung

From the celebrated cultural historian and bestselling author, a provocative history of the evolution of our ideas about art since the early nineteenth century

In this witty, provocative, and learned book, acclaimed cultural historian and writer Jacques Barzun traces our changing attitudes to the arts over the past 150 years, suggesting that we are living in a period of cultural liquidation, nothing less than the ending of the modern age that began with the Renaissance. He challenges our conceptions and misconceptions about art “in order to reach a conclusion about its value and its drawbacks for life at the present time.”

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Schlagwörter

Poetry, Primitivism, Theory of art, Modern architecture, Social science, Ezra Pound, Allegory, Thought, Dada, Contemporary art, Post-Impressionism, Spirituality, Abstract expressionism, Goncourt brothers, Marcel Duchamp, Rhetoric, Sophistication, Criticism, Phidias, Disenchantment, Academic art, Romanticism, Surrealism, Work of art, Anecdote, Ernest Hemingway, Cubism, Epithet, Allusion, Ideology, Romain Rolland, Ambiguity, Scientist, Figurative art, Diego Rivera, Philosophy, Op art, Prose, Technology, Art criticism, Elegance, Skepticism, Art for art's sake, Fine art, Action painting, Walter Pater, Aphorism, Roger Fry, Lytton Strachey, Suggestion, Disgust, Sensibility, Vorticism, Anti-art, Impressionism, Bourgeoisie, Boredom, Literature, Idiot, Symbolism (arts), Minimalism, T. S. Eliot, General knowledge, Aesthetics, Lecture, Idolatry, The Story of Art, The Philosopher, Erotic art, Scientism