Showing 2,941 - 2,960 results of 319,582 for search '"arts"', query time: 0.19s Refine Results
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    Berthe de Rayssac, muse et artiste sans œuvre by Sarah Hassid

    Published 2013-03-01
    “…Favouring an aestheticism of everyday life because she was unable to express herself fully in her works, she succeeded in making her small Parisian salon a cradle of symbolism entirely dedicated to the arts.…”
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  5. 2945

    Pater’s Scholar and the Hypertext by Martine Lambert-Charbonnier

    Published 2008-12-01
    “…After raising the issue of scholarship, the hypertext then leads us to consider Pater’s style in a new light and to explore relations between literature and the spatial arts in his works.…”
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    Accessibility and innovation: IEB Minecraft as a tool for collection exploration by Pedro B. de Meneses Bolle

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…ABSTRACT The Instituto de Estudos Brasileiros (IEB) has designed a video game in which playerscreate their own characters and enter the institution’s building to playfully explore the collections distributed among the Archives, the Library and the Visual Arts Collection. The aim of the launch of IEB Minecraft is to promote the Institute to a new audience - with an estimated age between 12 and 20 years old -, already accustomed to using the digital language and the world of games, becoming an innovative way to provide young people with access to the IEB collections playfully and interactively. …”
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    The Influence of Artistic Kitsch on the Formation of Political Memes by Anastasiia Tormakhova, Dmytro Tovmash, Ruslan Grechkosii

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Their origin was due to the emergence of kitsch and its spread in 20th century culture and art. It was kitsch, which went from ‘low’ art to camp, that initiated the spread of visual forms that perform a powerful communication function. …”
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  14. 2954

    Kitsch as Experience of the World by Darío Hernández Guerra

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…The term ‘kitsch’, widely laden with negative connotations, has often been used to designate worthless art, synonymous with artistic failure. However, there is something in kitsch that, beyond its apparent poor quality, distinguishes it from other art forms as something novel, peculiar, and even profoundly interesting. …”
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    La revalorización del medievo en la estética masónica: Inglaterra y Escocia (siglos XIX y XX) by David Martín López

    Published 2014-01-01
    “…Freemasonry, considered as one of the first “social network”, emerged in contemporary society of the pre-Enlightenment in England (1717), draw a global map of corporatism – whether philanthropic, educational, ethical, moral and even political senses could met there – with the principles and aesthetic values associated with arts and architecture. This aspects generates in Freemasonry, a national identity, a strong debate and revaluation of the Medieval culture in Europe, where freemasons as Walter Scott claimed the Gothic as the unique style.…”
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    Adolescent Experiences from Participating in Extracurricular and Community-based Activities by Rosemary V. Barnett

    Published 2005-12-01
    “… There is little debate remaining in the field of youth development that participation in extracurricular and community-based youth activities (sports, school and community organizations, arts groups, etc.) provides a rich context for positive youth development. …”
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    Introduction by Milena Lenderová

    Published 2009-01-01
    “…In July 2007 the young researchers met in the French city of Montpellier (topic entitled Le corps et ses images: santé, humeurs, maladies / The body and its images: health, humours, illnesses); in September 2009 they met in the Portuguese capital of Lisbon (the topic was Europe and the Colonial World / L’Europe et le monde colonial), and in 2008 they were invited to the seminar by the Czech branch of the ISECS, Česká společnost pro výzkum 18. století (The Czech Society for 18th- century Research). The College of Arts and Philosophy of the University of Pardubice, particularly its Historical Sciences Department, helped to organise the seminar. …”
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