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| Â | Surrealism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Often misinterpreted as an artistic movement, it has transformed visual art, writing, film, music, and political thought, not to mention everyday life. |  | | From the late 1930s on most members of the movement have found Dalí's painting to have had little significance for surrealism, and Dalí to have moved further and further away from the movement. |  | | While surrealism is typically associated with the arts, it has been said to transcend them; surrealism has had an impact in many other fields. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surrealism
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| Â | MSN Encarta - Print Preview - Cuba |
 | | Modernism is an artistic movement characterized by a concentration on art for art’s sake, or by emphasis on the beauty of structure in language and art. |  | | Romanticism, an artistic and literary movement stressing freedom of expression and a reliance on imagination, first appeared in Cuba in the early 19th century with the early poetry of José MarÃa de Heredia. |  | | The NovÃsimos, as the writers of the 1990s were known, distanced themselves from the revolution and often parodied communist lifestyles. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/text_761569844___104/Cuba.html
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| Â | Talk:Labour (economics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Surrealist art is a style of artistic expression, while the Surrealist movement is a collective of artists with a more-or-less common political and ideological perspective. |  | | Surrealism was never conceived as an artistic movement, has never functioned as an artistic movement, and has nothing in common with an artistic movement, and describing it as "a collective of artists" is inaccurate as many of those who have been active in it have not been artists at all. |  | | Once again I am going to have to reiterate (and that surrealism could have any beliefs pertaining to work should show this) that surrealism is not a style of fine art or an artistic movement. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Labour_(economics)
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| Â | artistic movement |
 | | There's an artistic movement afoot in Denver that has more to do with buying fine art than creating it. |  | | Though considered by many retail analysts a luxury, non-essential item, fine art sales are up at many Denver galleries, despite the flagging economy. |
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http://www.denverart.org/articledenverbusinesshournal8-02.htm
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| Â | The Militant - May 4, 2004 -- Revolution unleashes artistic freedom |
 | | In the manifesto he derides socialist realismthe artistic template enforced by the Stalin regime in the Soviet Unionas the negation of intellectual and artistic freedom, and contrary to the interests of working people. |  | | In the realm of artistic creation, the imagination must escape from all constraint and must under no pretext allow itself to be placed under bonds. |  | | The communist revolution is not afraid of art. |
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http://www.themilitant.com/2004/6817/681749.html
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| Â | Pre-Raphaelite Ideals and Artistic Dress |
 | | Artistic dress was eventually taken up by actresses, and by fashionable, wealthy ladies who enjoyed giving the impression that they were intimately involved in the arts. |  | | Morris said, no dress can be beautiful that is stiff; drapery is essential. Proponents of artistic dress applied the same artistic values as applied by the Pre-Raphaelites to painting: Those elements of fashion which distorted nature were unattractive for that very reason. |  | | Artistic gowns, such as those sold by Liberty and Co., were never intended to be exact replicas of the clothing worn by models in Pre-Raphaelite paintings, nor were they intended to replicate clothing of the classical and medieval eras. |
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http://www.glily.com/PreRaphs.htm
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| Â | Artcyclopedia: Artists by Movement |
 | | This section is intended to provide visitors with a simple overview of art styles and access to artists well-known for developing or working within a particular movement Please bear in mind that artists are not easily pigeonholed into well-defined categories, and definitions vary from artist to artist and from critic to critic. |
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http://www.artcyclopedia.com/history
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| Â | LEON TROTSKY Literature and Revolution Chapter 2 The Literary "Fellow-Travelers" Of The Revolution |
 | | But we prefer a yictorious revolution, though deprived of artistic recognition by that art which is now in the camp of the vanquished. |  | | The novelists and poets who were born of the Revolution and who are still very young, being almost in their swaddling clothes, try, in the search for their artistic individualities, to get away from the Revolution which has been their environment and in which milieu they have yet to find themselves. |  | | They are not the artists of the proletarian Revolution, but her artist "fellow-travelers", in the sense in which this word was used by the old Socialists. |
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http://www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/works/1924/lit_revo/ch02.htm
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| Â | Glosario de Términos |
 | | An artistic movement founded by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque in 1907 in which objects were no longer represented according to their optical impression, but were broken down into geometric forms. |  | | This artistic movement began in the sixties in the United States and England.It consists of the use and mounting of objects such as newspaper cuttings, advertising brochures and other elements to criticize the consumer society. |  | | The notion of style could be defined as the set of formal characteristics that express the artistic sensitivity of a certain period of time. |
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http://www.arslatino.com/ingles/estilos.php?familia=1&palabra=0
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| Â | George Rochberg's Revolution |
 | | It was this descent into artistic nihilism that Rochberg rejected, and it was this kind of music that he found incapable of expressing either the depth of his despair or the hope of his vision. |  | | The consensus was that Rochberg had replaced the artistic integrity of his earlier music with a kind of delusional nostalgia. |  | | This renewed appreciation of artistic integrity and the prophetic role of the artist is very much the legacy of George RochbergÂ’s revolt, and one for which we owe him our thanks. |
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http://www.firstthings.com/ftissues/ft9806/opinion/linton.html
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| Â | World Artistic Movement |
 | | The Artiada - World Artistic Festival - is an international celebration of arts, organized by the participants and members of the World Artistic Movement. |  | | The World Artistic Movement (WAM) is a public, non-governmental and self-governed humanitarian league uniting on a voluntary basis individuals and legal entities that are praising all-human culture and art, participating in the Artistic Movement and abiding to the Artistic Code and decisions of the World Artistic Committee. |  | | The Artiada is a five-year period in the development of human culture and art. |
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http://www.artiada.org/e_main/wam/page1.htm
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| Â | Vorticism |
 | | Confined almost exclusively to England, Vorticism was one of a number of art styles during this period to further expand the ideas developed by Cubism and important also for British artistic evolution since all the Major new art ideas at that time were emanating from other European centres. |  | | Although only short lived, Vorticism derives its significance not only for its Cubist-Futurist style, but also because it was the first organised art movement in England dedicated to abstraction. |  | | Poets experimented with fragmented syntax, composers reinvented musical structures while art movements such as Cubism, Futurism, Rayonnism, Fauvism, Orphism and the irreverant Dada amongst others stimulated a creative explosion in the visual arts. |
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http://users.senet.com.au/~dsmith/vorticism.htm
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| Â | Neo-Paganism -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | The artistic movement known as neo-expressionism dominated the art market in Europe and the United States during the early and mid-1980s. |  | | The artists linked to the movement portrayed the human body... |  | | Neo-Paganism differs from them, however, in striving to revive authentic pantheons and rituals of ancient cultures, though often in deliberately eclectic
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=56644&ref=news1003
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| Â | Socialist Review |
 | | This exhibition covers the years the couple spent in Mexico, and is a fascinating insight into the world they found themselves in, the artistic and political debates, the thrill of the struggle, and the sense that something was happening that could really change the world for the better. |  | | Though of course much of the work seen here is indeed documentary, especially that of Modotti, who seems to have taken the task to heart of melding strict artistic formalism with a determination to depict the reality of the revolution. |  | | Artistically they are groundbreaking, having such an impact on modern photography and ways of seeing that sometimes you have to remind yourself of the fact, so familiar and accepted have their ideas and vision become. |
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http://www.socialistreview.org.uk/article.php?articlenumber=8946
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| Â | The Development of Bodily-Kinesthetic Intelligence in |
 | | This state of affairs has resulted in a preoccupation with the study of logical problem-solving skills in children with a consequent neglect of the development of artistic abilities in the realms of musical, literary, visual, and movement arts. |  | | This is surprising when one considers that participation in the arts is widespread among American youth--from the sundry forms of popular music and dance, the high school band, and the neighborhood art school--and constitutes a central phenomenon of human experience. |  | | Indeed, the study of the arts and arts education as a whole has received relatively little attention and aesthetic features of movement have been wholly neglected. |
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http://www.york.cuny.edu/~seitz/HolisticEd.html
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| Â | ::::TEENSTUFFONLINE:::: |
 | | Unlike many other artistic movements, Dada was a heterogeneous movement that embraced literature, the visual arts and theatrical performances. |  | | Well, the "Dada Movement" is an artistic and literary movement that reflected a widespread nihilistic protest against all aspects of western culture especially against militarism during and after World War I (1914 - 1918). |  | | And the theatrical performances and manifestos were often designed to shock or bewilder, with the aim of startling the public into a reconsideration of accepted aesthetic values. |
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http://www.teenstuffonline.com/artmarch00-1.html
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| Â | WriteDesign - Art With a Voice Feature Article |
 | | Artistic movement with which your artist identifies (Romantic, Realist, Impressionist, Victorian) |  | | Examples of art created by the artist which demonstrate the traits of the artistic movement (at least five (05) major works if a visual artist and at five (05) excerpts or quotes if a writer) |
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http://www.writedesignonline.com/assignments/artwithavoice.htm
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| Â | NewKlassical |
 | | René has created NewBohemia as a unique place for the public to be part of a new artistic movement and to experience the inner world of new realist painters, poets, composers, architects and sculptors. |  | | As a passionate advocate of beautiful new culture René is the first to establish a new artistic place for people to discover and explore selected work of the new realist movement. |  | | With his combination of artistic, strategic and technical skills, René has brought together a unique range of artistic talent in a truly dynamic creative vision. |
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http://www.newbohemia.net/office.htm
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| Â | The Kinship and Mutual Relationship of Eurythmy, Artistic Speech and The Philosophy of Freedom |
 | | The realizing in paint of an imagined picture would only be comparable to that of a pure (artistic) handiwork, when we paint out of the colour- perception, including in the painting-process the colour’s own will and essence, a diving into the actual artistic process. |  | | It is not to be doubted that pondering about ideas as well as the putting of them into practice, works against artistic creating. |  | | Artistic speaking consequently carries as an archetypal picture especially that which is already inherent in speech – yet has still to be lifted into consciousness. |
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http://www.zeichen-und-symbole.de/artemis/Eurythmy.html
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| Â | The Pros and Cons of Artistic License |
 | | The use of artistic license in historic art is not an "either/or" concept, but a matter of degree from one extreme to another. |  | | Conversely, an artwork that overflows with artistic license may be a magnificent piece of art. |  | | The meaning of artistic license is examined and contrasted with historical mistakes in art. |
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http://www.nps.gov/jeff/LewisClark2/Education/VisualArt/VisualArtActivity2.htm
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| Â | M.S.Rau Antiques - New Orleans Antique Jewelry,Fine Art,Furniture,Globes,Silver,Sevres Porcelain,Music Boxes,Armor,Canes,Walking Sticks,Diamonds,Collectibles,Antiques |
 | | It was painted by Renoir at the apex of his artistic career in 1895 and certainly appeals to both art connoisseurs and novices alike. |  | | Renoir's solo exhibition in 1883 at the Durand-Ruel Gallery in Paris confirmed his position as one of the leading artistic masters of the day. |  | | It exhibits a palette of color and ease of brushstroke that can only be associated with the man who would help fuel an artistic revolution. |
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http://www.rauantiques.com/Articles.asp?ArticleID=6
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| Â | EXCHANGE GALLERY / GALERIA WYMIANY |
 | | The next important neo-avant-garde art space became Artforum, where young art enthusiasts including Hanka Nowicka and Wieslaw Michalak were expertly led by Tadeusz Porada; the artistic direction of the gallery was supervised by Zbigniew Warpechowski determined to introduce the performance art to a wider audience in Poland. |  | | During the same period, the pedagogic and artistic work of Zbigniew Dlubak begun to play a very important role among the young artists in Lodz; he was a Warsaw artist who offered very interesting photography courses at the Film School and Art College. |  | | At that time, yet another completely new artistic movement emerges in Lodz under the name VIDEO, while at the Wytwornia Filmow Oswiatowych (Educational Films Studio) and SeMaFor (Animated Films Studio) innovative, professionally produced films about distinguished Polish avant-garde artists from the past and present were created. |
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http://www.exchangegallery.cosmosnet.pl/english/wstep_do_zg.html
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| Â | Aspects Of Mail Art |
 | | Circumstances were thus created for the appearance of an essentially new form of artistic expression- the art of communication, which comes into existence by mutual interaction and exchange between creative personalities at distant points of the globe in the field of the visual arts, the arts of sound, movement and of written words. |  | | Mail-art first appeared as an organized and conscious artistic movement in the late 50s and early 60s, almost simultaneously in various parts of the globe. |  | | The appearance of mail-art in the history of art is to be viewed primarily in connection with the world boom in communication systems (telephone, radio, more rapid surface, sea, and air mail traffic, and starting with the 60s, television, satellites, computers, lasers), which was reflected in terms of artistic creativity. |
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http://members.tripod.com/~aaart/aspects.htm
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| Â | Search Results for futurism - Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | early 20th-century artistic movement that centred in Italy and emphasized the dynamism, speed, energy, and power of the machine and the vitality, change, and restlessness of modern life in general. |  | | Russian-born French painter and stage designer, a pioneer of pure abstraction in painting, most notably through his founding, with Natalya Goncharova, whom he later married, of the Rayonist movement... |  | | Provides information on art movements including Fauvism, Dada, Surrealism, Futurism, Cubism, Constructivism, Abstract Expressionism, Pop, Performance and Aboriginal Art. |
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http://www.britannica.com/search?query=futurism&submit=Find&source=MWTEXT
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| Â | The Industrial Revolution - Impact |
 | | There were many artistic movements during the period of Britain's industrialization, each of which was a reaction to the feelings of the time, as well as to the movement which had preceded it. |  | | As the Industrial Revolution progressed, the factory owners accumulated great wealth while the working classes retained none (Stearns). |  | | The introduction of liberalism in the 18th century by les philosophes meant a new age in British politics, which continued through the Industrial Revolution. |
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http://industrialrevolution.sea.ca/impact.html
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| Â | Shipe on Dada |
 | | Some went on to found new artistic movements (most notably the Paris Dadaists turned French Surrealists); others, like Hausmann and Schwitters, working in relative isolation, took independent, often eccentric artistic directions. |  | | Of all the influential artistic movements which flourished in the first half of the twentieth century, Dada is the one which most urgently requires an intensive and exhaustive effort to preserve and make available its documents. |  | | The name "literary archive" is a trifle misleading; the purpose of the archive is to preserve and disseminate the written documentation of the Dada movement, whether it relates to literature, painting, film, or any of the arts. |
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http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/Bai/dada.htm
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| Â | artistic creation - definition of artistic creation by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia. |
 | | artistic creation - the creation of beautiful or significant things; "art does not need to be innovative to be good"; "I was never any good at art"; "he said that architecture is the art of wasting space beautifully" |  | | aesthetics, esthetics - (art) the branch of philosophy dealing with beauty and taste (emphasizing the evaluative criteria that are applied to art); "traditional aesthetics assumed the existence of universal and timeless criteria of artistic value" |  | | draftsmanship, drawing, drafting - the creation of artistic drawings; "he learned drawing from his father" |
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http://www.thefreedictionary.com/artistic%20creation
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| Â | About Art History - Artists by Movement, Style, School or Period |
 | | This section is an assembly of the "Selected Artists" lists, where each list corresponds to a particular artistic movement, style, school or period. |  | | An alphabetical listing of visual (and literary) artists who worked in or were directly influenced by the Dada movement that arose in 1916. |  | | An alphabetical listing of important artists who work (or worked) in, pioneered or otherwise had direct influence on the Op Art movement that arose in the mid 1960s. |
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http://www.arthistory.about.com/od/by_movement/
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