Đặt câu với từ "classicism"

1. Examples of Literary Classicism

2. Classicism [Класицизм; klasytsyzm]

3. Classicism definition: Classicism is a style of art practised especially in the 18th century in Europe

4. Definition of Classicism in the Definitions.net dictionary

5. Find Classicism tracks, artists, and albums

6. How to use Classicism in a sentence.

7. Manet's break with classicism was threefold.

8. Find the latest in Classicism music at Last.fm.

9. Also known as Beaux-Arts Classicism, Academic Classicism, or Classical Revival, Beaux Arts is a late and eclectic form of Neoclassicism

10. What does Classicism mean? Information and translations of Classicism in the most comprehensive dictionary definitions resource on the web.

11. Classicist definition is - an advocate or follower of classicism

12. ‘Roman Classicism was the inspiration for this popular pattern.’ ‘That's the difference between romanticism and Classicism.’ ‘This involved a step from Classicism towards romanticism - which was also a shift from civilisation towards barbarism.’

13. Neo - classical art held dear nature, classicism and imitation.

14. Bourgie unites classicism, wealth and tradition with technological innovation

15. Neo-Classicism was engaged in a struggle for its survival.

16. Synonyms for Classicism include grandeur, balance, clarity, class, classicalism, dignity, elegance, excellence, finish and formality

17. Synonyms for Atticism include classicism, grandeur, balance, clarity, class, classicalism, dignity, elegance, excellence and finish

18. It turned out he had had the rudiments of classicism flogged into him as a schoolboy.

19. Here, Classicism was essential for the meaning of this primary monument of the factory aesthetic

20. Synonyms for Atticisms include classicism, grandeur, balance, clarity, class, classicalism, dignity, elegance, excellence and finishes

21. In art, Classicism is established between Baroque and Romanticism, creating a balanced mixture of both trends.

22. Classicism is a style of art practiced especially in the 18th century in Europe

23. The 17th century was the period when French painting became prominent and individualised itself through classicism.

24. Classicism, in the arts, refers generally to a high regard for a classical period, classical antiquity in the Western tradition, as setting standards for taste which the classicists seek to emulate.The art of Classicism typically seeks to be formal and restrained

25. Classicism and Romanticism developed so gradually and exhibited so many phases that a perfect definition is not possible

26. Classicism definition is - the principles or style embodied in the literature, art, or architecture of ancient Greece and Rome

27. 2 There are two elements in Foucault's characterisation of the prison as an alternative model to that of classicism.

28. In this respect Hirschi shared the long-standing positivist rejection of the central tenet of classicism: deterrence.

29. Classicism is generally associated with harmony and restraint, and obedience to recognized standards of form and craftsmanship.

30. Classicism, a term that, when applied generally, means clearness, elegance, symmetry, and repose produced by attention to traditional forms

31. Classicism, a term that, when applied generally, means clearness, elegance, symmetry, and repose produced by attention to traditional forms

32. Literary Classicism refers to a style of writing that consciously emulates the forms and subject matter of classical antiquity

33. Find 41 ways to say Classicism, along with antonyms, related words, and example sentences at Thesaurus.com, the world's most trusted free thesaurus.

34. Classicism An approach to aesthetics that favors restraint, rationality, and the use of strict forms in literature, painting, architecture, and other arts

35. Literary Classicism was most popular and had the most impact from the mid-1700s to about 1800, primarily in England

36. Classicism championed the achievements of ancient Greece and Rome - the classical ideal - as a standard against which contemporary society could be judged

37. In regard to the arts, Classicism is an emulation of the arts of the ancient world, particularly of Greece and Rome

38. His ring classicism has always argued so persuasively against excessive physical harm, his pride was beyond anything but a regal exit.

39. The word Classicism, in the arts, is used when talking about art from the Ancient Greeks and Romans and their influence

40. In your own words and in complete sentences, define and explain what was a salon in France during the century of Classicism

41. 11 It is quiet and symmetrical that the whole divertimento has dramaticism but a magnum opus of a romanticism remains classicism throughout.

42. This anti-Classicism ignored — or sought to crush — instructive legacies in thought and design, both civic and aesthetic, and ambitious moral system

43. Baseball and Classicism By Tom Clark About this Poet Tom Clark combined diverse roles of poet, biographer, novelist, dramatist, reviewer, and sportswriter during his writing career

44. Abert & Broggi is a perfect combination of tradition and innovation, between classicism and modernity, through a production that keeps some hand-made

45. The Classicism movement was an awakening in the world of art, producing new types of paintings and sculptures that the world had never seen before

46. The History of Chinoiserie “Chinoiserie was originally part of a desire for novelty and otherness in European design, which had long followed the rules of classicism and baroque design.

47. This is a list of the most popular Classicism art pieces, so art enthusiasts will likely recognize the names of the famous artists who created these pieces.

48. Home / Products tagged “Classicism” Showing 1–30 of 425 results Default sorting Sort by popularity Sort by latest Sort by price: low to high Sort by price: high to low

49. The art of Classicism often involves a thoughtful approach to the arts in which beauty and form is admired, rather than passion or any kind of exaggeration.

50. For the purposes of Western literature, this means Greek and Roman drama, poetic forms like the epic, and literary theory as expounded in Aristotle’s “Poetics.” Classicism developed during

51. His opera prefigure coming of romanticism in artistic song writing. Mozart let classicism and romanticism have a perfect integrating and endow with artistic song strong infection and life.

52. Classicism (countable and uncountable, plural Classicisms) (uncountable) All the classical traditions of the art and architecture of ancient Greece and Rome, especially the aspects of simplicity, elegance and proportion

53. Classicism both as an art style and as the first theory of art was defined by the ancient Greeks, emulated by the Romans, and then continued to appear in various forms across the centuries.

54. Classicism, in the arts, refers generally to a high regard for a classical period, classical antiquity in the Western tradition, as setting standards for taste which the classicists seek to emulate.

55. Classicism grew out of the late 18th century philosophy of enlightenment and new social order, prior to which justice was very intermittent, and would change wholly from defendant to defendant, place to place

56. Neoclassical art, also called NeoClassicism and Classicism, a widespread and influential movement in painting and the other visual arts that began in the 1760s, reached its height in the 1780s and ’90s, and lasted until the 1840s and ’50s.

57. The Louvre Colonnade is the easternmost façade of the Palais du Louvre in Paris.It has been celebrated as the foremost masterpiece of French Architectural Classicism since its construction, mostly between 1667 and 1674

58. ‘A second side to Aestheticism in painting was the recovery of classicism, but now in sensual or symbolic guise.’ ‘There is, one might observe, truth in the aesthetic, but truth defined by the aesthetic easily descends into sickly Aestheticism.’

59. In Neoclassical art …the context of the tradition, Classicism refers either to the art produced in antiquity or to later art inspired by that of antiquity, while NeoClassicism always refers to the art produced later but inspired by antiquity

60. ‘A second side to Aestheticism in painting was the recovery of classicism, but now in sensual or symbolic guise.’ ‘There is, one might observe, truth in the aesthetic, but truth defined by the aesthetic easily descends into sickly Aestheticism.’

61. In general, Classicism can be defined as a style in literature that draws on the styles of ancient Greece and Rome.Classicism is based on the idea that nature and human nature could be understood by reason and thought.

62. More ingenious with its use of the “elements” of Classicism, Gunnar Asplund’s Stockholm Public Library (1920–28) is massed with a simple cylinder rising from a low box, recalling at once the creative form play of neoclassical architect

63. Drawing inspiration from the art, literature, and culture of classical antiquity of ancient Greece and Rome, Classicism developed in the mid 18th century in western Europe (primarily in France and England) in opposition to the then-dominant Rococo esthetics

64. Classicism finds itself in a state of trivial misuse, the default style of McMansions and paste-on attempts to make suburban office buildings look grand—a problem that has deep roots, but that has been exacerbated by the Trump administration, its …

65. It first describes the theory, practice, and development of Atticism, the attempt by imperial Greeks to write in the language of the fifth and fourth century bce, treating its stylistic and grammatical variants and outlining its relation to imperial classicism.

66. Following the discovery of the Roman ruins of Pompeii and also the publication in 1764 of a highly influential history of ancient art by German scholar Winckelmann, there was an intense flourishing of Classicism in art, architecture and design in the eighteenth century.

67. NeoClassicism (also spelled Neo-Classicism; from Greek νέος nèos, "new" and Greek κλασικός klasikόs, "of the highest rank") was a Western cultural movement in the decorative and visual arts, literature, theatre, music, and architecture that drew inspiration from the art and culture of classical antiquity.