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  1. Utopia? Some thoughts on Europe in the performing arts : conference report
    Autor*in: Leon, Anna
    Erschienen: 26.02.2020

    The title of the conference that took place in the Dance Studies department of the University of Salzburg on January 23rd and 24th - Post-utopia and Europe in the performing arts - was an invitation to grapple not only with the subject matter... mehr

     

    The title of the conference that took place in the Dance Studies department of the University of Salzburg on January 23rd and 24th - Post-utopia and Europe in the performing arts - was an invitation to grapple not only with the subject matter announced, but also with the very conception of its terms. The interdisciplinary contributions to the conference - from dance studies, musicology, literature, cultural policy and film studies - presented a multifaceted range of ideas both about Europe and European-ness and about (post-)utopia, pushing and pulling the notions in a tense field of reflection.

     

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    Quelle: CompaRe
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Teile des Periodikums; Teile des Periodikums
    Format: Online
    DDC Klassifikation: Freizeitgestaltung, darstellende Künste, Sport (790); Literatur und Rhetorik (800)
    Sammlung: Figurationen des Übergangs
    Schlagworte: Darstellende Kunst; Europa; Utopie; Anti-Utopie; Tanz; Tanzwissenschaft
    Lizenz:

    creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/

    ;

    info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

  2. The idea of "modern art" in Renaissance Italy : essay
    Autor*in: Brennan, Robert
    Erschienen: 16.03.2021

    The Italian Renaissance has long been studied as a point of origin for "modern" ideas about art. This approach, which can be traced back to figures like Giorgio Vasari and Jacob Burckhardt, remains central in scholarship on Renaissance art to this... mehr

     

    The Italian Renaissance has long been studied as a point of origin for "modern" ideas about art. This approach, which can be traced back to figures like Giorgio Vasari and Jacob Burckhardt, remains central in scholarship on Renaissance art to this day. For example, on the first page of a recent textbook on Italian Renaissance art, Stephen Campbell and Michael Cole begin by laying out two contrary views of the period. To Renaissance writers like Lorenzo Ghiberti, they explain, the Renaissance meant the rebirth of classical antiquity; "to others, however, it has seemed that the importance of Italian art after about 1400 lay not in its return to origins but in the emergence of something entirely new and characteristically modern - the idea of art itself." [...] While this outlook has certainly made a lasting contribution to Renaissance art history, it has also given rise to certain blind spots and misconceptions in the field. For example, it is often assumed that the word "art" underwent a radical change of meaning in the Renaissance, anticipating the later, post-Enlightenment notion of the "fine arts" as an autonomous field of creative activity. However, close readings of period texts often suggest the opposite.

     

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    Quelle: CompaRe
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Teile des Periodikums; Teile des Periodikums
    Format: Online
    DDC Klassifikation: Künste; Bildende und angewandte Kunst (700); Literatur und Rhetorik (800)
    Sammlung: Figurationen des Übergangs
    Schlagworte: Kunst; Renaissance; Italien
    Lizenz:

    creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/

    ;

    info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

  3. "Art and defects" in the eye of a beholder : conference report
    Autor*in: Muilwijk, Bob
    Erschienen: 13.01.2021

    The conference "Kunst und Gebrechen" ("Art and Defects"), which was scheduled from March 19th to March 21st and then postponed due to Covid-19, finally took place from November 5th through to November 7th. [...] The conference had a clear... mehr

     

    The conference "Kunst und Gebrechen" ("Art and Defects"), which was scheduled from March 19th to March 21st and then postponed due to Covid-19, finally took place from November 5th through to November 7th. [...] The conference had a clear biographical focus: Most of the fourteen presentations sought to disentangle the influence any clear "defects" artists might have had on their work or their reception. Of course, this already poses a problem that many of the speakers addressed: the idea of "defects" presupposes a teleological norm, be it physical, mental or concerning age or gender, from which it is possible to deviate. A defect is a defect first and foremost in the eye of the beholder and, as Manfred Kern mentioned in his introduction, it can be seen not just as an impediment, but as a catalyst for artistic expression, too.

     

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    Quelle: CompaRe
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Teile des Periodikums; Teile des Periodikums
    Format: Online
    DDC Klassifikation: Künste; Bildende und angewandte Kunst (700); Literatur und Rhetorik (800)
    Sammlung: Figurationen des Übergangs
    Schlagworte: Kunst; Kreativität; Disability Studies; Krankheit; Darstellende Kunst; Musik
    Lizenz:

    creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/

    ;

    info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

  4. The art(s) of didactic poetry in antiquity : observations on Ovid, Archestratus, and Aratus
    Erschienen: 18.08.2023

    In scholarly discussions, ancient didactic poetry is sometimes considered a 'technical' form of literature. The 'technical' aspect of didactic poems would seem to concern mainly their contents, not the poems' form, which is described instead as... mehr

     

    In scholarly discussions, ancient didactic poetry is sometimes considered a 'technical' form of literature. The 'technical' aspect of didactic poems would seem to concern mainly their contents, not the poems' form, which is described instead as literary. And so, didactic poetry appears to be both 'technical' and, at the same time, more than just technical. To what extent were didactic poems considered 'artistic' in our modern sense? Or should we call them simply 'technical' poems in the sense that they deal with 'techne' as a form of practical expertise? Was the 'art' of ancient didactic poems one specific domain that ancient audiences easily identified? Or was this somewhat unclear? These are some of the key questions that I am concerned with, as I wish to explore to what extent the ancient poets themselves utilize the idea of 'techne' and what is the added value that the concept of 'techne' brings to their poetic works. I will present three authors to address these questions, namely in order: Ovid, whom I take as example of a poet who grandly advertises the presence of 'ars' in his poem; then, Archestratus of Gela, the first, partly extant poet to write 'didactic poems' in Greece in the manner that will impose itself in the following centuries, and an early example of how this poetry engages with what idea(s) about 'ars'; and, lastly, Aratus of Soli, the likely most canonical author of this type of poetry in Antiquity. This selection of authors, to be sure, does not provide a full picture of didactic poetry in Antiquity, with all its peculiarities. But it does have some paradigmatic meaning for two reasons. First, Archestratus and Aratus are significant within the history of didactic poetry, as I anticipated, because the former is a pioneer in this genre and the latter is a widely popular and influential author. Thus, analysis of their poems is useful to understand also certain features of the didactic genre more in general. Ovid's "Ars Amatoria", on the other hand, while perhaps being less influential for the whole history of the genre, becomes paradigmatic in so far as one explores the issue of didactic 'art'. For, this work features the topic of 'techne' much more extensively than many other didactic poems. But before I move to these authors, I wish to make a preamble about ancient didactic poetry as genre. For one might then wonder whether these questions about didactic poetry and 'techne' would find an easy solution if one considered first the meaning and category of the 'didactic' - a name that by itself seems to evoke the idea of knowledge and the sharing of a certain form of expertise.

     

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  5. The materiality of beauty : approaches, methods, and problems in the field of beauty studies
    Autor*in: Brunner, Lisa
    Erschienen: 19.12.2023

    As is well known, beauty is in the eyes of the beholder and what is considered beautiful is contextual. The itinerant symposium "Medicine, Beauty, and the Body: Materials, Texts and Artifacts" which took place from September 24 to 28, 2023 in... mehr

     

    As is well known, beauty is in the eyes of the beholder and what is considered beautiful is contextual. The itinerant symposium "Medicine, Beauty, and the Body: Materials, Texts and Artifacts" which took place from September 24 to 28, 2023 in Innsbruck, Salzburg and Vienna explored this topic in an interdisciplinary way and examined the intertwining of beauty, health and medicine from antiquity to early modern Europe. The event was a cooperation between the programme "Figurations of Transitions" of the inter-university institution Science and Art of the Paris-Lodron-University Salzburg and the University Mozarteum in Salzburg, Schloss Ambras and the Museumsverband Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien. Not only the sheer diversity of sources in the field of historical beauty cultures became apparent, but also their circulation and transformation through time and space as well as their significance as social, political, religious, and economic variables. The practical approach of the event in particular showed new paths in the field of historical beauty studies.

     

    Export in Literaturverwaltung
    Hinweise zum Inhalt: kostenfrei
    Quelle: CompaRe
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Teile des Periodikums; Teile des Periodikums
    Format: Online
    DDC Klassifikation: Literatur und Rhetorik (800)
    Sammlung: Figurationen des Übergangs; Tagungsberichte
    Schlagworte: Schönheit; Gesundheit; Medizin; Geschichte
    Lizenz:

    creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.de

    ;

    info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess