「classicism」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 55件
| e to regard Ingres as the standard-bearer of | classicism against the romantic school-a role he relish |
| chant, Arabic melisma, contemporary European | Classicism, ancient Hebrew psalms and modal scales. |
| English portrait painter steeped in Academic | Classicism and Romantic. |
| ousness of academic French art influenced by | Classicism, and decided to paint subjects taken mostly |
| the end of this period Colombo moved towards | Classicism and Monumentalism, without renouncing Modern |
| ks a desire to combine the formal imagery of | classicism and the energizing aura of modernity.” |
| or New York, with his characteristic mix of | classicism and modernism (the Fantasy Land area, for in |
| He is associated with both | classicism and anti-clerical art. |
| iticized by cubist artists for his return to | classicism and for mixing classicism and cubism. |
| manticism, Heliade was equally influenced by | Classicism and the Age of Enlightenment. |
| stly portraits and nudes exemplifying a calm | classicism, are in the collections of over thirty museu |
| icy (German: Kulturpolitik) promoting Weimar | classicism as the foundation of Germany's cultural heri |
| nding alternatives to the cool neo-Palladian | classicism being espoused in the 1730s by Lord Burlingt |
| wiss painter integrant of the style Academic | Classicism, born in 1822 at Le Locle in Switzerland and |
| , a departure from the prevailing Washington | classicism, but was able to integrate it with its surro |
| etween 1703 and 1731, in the style of French | classicism but with a Baroque interior. |
| was part of the brief movement called Nordic | Classicism, but with clear links with Swedish vernacula |
| His closing to romanticism from | classicism can be addressed to the works of German poet |
| nes modern art deco features with a modified | classicism, evidenced in the strong vertical ribs of th |
| the main streets are fine examples of Nordic | Classicism from the 1920s - 1930s. |
| f the Arts and Crafts Movement, 19th century | classicism had the advantage of continuing a long tradi |
| French baroque and | classicism has bequeathed the city several buildings, a |
| Their music, imbued with a deep and abiding | classicism, has been described as an exhilarating blend |
| works are traditionally considered literary | classicism, his best verse is rich with antitheses and |
| rical pieces marked by the well known French | Classicism in drama and as - next to Andreas Gryphius - |
| icism took the place hitherto held by French | classicism, in spite of the country falling to French e |
| ably cast iron, with conservative Beaux-Arts | classicism in a career that spanned the decades from th |
| nd years the Western history of the arts and | classicism; in the 18th century, Romanticism reversed i |
| icism took the place hitherto held by French | classicism, in spite of the country falling to French e |
| Classicism in Copenhagen. | |
| s arrival in the city marks the beginning of | classicism in Andalusia. |
| astel, grey, and gold, the elegant Gustavian | Classicism interiors features lighted candles, cut-glas |
| He introduced elements of the Vienna | Classicism into Swedish musical culture. |
| This period derives from the | Classicism movement. |
| The post-WW2 | classicism of the place excited a mode of indignation a |
| masterpiece of Mosan art, remarkable for the | classicism of its style, whose origin has been the subj |
| musical ideas of Richard Wagner towards the | classicism of Mozart. |
| Classicism of the 19th century was "the passionate genu | |
| turesque, and is not marred by the maladroit | classicism of some of the Ronsardists. |
| eford design "makes no attempt to follow the | classicism of Jefferson; it is proudly, almost defiantl |
| Beaux Arts | classicism, often reflected in federal buildings of thi |
| The Weimar | Classicism period in Germany is commonly considered to |
| of the 1990s in a style imitating the Nordic | Classicism prevalent in Sweden during the 1920s. |
| so wrote some original poems in a mixture of | Classicism, Roccoco and Sentimentalism. |
| Moore and Alberto Giacometti, and his serene | classicism set a standard for European (and American) f |
| designed the new building in the Beaux Arts | Classicism style, which he believed conveyed the dignit |
| 1920s with his houses designed in the Nordic | Classicism style. |
| avid Watkin, who wrote the monograph Radical | Classicism: The Architecture of Quinlan Terry (2006), a |
| Watkin, David, 2006, Radical | Classicism: The Architecture of Quinlan Terry Rizzoli, |
| essive, or primitive, relative to the modern | classicism then emerging. |
| hitecture Without Kings: The Rise of Puritan | Classicism under Cromwell, Timothy Mowl and Brian Earns |
| mparing the rules and strictures of Racine's | classicism unfavorably to the freer verse and settings |
| and is an example of Edwardian Graeco-Roman | classicism, with a tower in the style of Christopher Wr |
| successful essays in a whimsical, vernacular | classicism, with characteristically fine plasterwork de |
| manuscripts and initiated a revival of Roman | classicism, yet still maintained Migration Period art ( |
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