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An analysis of the sculpture of Candi Sukuh in Central Java : its meanings and religious functions 1437-1443 C.E.Sbeghen, Jo-Anne Maree. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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An analysis of the sculpture of Candi Sukuh in Central Java : its meanings and religious functions 1437-1443 C.E.Sbeghen, Jo-Anne Maree. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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An analysis of the sculpture of Candi Sukuh in Central Java : its meanings and religious functions 1437-1443 C.E.Sbeghen, Jo-Anne Maree. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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An analysis of the sculpture of Candi Sukuh in Central Java : its meanings and religious functions 1437-1443 C.E.Sbeghen, Jo-Anne Maree. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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The inner image: an examination of the life of Helen Elizabeth Martins leading to her creation The Owl House and A Camel Yard as outsider artRoss, Susan Imrie January 1996 (has links)
The Owl House is situated in the Karoo village of Nieu Bethesda, and the person responsible for its creation, Helen Elizabeth Martins (1897-1976), is South Africa's best known Outsider artist. A number of newspaper and magazine articles, television programmes, radio interviews, play, films, short stories, theses and art works have resulted directly from her work. Interest in The Owl House continues to grow, with visitors coming from all over South Africa, and various parts of the world,to visit it. The Owl House was Helen Martins' home for most of her 78 years. During the last 30 or so years of her life she devoted all her time and energy to transforming the interior of her house into a glistening fantasy world of colour and light, using crushed glass stuck to almost every surface, coloured glass pane inserts in the walls, mirrors of many sizes and shapes, and countless paraffin lamps and candles. She called her garden' A Camel Yard', and filled it with over 500 cement statues, structures and bas reliefs. All the labour involved, apart from crushing and sorting the coloured glass, was provided by at least four different men, who assisted her over the years, Johannes Hattingh, Jonas Adams, Piet van der Merwe and Koos Malgas, though Helen Martins was the inspiration and director behind it all. Through a study of Helen Martins' background and life, and their effects upon her psyche, a rigorous attempt has been made to reach some understanding of why she became a recluse, and what caused her to create this unique body of work comprising her entire domestic environment. She became increasingly asocial as her life progressed, and ultimately ended it by committing suicide in 1976. Through the universality of symbolism, the meanings of the subjects, themes and concerns which she chose to depict are studied. Then, together with some knowledge of her life and personal influences, an attempt has been made to deduce what it was that Helen Martins was trying to express and work through in her creations. This study also led to an awareness of the fact that, although each one is unique, there are many examples of Outsider Art throughout the world. Fundamentally, creators of Outsider Art remain asocial in relation to their cultural milieu and cultural context. Some other examples of Outsider Art, both in South Africa as well as in Europe and India, were visited, and are described and compared with The Owl House as well as with one another. The way in which society reacts or responds to Outsider Art and its creators is studied through the comprehensive records of one specific case which caused great controversy in Johannesburg during the 1970s. Ultimately, working alone or with assistance, it is the Outsider artist who is the driving force behind these unique works, and whose indefinable inner fire of passion alone makes it possible to bring them into being. It would seem that the fascination with Outsider Art is that through their work, creators allow others a glimpse into a different sense of reality which is both mysterious and inexplicable.
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Deconfigurations: the practice of repetition as confirmation of (re)productive (art)worksSwanepoel, Pieter Johan 30 November 2002 (has links)
This study will argue that visual art and the making of images share much
With other languages. If writing can be deoonstructed, visual Imagery can
be deconfigured, for figuring an image is much like structuring a sentence.
The process of deconfiguration however relies on repetition.
DeconflguratiOn therefore denies any claim of a primary creator. It will be
argued though that deconfiguratlon remains creative as it engages the
imagination in a process of transference and through association.
Moreover, deconfiguration shows how binary opposites are essential In the
making of artworks. The repetitive process takes place when the artwork
Is made and continues during the appreciation and/or interpretation of the
artwork. For the interpretation to really deconfigure, it would mean that
the image constituted by the artist has metaphorical, allegorical and even
symbolical implications. The interpreter will thus always remain a
partidpant in the creative process suggested by the artwork. / Art History, Visual Arts and Musicology / M.A. (Visual Arts)
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The motif of a bull in the ancient near East : an iconographic studyVan Dijk, Renate Marian 02 1900 (has links)
The bull was a potent symbol of power, strength, and, to a lesser degree, fertility to the peoples
of the ancient Near East from the twelfth century until 330 BCE. This symbolism was
manifested in several iconographic motifs. These motifs reveal the bull as a manifestation of
divine characteristics and as an expression of the power of man, and particularly the authority of
the king. The use of these iconographic motifs was not consistent across the entire area of the
ancient Near East; some differed in appearance and use in the different areas of the region, and
many changed over time even in the same area. In all areas and during all periods the basic core
symbolism stayed the same, and the bull was always held in a special respect. / Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Studies / M.A. (Ancient Near Eastern Studies)
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Intimations of infinity : exploring transcendence in landscape paintingSaad, Georgia 11 1900 (has links)
This dissertation investigates the question of transcendence and its relevance to my picture-making .
process. The term 'transcendence' refers to any experience which surpasses the finite. In relation to the
art-making process it refers to an opening up of the frame. Transcendence is not regarded as a fixed and
unalterable state but as such that it encompasses paradox. The fragmentary nature of experience and"
knowledge provides the point of departure for this investigation.
The possibility of transcendence is partly explored through the concept of symbolic orders. I am using
the term 'symbolic orders' to refer to any frameworks which shape human experience in general and the
creative process specifically.
Upon exploring the concept of transcendence as concerns the work of a number of artists and insofar as it
has informed my own pictures it appears that there is a creative system pertaining to the artwork which is
transcendent. / Art History, Visual Arts and Musicology / M.A. (Fine Arts)
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David III Ryckaert : a seventeenth-century Flemish painterHaute, Bernadette van 11 1900 (has links)
This thesis in two volumes is a study of the paintings of David ill Ryckaert (1612-
1661 ). Ryckaert grew up in a family of artists, and painted within a close community
of fellow artists. According to several twentieth-century critics, Ryckaert was no
more than a minor imitator of other Flemish painters. Underlying such relegation of
Ryckaert is an uncritical and distinctly Modernist glorification of originality, or
merely novelty. The chief argument of this thesis is that a careful reconstruction of
the socio-cultural circumstances ofRyckaert's work calls into question the destructive
employment of originality as a criterion of artistic greatness. Much of the vocabulary
of Flemish art of the time was established. Artists thus proved their excellence both
to fellow painters and a public fully conversant with the artistic traditions of subject
and style, if such pictorial conventions were notably refmed or treated with a
remarkable grace. Embracing the criteria of personal style and the beauty of the work,
this environment is clearly averse to the blank veneration of new or original art.
I argue that the term originality is itself dangerous therefore and that to neglect
Ryckaert's work as that of a minor imitator is invalid and unhelpful.
A careful examination of Ryckaert's known oeuvre reveals that his work is
distinguished by a fine modelling, harmonious composition and a warm palette with
colourful highlights. Although he relied on an established iconographic repertory, he
maintained creative variation, thereby ensuring a steady demand. Ryckaert's imitation
of other artists' work requires us to adjust twentieth-century criteria which tend to be
pejorative of those who borrow from fellow artists. In fact Ryckaert could be said to
have refmed his individuality as a painter through the testing creative encounter with
and imitation of other artists. / Art / D.Litt. et Phil. (History of Art)
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Symbols and power in Theatre of the OppressedMorelos, Ronaldo Jose Unknown Date (has links) (PDF)
Augusto Boal developed Theatre of the Oppressed as a way of using the symbolic language of the dramatic arts in the examination of power relations in both the personal and social contexts. Boal understood that symbolic realities directly influence empirical reality and that drama, as an art form that employs the narrative and the event, serves as a powerful interface between symbols and actuality. In the dramatic process, the creation and the environment from which it emerges are inevitably transformed in the process of enactment. These transformations manifest in the context of power relations - in the context of the receptors ability to make decisions and to engage in actions, and the communicators ability to influence the receptors opinions and behaviour. This thesis will examine two different practices in which symbolic realities have been utilised in the context of human relations of power. Primarily, this thesis examines the theory and practice of Theatre of the Oppressed as it has developed.
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