Aubrey Beardsley (illustrator)
ellauri219.html on line 267: 16: Aubrey Beardsley
ellauri219.html on line 270: The influence of Aubrey Beardsley’s pen-and-ink line drawings had already made itself felt on Klaus Voormann’s artwork for Revolver, and here the 19th-century illustrator, whose own style was influenced by Japanese woodcutting, takes a position not too far away from Oscar Wilde (No.41), Beardsley’s contemporary in the Aesthetic movement.
ellauri392.html on line 117: Toisaalta hänen näkemyksensä ovat suurelta osin ristiriidassa Martin Heideggerin ja hänen oppilaansa Hans-Georg Gadamerin sekä WK Wimsattin ja Monroe Beardsleyn näkemysten kanssa kirjallisuusteosten "semanttisesta autonomiasta" teoksissa "The Intentional Fallacy". ja "The Affective Fallacy". Wimsatt ja Beardsley uhosivat, että teksti on ensisijainen merkityksen lähde, ja kaikki tekijän halujen tai elämän yksityiskohdat ovat toissijaisia. Nämä ovat elämä ja teos -menetelmän pahimmat mustamaalaajat.
xxx/ellauri123.html on line 1025: the urge to commit it. Naming a girls' school for Beardsley must have
xxx/ellauri123.html on line 1033: Aubrey Vincent Beardsley (21. elokuuta 1872 Brighton, Englanti – 16.
xxx/ellauri123.html on line 1037: movement which also included Oscar Wilde and James McNeill Whistler. Beardsley's
xxx/ellauri154.html on line 214: The theme of Salome is one that Moreau returned to time and again. The artist explored the subject in more than one hundred sketches and drawings as well as in numerous paintings—ranging from highly elaborate to sketchily rendered—and even in sculpture (both Salome and The Apparition figured in Moreau’s waxworks). Moreau was not alone in his passion for the theme of Salome, as other famous artists — Lucas Cranach, Caravaggio, Titian, Guido Reni, Artemisia Gentileschi, Aubrey Beardsley, and Nabil Kanso, to name just a few — shared this interest. Selkeästi perverssiä jengiä.
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