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Search results 1721 - 1730 of 3467 matching essays
- 1721: History And Culture Of The Renaissance
- ... beginning of political institutions with a commercial economy and the encouragement of education, arts, and music. It was a period of new inventions and believes. Renaissance actually means "rebirth". It was first used by a French historian Jules Michelet. Swiss historian Jakob Burckhardt said it was the time period between Italian painters Giotto and Michelangelo. He also said it was the birth of modern humanity after a long period of decay ...
- 1722: Johann Sebastian Bach 2
- ... became a supreme master of this difficult compositional skill. Plus, through several of his pieces his religion influences him greatly. He even chose to put different cultures in his pieces. He would combine patterns of French dancers, Italian melodies, and German counterpoint all in one when he wished. As well because of the influence of a great vocalist, Buxtehude, he incorporated vocal parts in his pieces at one point in his ...
- 1723: Johann Sebastian Bach
- ... 000 of his compositions survive. Some examples are the Art of Fugue, Brandenburg Concerti, the Goldberg Variations for Harpsichord, the Mass in B-Minor, the motets, the Easter and Christmas oratorios, Toccata in F Major, French Suite No 5, Fugue in G Major, Fugue in G Minor ("The Great"), St. Matthew Passion, and Jesu Der Du Meine Seele. He came from a family of musicians. There were over 53 musicians in ...
- 1724: A Tale Of Two Cities
- ... make up for the child’s life. This act portrays the nobility’s no respect for life. It also portrays the coldness and unsympathtic atitude of France’s nobiliyt. Dickens makes the reader despise the French nobility by showing us these acts. Throught the development of the novel, this feeling changes. In “Book the Third”. In “Book the third”, the massacre of Foulon is graphically described to the reader Word Count ...
- 1725: Jazz 3
- ... and illustrated a children’s book. Basquiat was inspired by Alfred Hitchcock films, cars, comic books, and Alfred E. Newman from Mad Magazine. By the time he was seven he was an avid reader of French, Spanish, and English texts. In his teenage years Basquiat ran away from home often. He did not like obedience. By 1978 he was in with the "in crowd." The filmmakers and artists of New York ...
- 1726: Jazz
- ... simply to embellish or paraphrase a tune, Armstrong himself was a master at both. Armstrong^s command of the trumpet was arguable greater than that of any preceding jazz trumpeter who recorded. In actuality, the revolution initiated by Armstrong took place in fits and starts, and with little fanfare at the time. After Armstrong^s departure from the King Oliver Creole Band, over a year would transpire before he would record ...
- 1727: Japanese Animation
- ... to Japanimation’s action, and become enthralled in its story lines. Japanese animation has proven itself superior not only to American animation, but also to animation the world over, and today anime is starting a revolution in the idea of animation as a hobby. A multitude of fresh, exciting adventures that have until present remained unexperienced in the United States wait overseas. If Japanese animation is given a warm enough reception ...
- 1728: Fashion Evolution
- ... the social groups. The women used crinolines and shirtwaists. Men used jackets and blue jeans, with grease in their hair. And women used the hair over the shoulders. The 60s were the time of a revolution. The hippie clothes, psychedelic ones, and groovy elements were fashionable. The hippies used a natural or ethnic style, love-ins, flowers, and free-flowing hairstyles. The 70s era involves different styles of fashion. By one ...
- 1729: Severan Copy Of Athena Parthenos And 13th Century Virgin And
- ... are not as detailed and show much less movement and form that those of Athena. The clothes of the virgin do hang vertically,or radiate naturally however , from their points of suspension.10 Unlike earlier French sculptures, this suggests the use of models instead of copying from a painting. The grain of the wood also offers interesting texture to the material, adding possibly unintentional detail that the carving does not. The ...
- 1730: Candide
- By: Artikrez Francois Marie Arouet de Voltaire was the French author of the novella Candide, also known as "Optimism"(Durant and Durant 724). In Candide, Voltaire sought to point out the fallacy of Gottfried William von Leibniz's theory of optimism and the hardships brought ...
Search results 1721 - 1730 of 3467 matching essays
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