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Search results 4281 - 4290 of 8980 matching essays
- 4281: Art Essay
- ... These statues, Kore (maiden) and Kouros (youth) were produced in large numbers, all being virtually the same in outline. Their general names emphasised the need for the statues to remain unidentified and the lack of personal character. Some were placed on graves only to be viewed as representations of the deceased in the broadest sense (completely impersonal). And some were used as offerings, for example: for a favoured person like the ...
- 4282: Ancient Japanese Art
- ... loved though. The large and intricately painted vases really stood out from everything else. I don’t like things that are too complicated to even remember when you can’t see them. I thought about writing about the little porcelain cups, but thought that tea drinking really couldn’t be all that important to teach me about art. I circled the exhibit at least twelve times before an hour had passed ...
- 4283: A Tale Of Two Murders
- ... is mad, "You should have seen how wisely I proceeded- with what caution- with what foresight- with what dissimulation I went to work!" (543). When an author creates a situation where the protagonist tells a personal account, the overall impact of the story is heightened. This allows the audience to see what the narrator is really thinking, his own perception in justifying murder. Human nature is a delicate balance of light ...
- 4284: Andrew Warhol Art Or Not Art
- ... harshness, an ambiguity of American Culture. The Campbell's Soup is one of the most famous and recognized paintings of Warhol. It was done in 1962 and is oil on canvas. "This painting defines his personal artistic repertoire of low cost consumer items. The soupcan is a mass market article of the American consumer and a recognizable symbol of Americans way of life." However, is this art or a duplication of ...
- 4285: Analysis Of The Use Of Lighting In THE GODFATHER
- I am writing about the use of lighting in the opening scene of The Godfather, (1). The photography of The Godfather as an entire film is very planned and used specifically to generate moods, and have great psychological ...
- 4286: Martin Heidegger’s Being and Time
- ... Temporality likewise is relevant to non-human objects in only one sense. Chalk, whether seen now or 10 years from now, will always be used for the same thing in which it was created, namely writing on black boards. Tables will always be used to put things upon. The individual though, as he temporally moves through life, is constantly changing. Since his essence is not fixed, his purpose and mental composition ...
- 4287: A Lesson Well Taught
- ... of money and feel intimidation. The are taught with an hands on experience, you have to work hard for the things you want in life. Works Cited Bambara, Toni Cade. “The Lesson”. Literature and the Writing Process. Elizabeth McMahan, Susan X Day, and Robert funk. 5th ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice, 1999. 457-461.
- 4288: Andy Warhol And Pop Art
- ... interest idea (Bondo, 1998). Warhol used a detached style, in which little emotional involvement or identification is created. By use of this method, a statement is made, but does not effect the audience on a personal level. Conclusion Andy Warhol was one of the twentieth century's greatest artists. And like many artists, Warhol saw the world in a very different way. However, he was misunderstood as one who satirized American ...
- 4289: Leon The Movie Review Essay
- ... 1994 who knows "Bonnie and Clyde" is so extraordinary that it almost makes everything else she does plausible.) So Leon finds himself saddled with a little sidekick, just when the manic Stansfield is waging a personal vendetta against him. Although "The Professional" bathes in grit and was shot in the scuzziest locations New York has to offer, it's a romantic fantasy, not a realistic crime picture. Besson's visual approach ...
- 4290: The History Of Greek Theater
- ... tragedy, Aeschulus, Euripides and Sophocles (whose Oedipus Rex he considered the finest of all Greek tragedies), arrived at his definition of tragedy. This explanation has a profound influence for more than twenty centuries on those writing tragedies, most significantly Shakespeare. Aristotle’s analysis of tragedy began with a description of the effect such a work had on the audience as a “catharsis” or purging of the emotions. He decided that catharsis ...
Search results 4281 - 4290 of 8980 matching essays
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