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  2. Arts and letters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arts_and_letters

    'Arts and Letters' as an education has been studied for centuries [2] prior to institutional education. In contemporary times, an ‘Arts and Letters’ major is a field of study that combines elements of literature with visual, liberal, and performing arts. The major’s highest frequency is in the North American University system. [4]

  3. Visual arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_arts

    Training in the visual arts has generally been through variations of the apprentice and workshop systems. In Europe, the Renaissance movement to increase the prestige of the artist led to the academy system for training artists, and today most of the people who are pursuing a career in the arts train in art schools at tertiary levels.

  4. Style (visual arts) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Style_(visual_arts)

    In critical analysis of the visual arts, the style of a work of art is typically treated as distinct from its iconography, which covers the subject and the content of the work, though for Jas Elsner this distinction is "not, of course, true in any actual example; but it has proved rhetorically extremely useful". [11]

  5. American Figurative Expressionism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Figurative...

    The Boston origins of the American movement date to a "wave of German and European-Jewish immigrants" in the 1930s and their "affinities to the contemporary German strain of figurative painting ... in artists like Otto Dix (1891–1969), Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (1880–1938), Oskar Kokoschka (1886–1980), and Emil Nolde (1867–1956), both in style and in subject matter," art historian Adam ...

  6. Wikipedia:Contents/Culture and the arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Culture_and_the_arts

    The arts are a vast subdivision of culture, composed of many creative endeavors and disciplines. It is a broader term than "art," which as a description of a field usually means only the visual arts. The arts encompasses visual arts, literary arts and the performing arts – music, theatre, dance, spoken word and film, among others.

  7. Primitivism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primitivism

    In a Tropical Forest Combat of a Tiger and a Buffalo (1908–1909), by Henri Rousseau. In the arts of the Western World, Primitivism is a mode of aesthetic idealization that means to recreate the experience of the primitive time, place, and person, either by emulation or by re-creation.

  8. Medieval art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_art

    Migration Period art describes the art of the "barbarian" Germanic and Eastern-European peoples who were on the move, and then settling within the former Roman Empire, during the Migration Period from about 300-700; the blanket term covers a wide range of ethnic or regional styles including early Anglo-Saxon art, Visigothic art, Viking art, and ...

  9. Humanist photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanist_photography

    The humanist current continued into the late 1960s and early 70s, also in the United States [34] when America came to dominate the medium, [42] with photography in academic artistic and art history programs becoming institutionalised in such programs as the Visual Studies Workshop, [43] after which attention turned to photography as a fine art ...