Results for ' Landscape painting, American'

979 found
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  1.  16
    Aesthetic Transcendentalism in Emerson, Peirce, and Nineteenth-Century American Landscape Painting.Nicholas Guardiano - 2016 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    This book proposes an original philosophy of nature, contributes to our understanding of two of America’s greatest philosophers, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Charles S. Peirce, and examines the philosophical expressions of the art of nineteenth-century American landscape painting.
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  2.  27
    Representing Place: Landscape Painting and Maps.Edward S. Casey - 2002 - U of Minnesota Press.
    "You are here, a map declares, but of course you are not, any more than you truly occupy the vantage point into which a landscape painting puts you. How maps and paintings figure and reconfigure space--as well as our place in it--is the subject of Edward S. Casey's study, an exploration of how we portray the world and its many places. Casey's discussion ranges widely from Northern Sung landscape painting to nineteenth-century American and British landscape painting (...)
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  3.  42
    Transcendentalist Aesthetics in Emerson, Peirce, and Nineteenth-Century American Landscape Painting.Nicholas Guardiano - unknown
    My thesis is that there is an aesthetic dimension of nature that is metaphysically significant, qualitatively pluralistic, and artistically creative, and that this accounts for the sensuous complexity of experience, as well as the possibility of discovering new qualitative features about the world and expressing them in novel forms, as exemplified in art. I call the philosophy that endorses the reality of this dimension Transcendentalist Aesthetics. The term "Transcendentalist" recalls the philosophy of New England Transcendentalism with its core in Ralph (...)
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  4.  39
    Chinese Landscape Painting in the Sui and T'ang Dynasties.Paul W. Kroll & Michael Sullivan - 1983 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 103 (4):798.
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  5.  67
    Aesthetic Transcendentalism in Emerson, Peirce, and Nineteenth-Century American Landscape Painting by Nicholas L. Guardiano.Nicholas Aaron Friesner - 2019 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 40 (2):120-123.
    As environmental concerns rightly take a greater role in the critical reevaluation of the American philosophical tradition, it behooves us to return again to the often slippery notion of “nature” to ask if it can be redeemed as not merely the canvas on which human endeavor is depicted but an active element of the diverse and distinct philosophical perspectives that make the tradition. Indeed, there is a great need to depict the potentially subversive ways that human and nature can (...)
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  6.  13
    The Birth of Landscape Painting in China.Max Loehr - 1962 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 82 (2):257.
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  7.  28
    Rebecca Bedell. The Anatomy of Nature: Geology and American Landscape Painting, 1825–1875. xiv + 186 pp., frontis., illus., bibl., index. Princeton, N.J./Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2001. $45. [REVIEW]Alfred Runte - 2002 - Isis 93 (4):744-745.
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  8. C. C. Wang: Landscape Paintings.P. W. K. & C. C. Wang - 1989 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 109 (1):160.
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  9.  30
    Symbols of Eternity: The Art of Landscape Painting in China.David Sensabaugh & Michael Sullivan - 1982 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 102 (3):578.
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  10.  51
    Painting in AmericaCharles Herbert Moore: Landscape PainterWilliam Page: The American Titian.Paul Mills, E. P. Richardson, Frank Jewett Mather & Joshua C. Taylor - 1959 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 18 (1):134.
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  11.  27
    Railroads and the American Industrial Landscape: Ted Rose Paintings and Photographs.Curtis Carter - unknown
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  12.  62
    The Presentness of Painting: Adrian Stokes as Aesthetician.David Carrier - 1986 - Critical Inquiry 12 (4):753-768.
    Adrian Stokes , long admired by a small, highly distinguished, mostly English circle, was the natural successor to Pater and Ruskin. But though his place in cultural history is important, what is of particular interest now to art historians is his theory of the presentness of painting, a theory which offers a challenging critique of the practice of artwriting. From Vasari to the present, the most familiar rhetorical strategy of the art historian is the narrative of “the form, prophet-saviour-apostles,” in (...)
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  13.  50
    Grand manner aesthetics in landscape: From canvas to celluloid.Emily E. Auger - 2009 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 43 (4):pp. 96-107.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Grand Manner Aesthetics in LandscapeFrom Canvas to CelluloidEmily E. Auger (bio)Popular films about the environment and related human and material resource issues, particularly colonialism, tend to enhance the appeal of their subject matter by aesthetically transforming it according to audience preferences and tastes. Such mediating strategies are perhaps too familiar to contemporary artists of all types who would prefer to work beyond the limits of what their readers or (...)
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  14.  28
    Brian Black. Petrolia: The Landscape of America's First Oil Boom. xiv + 236 pp., illus., tables, app., index.Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000. $42.50. [REVIEW]Paul Lucier - 2002 - Isis 93 (1):151-152.
    The history of the modern oil industry begins along Oil Creek in August 1859 when Edwin Drake and Billy Smith found petroleum at the bottom of their well. Over the next decade and a half, Petrolia, the name given to this region in northwest Pennsylvania, produced more oil than anywhere else on earth. In the process, Petrolia became a massive industrial site and a vivid cultural image. Understanding this profound dual transformation is the object of Brian Black's sensitively drawn portrait (...)
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  15.  8
    Home Front: American Flags From Across the United States.Peter Elliott - 2002 - Lily Bay Press.
    After the horrendous events of September 2001, photographer Peter Elliott loaded his cameras and some clothes into his car and began a cross-country journey, looking for the flag. He found it everywhere: painted on a retaining wall in Tacoma, flying over a trailer in Bozeman, carried billowing by a lone man walking a sandbar in Florida, made of plastic cups stuck in a fence in Mississippi, draped over a fake horse in Salinas, immaculately hanging from a Beverly Hills mansion's window. (...)
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  16.  78
    Walking with Odysseus: The Portico Frame of the Odyssey Landscapes.Timothy M. O'Sullivan - 2007 - American Journal of Philology 128 (4):497-532.
    This article examines the cultural and artistic context of one of the most famous Roman frescoes, the Odyssey Landscapes. It argues that the painting's fictive portico frame would have evoked in the Roman viewer the experience of the ambulatio, the act of walking for leisure and contemplation that came to be an essential element of a properly Hellenized otium. The painted portico thus puts the viewers in the proper frame of mind to appreciate the intellectual associations of the painting as (...)
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  17.  73
    Comments on Marilyn Fischer’s “Addams on Cultural Pluralism, European Immigrants, and African Americans”.V. Denise James - 2014 - The Pluralist 9 (3):66-71.
    marilyn fischer’s careful historiographical treatment of the ideas and life of Jane Addams deepens our understanding of Addams’s important work as a thinker and practitioner. The paper paints a picture of the ideological and sociological landscape of Addams’s world, paying close attention to the relationships Addams had with other prominent thinkers of the day, such as the African Americans W. E. B. Du Bois and Ida B. Wells-Barnett, as well as the pragmatist Josiah Royce. Fischer seems to have doubled (...)
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  18.  33
    A Philosophy of Gardens (review).Ronald Moore - 2007 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 41 (3):120-124.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:A Philosophy of GardensRonald MooreA Philosophy of Gardens, by David E. Cooper. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006, 173 pp., $35.00 cloth.It is very likely that more people devote more aesthetic attention to gardens and their contents than they do to any other set of objects in the art world or in natural environments. Despite this, however, there has been very little philosophical writing devoted specifically to the aesthetics (...)
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  19.  20
    Landscape Painting in the Tang Dynasty: On “Changes” and the Historical Constitution of the Concept.Xiaomeng Ning - 2022 - Culture and Dialogue 10 (2):158-179.
    Focusing on the “bian” (changes) of Chinese landscape painting in the Tang Dynasty, this essay seeks to expound a breakthrough in the study of painting in the dynasty. Such a study was once difficult to carry out in the form of pictorial and stylistic analyses due to the lack of physical works. By showing that the prevailing landscape paintings of two representative painters Wu Daozi and Li Sixun were at the time most likely to be dominated by the (...)
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  20. The Poetry of Nachoem M. Wijnberg.Vincent W. J. Van Gerven Oei - 2011 - Continent 1 (2):129-135.
    continent. 1.2 (2011): 129-135. Introduction Vincent W.J. van Gerven Oei Successions of words are so agreeable. It is about this. —Gertrude Stein Nachoem Wijnberg (1961) is a Dutch poet and novelist. He also a professor of cultural entrepreneurship and management at the Business School of the University of Amsterdam. Since 1989, he has published thirteen volumes of poetry and four novels, which, in my opinion mark a high point in Dutch contemporary literature. His novels even more than his poetry are (...)
     
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  21.  90
    Wetland gloom and wetland glory.J. Baird Callicott - 2003 - Philosophy and Geography 6 (1):33 – 45.
    Mountains were once no less feared and loathed than wetlands. Mountains, however, were aesthetically rehabilitated (in part by modern landscape painting), but wetlands remain aesthetically reviled. The three giants of American environmental philosophy--Thoreau, Muir, and Leopold--all expressed aesthetic appreciation of wetlands. For Thoreau and Muir--both of whom were a bit misanthropic and contrarian--the beauty of wetlands was largely a matter of their floral interest and wildness (freedom from human inhabitation and economic exploitation). Leopold's aesthetic appreciation of wetlands was (...)
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  22.  13
    Western Approaches to Chinese Landscape Painting.Kiraz Perinçek Karavit - 2017 - Diogenes 64 (3-4):111-120.
    This paper considers Western approaches at different time periods to Chinese landscape painting, with a focus on the eleventh century Chinese painter Guo Xi’s Essay on landscape painting. First, brief information will be given about the artist and his work. A brief scrutiny of a review published in 1936 will show how the Essay became influential in the West. Later publications, which appeared in 1969, 2007, and 2009 respectively, will show some changes in Western approaches to Chinese (...) painting, revealing the main rhetoric of their times along with changing debates and approaches within Western art history. (shrink)
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  23. Exploring the Work of Edward S. Casey: Giving Voice to Place, Memory, and Imagination.Donald A. Landes & Azucena Cruz-Pierre (eds.) - 2013 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    From his initial writings on imagination and memory, to his recent studies of the glance and the edge, the work of American philosopher Edward S. Casey continues to shape 20th-century philosophy. In this first study dedicated to his rich body of work, distinguished scholars from philosophy, urban studies and architecture as well as artists engage with Casey's research and ideas to explore the key themes and variations of his contribution to the humanities. -/- Structured into three major parts, the (...)
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  24.  21
    Chinese landscape painting and the art of living.Marcello Ghilardi - 2021 - Studi di Estetica 21.
    This article deals with the Chinese ink painting tradition, as a paradigm in which art and life are coupled and intertwined. In fact, in Chinese classical aesthetics, art and life do not produce a dramatic tension, but are inscribed in a common process of naturalness or spontaneity. The painter has to learn how the breath, or vital energy, that flows in every single image-phenomenon, can be enlivened by the brush strokes. Moreover, the paper builds a dialogue between the European and (...)
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  25.  29
    Chinese Landscape Painting and the Study of Being: An Imagined Encounter Between Martin Heidegger and Xia Gui.Tyson E. Lewis & Li Xu - 2020 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 39 (3):309-320.
    In this paper, we pose a speculative encounter between Heidegger and the Chinese Song Dynasty landscape painter Xia Gui. Our intention is to reassess Heidegger’s theory of the fourfold. By placing the concept in a cross-cultural context, we argue that Heidegger was essentially correct in that the world is structured as a fold between interrelated elements. At the same time, we challenge the quantity and quality of the folded elements. If one turns to the work of Xia Gui in (...)
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  26.  3
    Communicative consciousness and principles of environmental design in the experimental project "Stone. Inversion. Vessel".Потехина А.Е Чан С. - 2024 - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal) 11.
    The article is based on the analysis and summary of the design process of the work of the Chinese author "Stone. Inversion. Vessel". It examines three key aspects of the development of environmental design. Firstly, it is a combination of modern technologies with aesthetic representations of traditional Chinese culture. Through the study of the project, it is demonstrated how traditional Chinese art can be combined with modern technologies when creating a design object. Secondly, the project highlights the features of the (...)
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  27.  33
    Wilderness in Ancient Chinese Landscape Painting.LuYang Chen & Ziao Chen - 2020 - Environmental Ethics 42 (3):253-266.
    Chinese painting is dominated by landscape painting, which is a unique form of artistic expression for Chinese people, while landscape generally refers to nature. Wild natural landscape can be called “wilderness,” which embodies the vitality and upward vitality of nature, and also contains unique cultural characteristics. “Wilderness” is the most important “original ecological” environment in the natural environment. Its existence has natural, ecological, and aesthetic significance. It is nature in its primitiveness and ecology in its wildness; the (...)
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  28.  66
    Picturesque Landscape Painting and Environmental Aesthetics.Roger Paden - 2015 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 49 (2):39-61.
    Many environmental aestheticians—most prominently, Allen Carlson—have drawn a distinction between “arts-based” and “nature-based” approaches to the aesthetics of nature and have argued that the widespread practice of using arts-based theories and categories to understand the aesthetics of nature is a mistake. This practice, they argue, should be rejected and replaced by a practice in which an aesthetics of nature based on a clear, scientifically grounded understanding of the environment is used to appraise nature. In this paper, I will challenge important (...)
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  29.  49
    Bergsonian Vitalism and the Landscape Paintings of Monet and Cézanne: Indivisible Consciousness and Endlessly Divisible Matter.Manfred Milz - 2011 - The European Legacy 16 (7):883-898.
    From around the year 1900, the ideal of the equivalence of art (form) and nature (animated matter) was challenged when two concurring principles—homogeneous duration and heterogeneous moments—started to manifest themselves in the discrete attempts of artists to integrate being into art. As creative approaches to the perception and representation of nature, these diametrically opposed configurations find expression in the writings of the French philosopher Henri Bergson, mainly between 1889 and 1907. The notion of living forms in permanent transition, informed by (...)
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  30. Classical chinese landscape painting and the aesthetic appreciation of nature.Matthew Turner - 2009 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 43 (1):pp. 106-121.
  31.  19
    Representing Place: Landscape Painting and Maps, by Edward S. Casey.Nader El-Bizri - 2004 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 35 (2):223-224.
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  32.  43
    Landscape Painting Effects in Pope's Homer.David Ridgley Clark - 1963 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 22 (1):25-28.
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  33. Some reflections on japanese landscape painting.Geraldine Carr - 1936 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 17 (1):32.
     
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  34.  17
    Introduction to Figure and Landscapes : Paintings and Drawings by Cornelia Foss.Curtis Carter - unknown
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  35.  21
    Bilingual and intersemiotic representation of distance(s) in Chinese landscape painting: from yi (‘meaning’) to yi.Chunshen Zhu & Chengzhi Jiang - 2018 - Semiotica 2018 (225):293-311.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Semiotica Jahrgang: 2018 Heft: 225 Seiten: 293-311.
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  36.  40
    The Peircean order of signification and its encoding system in Chinese landscape painting.Lian Duan - 2018 - Semiotica 2018 (221):199-218.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Semiotica Jahrgang: 2018 Heft: 221 Seiten: 199-218.
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  37. "British Landscape Painting of the Eighteenth Century": Luke Herrmann. [REVIEW]David Mannings - 1974 - British Journal of Aesthetics 14 (3):275.
     
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  38.  14
    Ireland and the picturesque: design, landscape painting and tourism 1700-1840.Finola O'Kane - 2013 - London: Published for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art, Yale University Press.
    Adorning the Country with Ruins -- The Western Baroque Landscape -- The Irish Tours -- Designing Picturesque Ireland -- Epilogue: Studies in a Point of View.
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  39. The Sign System in Chinese Landscape Paintings.Cliff G. McMahon - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 37 (1):64.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 37.1 (2003) 64-76 [Access article in PDF] The Sign System in Chinese Landscape Paintings Cliff G. Mcmahon Paintings emerge from a culture field and must be interpreted in relation to the net of culture. A given culture will be implicated by the sign system used by the painter. Everyone agrees that in Chinese landscape paintings, the most important cultural bond is to (...)
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  40.  23
    The role of the "plum blossom" in the development of traditional landscape painting in China.Sa Lu - 2022 - Философия И Культура 7:139-147.
    The article analyzes the works of Chinese artists of various historical eras who used a stylistic and thematic direction with the image of a plum blossom. The artists' appeal to images of nature to convey feelings and experiences contributed to the emergence of this image and its formation as a symbol of steadfastness and inflexibility of character. Thus, the subject of the proposed study is Chinese painting, the object is the formation of such a common motif as a plum blossom. (...)
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  41.  15
    Bodily Contemplation: On the Question of the Truth of the Perception of Physical Objects in Chinese Landscape Painting.Yiqun Wang - 2021 - RUDN Journal of Philosophy 25 (2):298-310.
    This article analyzes the views of representatives of the scientific community on ancient Chinese landscape painting, emphasis is mainly placed on views that concern the spiritual qualities of landscape painting, as well as rethinking concepts that ignore the significance of sensual perception. Landscape painting is usually considered as a spiritual work of Taoism: landscape painting developed from Taoist thought, Taoist philosophy determined the identity of the artistic style and the inherent spirit of landscape painting. Moreover, (...)
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  42.  38
    Aesthetic Experiences Across Cultures: Neural Correlates When Viewing Traditional Eastern or Western Landscape Paintings.Taoxi Yang, Sarita Silveira, Arusu Formuli, Marco Paolini, Ernst Pöppel, Tilmann Sander & Yan Bao - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  43. The Cosmological Aesthetic Worldview in Van Gogh’s Late Landscape Paintings.Erman Kaplama - 2016 - Cosmos and History 12 (1):218-237.
    Some artworks are called sublime because of their capacity to move human imagination in a different way than the experience of beauty. The following discussion explores how Van Gogh’s The Starry Night along with some of his other late landscape paintings accomplish this peculiar movement of imagination thus qualifying as sublime artworks. These artworks constitute examples of the higher aesthetic principles and must be judged according to the cosmological-aesthetic criteria for they manage to generate a transition between ethos and (...)
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  44.  18
    Meaning and Evolution of the Image of Trees in Chinese Landscape Paintings.Zheng Wen - 2011 - Journal of Aesthetic Education (Misc) 4:020.
  45.  41
    Art, The Ethical Self, and Political Eremitism: Fujiwara Seika’s Essay on Landscape Painting.John Allen Tucker - 2004 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 31 (1):47-63.
  46.  11
    The Aesthetics of Qiyun and Genius: Spirit Consonance in Chinese Landscape Painting and Some Kantian Echoes.Xiaoyan Hu - 2021 - Lexington Books.
    This book discusses qiyun aesthetics in Chinese painting formulated by leading sixth to fourteenth-century intellectual elite. In light of Kant’s account of artistic genius, it considers the role of the mind in creating a painting replete with qiyun, thereby both demystifying qiyun aesthetics and illuminating some limitations in Kant’s aesthetics.
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  47.  25
    The Ideological Foundations of Chinese Traditional Landscape Painting Art.Лу С - 2022 - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal) 10:144-157.
    The article analyzes the ideological foundations of the emergence and evolution of landscape in Chinese painting as an independent genre from the III to the XVIII century, before the rapid integration of Western European artistic traditions. Landscape painting is considered as an expression of the state of mind of Chinese artists, the prevailing philosophical ideas, in particular Taoism, the embodiment of literary images associated with the natural origin. Despite the attention of the scientific community to the development of (...)
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  48.  25
    The Birth of Landscape Painting in China.Sherman E. Lee - 1963 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 21 (3):351-353.
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  49.  44
    Unless there are Hills and Valleys in One’s Breast: On the Inward Life of Chinese Landscape Painting.Ben-Ami Scharfstein - 1976 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 3 (4):317-354.
  50.  58
    Mythological Landscape Painting. [REVIEW]A. W. Lawrence - 1946 - The Classical Review 60 (2):90-91.
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