Results for 'Art in music'

980 found
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  1.  13
    Convergences in music and art: a bibliographic study.George C. Schuetze - 2005 - Warren, Mich.: Harmonie Park Press.
    Artists inspired by music and musicians -- Composers inspired by art and artists -- Twin talents : artist-musicians and musician-artists -- Musicians pose for the artists : a history of portrait iconography.
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  2.  24
    Philosophy of Art in the Thinking of Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy.Lejla Mušić - 2007 - Filozofska Istrazivanja 27 (1):213-234.
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  3.  17
    The aesthetics of imperfection in music and the arts: spontaneity, flaws and the unfinished.Andy Hamilton & Lara Pearson (eds.) - 2020 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    The aesthetics of imperfection emphasises spontaneity, disruption, process and energy over formal perfection and is often ignored by many commentators or seen only in improvisation. This comprehensive collection is the first time imperfection has been explored across all kinds of musical performance, whether improvisation or interpretation of compositions. Covering music, visual art, dance, comedy, architecture and design, it addresses the meaning, experience, and value of improvisation and spontaneous creation across different artistic media. A distinctive feature of the volume is (...)
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  4.  10
    Making sense in music: an enquiry into the formal pragmatics of art.Jozef Johannes Petrus Maria Kunst - 1978 - Ghent, Belgium: Communication & Cognition.
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  5. (1 other version)Style in musical art.C. Hubert H. Parry - 1911 - St. Clair Shores, Mich.: Scholarly Press.
     
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  6. Romanticism in Art and Music.Ernst Mannheimer - 1949 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 30 (1):45.
     
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  7.  15
    Tragedy in the Art of Music.Leo Schrade - 1966 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 25 (2):215-215.
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  8. Music and the Plastic Arts in Conquest of Time and Space.Tadeusx Kowzan & Robert Blohm - 1971 - Diogenes 19 (73):1-20.
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  9. The Aesthetic Self. The Importance of Aesthetic Taste in Music and Art for Our Perceived Identity.Joerg Fingerhut, Javier Gomez-Lavin, Claudia Winklmayr & Jesse J. Prinz - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 11:577703.
    To what extent do aesthetic taste and our interest in the arts constitute who we are? In this paper, we present a series of empirical findings that suggest anAesthetic Self Effectsupporting the claim that our aesthetic engagements are a central component of our identity. Counterfactual changes in aesthetic preferences, for example, moving from liking classical music to liking pop, are perceived as altering us as a person. The Aesthetic Self Effect is as strong as the impact of moral changes, (...)
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  10.  59
    Musical art in early confucian philosophy.Siu-Chi Huang - 1963 - Philosophy East and West 13 (1):49-60.
  11. Sound and sense in musical phrases : from the art of the keyboard to the question of phrase and melody.Michael Levinas - 2019 - In Kathleen Coessens (ed.), Sensorial aesthetics in music practices. Leuven: Leuven University Press.
     
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  12.  57
    Untwisting the serpent: modernism in music, literature, and other arts.Daniel Albright - 2000 - Chicago, Ill: University of Chicago Press.
    From its dissonant musics to its surrealist spectacles (the urinal is a violin!), Modernist art often seems to give more frustration than pleasure to its audience. In Untwisting the Serpent, Daniel Albright shows that this perception arises partly because we usually consider each art form in isolation, even though many of the most important artistic experiments of the Modernists were collaborations involving several media--Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring is a ballet, Gertrude Stein's Four Saints in Three Acts is an (...)
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  13.  17
    Judaism in Music and Other Essays.Richard Wagner - 1995 - U of Nebraska Press.
    Musical genius, polemicist, explosive personality-that was the nineteenth-century German composer Richard Wagner, who paid as much attention to his reputation as to his genius. Often maddening, and sometimes called mad, Wagner wrote with the same intensity that characterized his music. The letters and essays collected in Judaism in Music and Other Essays were published during the 1850s and 1860s, the period when he was chiefly occupied with the creation of The Ring of the Nibelung. Highlighting this collection is (...)
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  14.  42
    The problem of meaning in music and the other arts.Theodore M. Greene - 1947 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 5 (4):308-313.
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  15. The Expression of Feeling in Music in Art and Philosophy: Mutual Connections and Inspirations.P. Mew - 1988 - Dialectics and Humanism 15 (1-2):205-217.
     
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  16. Messages in Art and Music.Małgorzata A. Szyszkowska - 2010 - Dialogue and Universalism 20 (3-4):97-109.
    In his article untitled Messages in Art Jerrold Levinson discusses the idea of a message behind a work of art. He argues that despite certain disclaimers put forward by artists it is „hard to deny that artworks (...) very often do have messages, and far from inexpressible ones”. From given examples it would seem that Levinson assumes that musical work just as other artworks sometimes generate messages and that in order for a work of music to be successful in (...)
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  17.  10
    Experimental encounters in music and beyond.Kathleen Coessens (ed.) - 2017 - Leuven (Belgium): Leuven University Press.
    Experimental encounters in music and beyond opens a necessary dialogue on experimental practices in the arts and negotiates their place in contemporary society. Going beyond the music-historical usage of the term "experimental", this book reimagines experimentation as an open working definition encompassing multiple forms of artistic attitudes and processes. The texts, images, and sounds offer multiple traces, faces, and spaces, revealing what experimentalism in music and the wider arts entails today. With perspectives from a range of disciplines (...)
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  18.  6
    The Arts in Mind: Pioneering Texts of a Coterie of British Men of Letters.Ruth Katz & Ruth HaCohen - 2003 - Transaction.
    Amajor shift in critical attitudes toward the arts took place in the eighteenth century. The fine arts were now looked upon as a group, divorced from the sciences and governed by their own rules. The century abounded with treatises that sought to establish the overriding principles that differentiate art from other walks of life as well as the principles that differentiate them from each other. This burst of scholarly activity resulted in the incorporation of aesthetics among the classic branches of (...)
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  19.  11
    Imitation and Expression. Inauthenticity in music according to Giacinto Scelsi.Quentin Gailhac - 2024 - Aisthesis: Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 16 (2):99-107.
    This article focuses on the consequences of a little-known work by Giacinto Scelsi, Rotativa (1930), for the concepts of imitation and expression in music. Critical of the mechanization of art peculiar to the Futurism of his time, the Italian composer allows us to think, against the pseudo-photographic reproduction of objects by sound forms, the limits of musical imitation by revealing, from the historicity of his own piece, the inauthenticity of a certain modernism.
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  20.  22
    Cultivating Our “Musical Bumps” while Fighting the “Progress of Popery”: The Rise of Art and Music Education in the Mid-Nineteenth Century United States.Margaret A. Nash - 2013 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 49 (3):193-212.
    This article seeks to understand the social and cultural factors that led to the introduction of music and art education in public schools, a process that began in the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Based on archival material, including institutional catalogues, school board reports, magazine articles, and tracts, I demonstrate that music and art held varied meanings in this period, one of the most important of which was denominational competition. One major element in a nationwide promotion of (...)
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  21. Meaning in music and information theory.Leonard B. Meyer - 1957 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 15 (4):412-424.
  22.  11
    The occult arts of music: an esoteric survey from Pythagoras to pop culture.David Huckvale - 2013 - Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers.
    Music has often attempted to express mystical states of mind, cosmic harmony, the demonic and the divine. This wide-ranging survey explores how such film music works and uncovers its origins in Pythagorean and Platonic ideas about the divine order of the universe and its essentially numerical/musical nature.
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  23.  11
    Art in the life of mathematicians.Anna Kepes Szemeredi & Michael Francis Atiyah (eds.) - 2015 - Providence, Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society.
    Why are mathematicians drawn to art? How do they perceive it? What motivates them to pursue excellence in music or painting? Do they view their art as a conveyance for their mathematics or an escape from it? What are the similarities between mathematical talent and creativity and their artistic equivalents? What are the differences? Can a theatrical play or a visual image capture the beauty and excitement of mathematics? Some of the world's top mathematicians are also accomplished artists: musicians, (...)
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  24. Representation in Music.Roger Scruton - 1976 - Philosophy 51 (197):273 - 287.
    Music may be used to express emotion, to heighten a drama, to emphasize the meaning of a ceremony; but it is nevertheless an abstract art, with no power to represent the world. Representation, as I understand it, is a property that does not belong to music.
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  25.  11
    Artistic research in music: Discipline and resistance: Artists and researchers at the Orpheus Institute.Jonathan Impett (ed.) - 2016 - Leuven: Leuven UP.
    The Orpheus Institute celebrates 20 years of artistic research in music Artistic research has come of age, and with it the Orpheus Institute. Founded twenty years ago, the Institute’s purpose from the start has been to pursue research through the practice of musicians. The Orpheus Institute is of the same generation as the field it was established to explore. Like many young adults, artistic research and its structures are still constructing their identity within a wider world. How have they (...)
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  26.  30
    6. Silence in the Temporal Arts I: Music.Haig Khatchadourian - 2015 - In How to Do Things with Silence. Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 65-79.
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  27. Adab and embodiment in the process of performance : Islamic musical arts in Indonesia.Anne K. Rasmussen - 2019 - In Robert Thomas Rozehnal & Thomas B. Pepinsky (eds.), Piety, politics, and everyday ethics in Southeast Asian Islam: beautiful behavior. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
  28.  17
    Arts in Education: A Systematic Review of Competency Outcomes in Quasi-Experimental and Experimental Studies.Verena Schneider & Anette Rohmann - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Arts education in schools frequently experiences the pressure of being validated by demonstrating quantitative impact on academic outcomes. The quantitative evidence to date has been characterized by the application of largely correlational designs and frequently applies a narrow focus on instrumental outcomes such as academically relevant competencies. The present review aims to summarize quantitative evidence from quasi-experimental and experimental studies with pre-test post-test designs on the effects of school-based arts education on a broader range of competency outcomes, including intra- and (...)
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  29. Feminist Imperative(s) in Music and Education: Philosophy, theory, or what matters most.Elizabeth Gould - 2011 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (2):130-147.
    A historically feminized profession, education in North America remains remarkably unaffected by feminism, with the notable exception of pedagogy and its impact on curriculum. The purpose of this paper is to describe characteristics of feminism that render it particularly useful and appropriate for developing potentialities in education and music education. As a set of flexible methodological tools informed by Gilles Deleuze's notions of philosophy and art, I argue feminism may contribute to education's becoming more efficacious, reflexive, and reflective of (...)
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  30.  52
    Emotions and Understanding in Music.Vojtěch Kolman - 2014 - Idealistic Studies 44 (1):83-100.
    The aim of this paper is to sketch a theory of musical experience which takes the empirical research seriously without abandoning or neglecting music’s transcendental features. The tension between the recent empirical approach, as represented particularly by Huron’s ITPRA theory, and the transcendental fact that music as an instance of art is something one can understand and, moreover, can understand oneself through, should be overcome by elaborating on the concept of emotion and the role it can play in (...)
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  31.  24
    The postmodern in music.James Wierzbicki - 2011 - Semiotica 2011 (183):283-308.
    “Postmodern” is an elusive concept that embraces a wide range of critical theories and attitudes. To borrow the assessment that the American poet Walt Whitman offered of himself, the concept is large and contains multitudes, various aspects of which often seem to be at odds with one another. Postmodern art likewise contains multitudes; indeed, it would seem that one of postmodern art's chief characteristics is the comfortable integration of apparently contradictory stimuli that, importantly, are sited less in the “work” itself (...)
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  32.  1
    Time, Risk and Control in Musical Performance Practices.Michela Garda - 2025 - Philosophies 10 (1):20.
    Time, control and risk are interrelated concepts that provide a valuable framework for exploring the connections among various performative practices and their cultural functions. By referencing sports, circus arts, and musical performance, this article examines the similarities and differences between musical reproductive performance and improvisation. It focuses on the concept of transformational processes through analogies.
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  33.  23
    Variety Vocal Art in the Context of Integration into Society of the Future.Nataliya Drozhzhina, Olena Yeroshenko, Serhii Davydov, Vasyl Shchepakin, Halyna Breslavets & Viktoriia Osypenko - 2022 - Postmodern Openings 13 (4):01-13.
    The urgency of the research is determined by the intensive development of new technologies as prospects for further development of society. Art accumulates intellectual, spiritual, material, and value heritage of previous epochs and determines the perspective features of the future. Vocal art is thereby one of the manifestations of individual ideological rethinking. Variety as a socio-cultural phenomenon combines different styles of music, genres, types, and aspects of professional music and vocal performance, which is important for the research in (...)
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  34.  2
    Daniel Samoilovich. Estéticas del error || Tiago Martins et al. (eds.). Artificial Intelligence in Music, Sound, Art and Design. [REVIEW]Mauro Sarquis & Gisela Fabbian - 2024 - Boletín de Estética 69:83-89.
    Daniel Samoilovich. Estéticas del error. Apuntes sobre arte y poesía. Buenos Aires: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 2024, 315 páginas. Tiago Martins, Nereida Rodríguez-Fernández y Sérgio M. Rebelo (eds.). Artificial Intelligence in Music, Sound, Art and Design. Cham: Springer, 2022, 416 páginas.
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  35.  60
    Problems of structure in some relations between the visual arts and music.Wolfgang Stechow - 1953 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 11 (4):324-333.
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  36.  21
    Postmodernism in music.Kenneth Gloag - 2012 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Postmodernism is a term that has been used extensively to describe general trends and specific works in many different cultural contexts, including literature, cinema, architecture and the visual arts. This introduction clarifies the term and explores its relevance for music through discussion of specific musical examples from the 1950s to the present day, providing an engagement between theory and practice. Overall, this book equips students with a thorough understanding of this complex but important topic in music studies. It: (...)
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  37.  71
    Emotions in music (a postscript).Alan Goldman - 1995 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 53 (1):59-69.
  38.  31
    Susanne Langer's Concept of Secondary Illusion in Music and Art.Mary J. Reichling - 1995 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 29 (4):39.
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  39. Four Theories of Inversion in Art and Music.John Dilworth - 2002 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 40 (1):1-19.
    Issues about the nature and ontology of works of art play a central part in contemporary aesthetics. But such issues are complicated by the fact that there seem to be two fundamentally different kinds of artworks. First, a visual artwork such as a picture or drawing seems to be closely identified with a particular physical object, in that even an exact copy of it does not count as being genuinely the same work of art. Nelson Goodman describes such works as (...)
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  40. Visual Music: Synaesthesia in Art and Music since 1900.Thomas Adajian - 2006 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 64 (4):488-489.
  41.  8
    Eye hEar the visual in music.Simon Shaw-Miller - 2013 - Burlington, VT: Ashgate.
    'Eye hEar The Visual in Music' employs the concept of the visual in proximate relation to music, producing a tension: 'is it not the case that there is a gulf between painting and music, between the visible and the audible? One is full of colour and light yet silent; one is invisible and marvellously noisy.' Such a belief, this book argues, betrays an ideological constraint on music, desiccating it to sound, and art to vision. The starting (...)
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  42.  59
    The Recognition of Emotions in Music and Landscapes: Extending Contour Theory.Marta Benenti & Cristina Meini - 2018 - Philosophia 46 (3):647-664.
    While inanimate objects can neither experience nor express emotions, in principle they can be expressive of emotions. In particular, music is a paradigmatic example of something expressive of emotions that surely cannot feel anything at all. The Contour theory accounts for music expressiveness in terms of those resemblances that hold between its external and perceivable properties and the typical contour of human emotional behavior. Provided that some critical aspects are emended – notably, the stress on the perception of (...)
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  43.  16
    Music of the spheres and the dance of death: studies in musical iconology.Kathi Meyer-Baer - 1970 - New York: Da Capo Press.
    The roots and evolution of two concepts usually thought to be Western in origin-musica mundana (the music of the spheres) and musica humana (music's relation to the human soul)-are explored. Beginning with a study of the early creeds of the Near East, Professor Meyer-Baer then traces their development in the works of Plato and the Gnostics, and in the art and literature of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Previous studies of symbolism in music have tended to (...)
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  44. Music and technology. Virtuality and metadesign : Sound art in the age of connectivity.Laura Ahonen - 2006 - In Erkki Pekkilä, David Neumeyer & Richard Littlefield (eds.), Music, meaning and media. Helsinki: University of Helsinki.
     
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  45.  31
    Epic and Tragic Music: The Union of the Arts in the Eighteenth Century.Joshua Billings - 2011 - Journal of the History of Ideas 72 (1):99-117.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Epic and Tragic Music: The Union of the Arts in the Eighteenth CenturyJoshua BillingsI. The Union of the Arts in WeimarAround 1800 in Weimar, thought on Greek tragedy crystallized around the union of speech, music, and gesture—what Wagner would later call the Gesamtkunstwerk. Friedrich Schiller and Johann Gottfried Herder both found something lacking in modern spoken theater in comparison with ancient tragedy’s synthesis of the arts. Schiller’s (...)
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  46.  60
    The element of motion in baroque art and music.William Fleming - 1946 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 5 (2):121-128.
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  47.  42
    Metaphor in music.Steven C. Krantz - 1987 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 45 (4):351-360.
  48.  6
    Tracking Musical Voices in Bach's The Art of the Fugue: Timbral Heterogeneity Differentially Affects Younger Normal-Hearing Listeners and Older Hearing-Aid Users.Kai Siedenburg, Kirsten Goldmann & Steven van de Par - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Auditory scene analysis is an elementary aspect of music perception, yet only little research has scrutinized auditory scene analysis under realistic musical conditions with diverse samples of listeners. This study probed the ability of younger normal-hearing listeners and older hearing-aid users in tracking individual musical voices or lines in JS Bach's The Art of the Fugue. Five-second excerpts with homogeneous or heterogenous instrumentation of 2–4 musical voices were presented from spatially separated loudspeakers and preceded by a short cue for (...)
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  49.  31
    Confucian Music Aesthetics and Music Art of Ancient Traditional Religion in China.Ji Huihui - 2023 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 15 (3):347-362.
    China's traditional religious music is deeply rooted in the folk life and labor. Studying the influence of Confucian music aesthetics on ancient religious music and the establishment of modern music aesthetics has an important influence and the significance of learning from it. Studying the music aesthetics of Confucianism in the pre-Qin period can scientifically inherit and carry forward the traditional ritual and music civilization, combine the essence of China's traditional religious music aesthetics with (...)
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  50. Beauty in music: conflicting views in the modern age.Alicja Jarzębska - 2025 - New York: Peter Lang.
    This book is interdisciplinary in nature and presents the dispute 'around beauty' in art of the last century. It is a synthesis of artistic phenomena and the aesthetic attitudes of composers, taking into account the ideological and social context of music written in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The proposed historiographical structure is based on the assumption that diverse artistic phenomena and aesthetic attitudes can be interpreted in relation to the idea of beauty, which in the twentieth century was (...)
     
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