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Artefact

Fine arts Arte poveraArtistic revolution

Artefacts, especially documents, produced for a particular purpose or occasion and not intended for preservation; Printed material of interest for its appearance, association, design, or documentation produced in connection with art exhibitions, etc.

 


artefacts or images with symbolic meanings as a means of communication.

Artefact: Today, any work of art or craft, but originally archaeological evidence of things made by people from earlier civilizations.

"[Art is a set of] artefacts or images with symbolic meanings as a means of communication." -Steve Mithen[27] ...

It inspired the papacy to demand from Bernini a similar artefact, on an even larger scale, to complete the main decoration of the interior of St Peter's.

The long prehistoric period in Iran, is known to us mostly from excavation work carried out in a few key sites, which has led to a chronology of distinct periods, each one characterised by the development of certain types of pottery, artefacts and ...

Given the admiration for the men and artefacts of ancient Rome, the stress on individual character, the desire for fame and the penchant for summing up temperament in symbols and images, ...

The term originated in the mid-1950s at the ICA, London, in the discussions held by the INDEPENDENT GROUP concerning the artefacts of popular culture.

More than most other artefacts from the La Tene period, the torc was prey to dramatic regional variations.

The discovery of ancient artefacts at the ruins of Herculaneum and Pompeii was a big inspiration to neoclassicism. German art historian Johann J.

In 1862 Lourens visited London for the first time, where he saw and was impressed by the Elgin Marbles, as well as some ancient Egyptian artefacts.

popular culture: contemporary culture as defined by the objects, images, artefacts, literature, music, and so on of "ordinary" people.

See also: Painting, Sculpture, Movement, Expression, Roman

Fine arts Arte poveraArtistic revolution

 
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