Portal:Visual arts
From Wikisource
Works[edit]
- The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci by Leonardo da Vinci, translated by Jean Paul Richter
- "Art in the Stone Age", in Popular Science Monthly Volume 2, January 1873
- "The Physiology of Authorship", by Robert Edward Francillon in Popular Science Monthly Volume 7, May 1875
- "The Monstrous in Art", by Samuel Kneeland in Popular Science Monthly Volume 14, April 1879
- "The Pleasure of Visual Form I", by James Sully in Popular Science Monthly Volume 16, April 1880
- "The Pleasure of Visual Form II", by James Sully in Popular Science Monthly Volume 17, May 1880
- "Prehistoric Art in America", by Jean-François-Albert du Pouget in Popular Science Monthly Volume 24, April 1884
- The Metaphysics of Fine Art, 1893 by Arthur Schopenhauer, translated by Thomas Bailey Saunders
- Pulchrism: Championing Beauty as the Purpose of Art by Jesse Waugh, 2015
Neoplasticism (De Stijl)[edit]
- Neoplasticism, or De Stijl (Dutch for "The Style"), was a Dutch artistic movement founded in 1917. Proponents of De Stijl sought to express a new utopian ideal of spiritual harmony and order. They advocated pure abstraction and universality by a reduction to the essentials of form and colour; they simplified visual compositions to the vertical and horizontal directions, and used only primary colors along with black and white.— Excerpted from De Stijl on Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.