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What Was Abstract Art?

Critical Inquiry 29 (1):1-24 (2002)

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  1. Artisans, Artists and Hegel's History of Art.Allen Speight - 2013 - Hegel Bulletin 34 (2):203-222.
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  • Love, Truth, Orthodoxy, Reticence; or, What Edgar Wind Didn’t See in Botticelli’s Primavera.Rebecca Zorach - 2007 - Critical Inquiry 34 (1):190.
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  • Hegel, Danto, Adorno, and the end and after of art.Owen Hulatt - 2016 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 24 (4):742-763.
    ABSTRACTIn this paper, I consider Adorno's claim that art is at, or is coming to, an ‘end’. I consider Adorno's account in relation to the work of Arthur Danto and G. W. F. Hegel. I employ Danto's account, together with two distinct interpretive glosses of Hegel's account, as heuristic devices in order to clarify both Adorno's own arguments, and the context within which they are being advanced. I argue that while Danto and Hegel see art as coming to an end (...)
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  • Robert B. Pippin After the Beautiful: Hegel and the Philosophy of Pictorial Modernism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2014. ISBN 978-0-226-07949-3 . ISBN 978-0-226-32558-3 . Pp. 159. £21. [REVIEW]Julia Peters - 2018 - Hegel Bulletin 39 (1):169-173.
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  • (1 other version)Must it Be Abstract? Hegel, Pippin, and Clark.Martin Donougho - 2007 - Hegel Bulletin 28 (1-2):87-106.
    By comparison with other parts of his philosophy, Hegel'sAestheticshas been slighted by Anglo-American philosophers. All the more welcome then are two recent essays by Robert Pippin, which promise to go well beyond received notions. WithHegel's Idealism, Pippin published what is by any measure one of the most original of recent treatments. Shortly thereafter came a penetrating study of the idea of the modern, which allotted a central role to artistic modernism, and since then he has published various essays actively engaging (...)
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  • Nothing Human is Foreign to Me.Nathan Ross - 2009 - Philosophy Today 53 (4):337-346.
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  • On the Hegelian roots of Lukács’s theory of realism.Vadim Shneyder - 2013 - Studies in East European Thought 65 (3-4):259-269.
    This article attempts two things. First, it aims to reassess the literary criticism that Georg Lukács produced in the 1930s while he was living in the Soviet Union in light of his earlier, and much-esteemed, The theory of the novel. Second, in order to carry out this reassessment, it examines the place of Hegelian aesthetics in Lukács’s theorization of realism in the 1930s criticism, in relation both to contemporary Soviet writings on the subject and to his own earlier, ostensibly Hegelian (...)
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