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3,717 results for "Rajaraja I" — page 14 of 186
U_5_15 — Public Monuments and Memorials: Memory, Power, and Iconoclasm
Public monuments and memorials are among the most politically charged forms of art — objects placed in shared civic space to shape collective memory, assert values, and project power. From the ancient world's triumphal a
U_5_28 — Hierophany: Sacred Manifestation in Architecture, Landscape, and Ritual
Hierophany — a term coined by Mircea Eliade in The Sacred and the Profane (1957) — denotes any manifestation of the sacred in ordinary reality: a stone, a tree, a building, a moment of light. Unlike theophany (appearance
U_5_03 — Graffiti & Subversive Art: Pompeii to Street Art
Graffiti — unsanctioned inscriptions on public surfaces — is among humanity's oldest and most persistent forms of expression, from the 11,000+ inscriptions preserved at Pompeii (79 CE volcanic burial) to modern street ar
U_5_08 — Cultural Heritage Preservation
Cultural heritage preservation — the protection, conservation, documentation, and transmission of tangible and intangible cultural expressions across generations — is a global enterprise involving international law, muse
U_5_29 — Ancient Brewing: Beer, Civilization, and Sacred Fermentation
Beer may be older than bread. Archaeological evidence from Raqefet Cave (Israel, c. 13,000 BCE) and Göbekli Tepe (Turkey, c. 10,000 BCE) demonstrates that cereal fermentation predated or co-evolved with agriculture, supp
U_5_06 — Art Forgery and Authenticity
Art forgery — the creation of works intended to deceive buyers, dealers, or institutions into believing they are by another (usually more famous or valuable) artist — is as old as the art market itself and raises profoun
U_5_02 — Propaganda Art & Political Visual Culture
Art has served as an instrument of political power throughout history, but the 20th century witnessed the industrialization of propaganda aesthetics on an unprecedented scale.
U_5_30 — Venus Figurines: Paleolithic Art, Fertility Symbolism, and the Female Form
Venus figurines — small statuettes of the female form, typically emphasizing breasts, abdomen, hips, and vulva while minimizing faces, arms, and feet — constitute one of the most widespread and enigmatic art traditions o
U_5_05 — Children's Literature and Fairy Tales
Children's literature and fairy tales — stories told to, about, or for children, ranging from ancient oral folk narratives to modern picture books and young adult novels — constitute one of the most culturally pervasive
U_5_18 — Fractals in Art, Music & Mathematical Aesthetics
Fractal geometry is deeply woven into the fabric of human aesthetic experience across cultures and millennia — not as ornament, but as structure. Richard Taylor (University of Oregon) discovered in 1999 that Jackson Poll
U_5_19 — Iconoclasm History
Iconoclasm — from Greek eikon (image) and klasma (that which is broken) — is the deliberate destruction of images, statues, monuments, or other visual representations, typically motivated by religious, political, or ideo
U_2_04 — Sculpture from Venus Figurines to Monumental Art
Sculpture — the shaping of three-dimensional form — represents one of humanity's oldest artistic expressions, from the Venus of Willendorf (c. 30,000 BP, Austria) to the monumental Moai of Rapa Nui (Easter Island, c. 125
U_2_22 — Shamanic & Entoptic Art
The neuropsychological model of shamanic art proposes that much of humanity's oldest visual art — from Upper Paleolithic cave paintings in Europe to San Bushman rock art in southern Africa to Aboriginal art in Australia
U_2_14 — Minimalism in Art: Reduction, Silence, and Essential Form
Minimalism — emerging in the early 1960s in New York as a radical reaction against the emotional excess of Abstract Expressionism — reduced art to its most fundamental elements: simple geometric forms, industrial materia
U_2_02 — Cave Art — Lascaux, Chauvet & World's Oldest Paintings
Cave art constitutes the oldest known evidence of symbolic visual expression by Homo sapiens (and possibly Neanderthals), with the earliest confirmed figurative painting — a Sulawesi warty pig — dated to at least 45,500
U_2_19 — Impressionism and Color Theory: Light, Perception, and the Science of Seeing
Impressionism — the most revolutionary art movement of the 19th century — emerged in Paris in the late 1860s–1870s through the work of Claude Monet (1840–1926), Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841–1919), Camille Pissarro (1830–1
U_2_06 — Cinema and Film History
Cinema — the art and technology of moving images — emerged from late 19th-century developments in photography and persistence of vision. Pioneer technologies: Eadweard Muybridge's sequential photographs of a galloping ho
U_2_15 — Art and Mathematics: Escher, Perspective, and Golden Ratio in Practice
The relationship between art and mathematics is one of the oldest and richest intersections in human intellectual history — from the geometric patterns of Islamic tile work and the proportional systems of ancient Greek s
U_2_12 — Portraiture: Face, Identity, and Power in Visual Art
Portraiture — the artistic representation of a specific individual — is among the oldest and most culturally charged genres in visual art, serving functions from magical (ensuring the soul's survival — Egyptian Ka statue
U_2_21 — Abstract Art & Consciousness
Abstract art — visual art that does not attempt to represent external reality but instead explores relationships of form, color, line, and composition independently — emerged in the early 20th century in direct connectio
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