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1,142 results for "art history" — page 3 of 58
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_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_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_20 — Islamic Geometric Art: Pattern, Calligraphy & Arabesque
Islamic geometric art — one of the most sophisticated and mathematically advanced artistic traditions in human history — developed from the 8th century CE across a vast geographic range from Andalusia to Central Asia, pr
U_2_16 — Street Art, Graffiti & Urban Visual Culture
Street art and graffiti constitute a global visual culture tradition of unauthorized or semi-authorized artistic intervention in public space, ranging from simple name-based tags to elaborate murals, stencil works, wheat
U_2_08 — Digital Art and Generative Art
Digital art — visual art created with or substantially mediated by digital technology — and generative art — art produced in whole or part by autonomous systems (algorithms, rules, or AI) — represent a fundamental expans
U_2_18 — Islamic Geometric Art & Calligraphy
Islamic geometric art represents one of humanity's most sophisticated achievements in mathematical pattern-making, developed over a millennium across an artistic tradition stretching from Spain to Central Asia. Constrain
U_4_17 — Alchemical Art & Symbolism
Alchemical art represents one of the most visually complex and symbolically layered artistic traditions in Western history — a corpus of illuminated manuscripts, printed emblem books, and hieroglyphic images produced pri
U_4_11 — Martial Arts as Cultural Practice
Martial arts — codified systems of combat training that integrate physical technique with cultural philosophy, aesthetic form, and (often) spiritual discipline — are found in virtually every civilization and represent a
U_4_06 — Architecture as Sacred Art — Cathedrals, Mosques, Temples
Sacred architecture represents humanity's most ambitious attempt to materialize the divine in built form — encoding theological doctrines, cosmological models, mathematical principles, and ritual programs into stone, woo
X_1_01 — History of Medicine: From Trepanation to Modern Surgery
The history of medicine spans from Neolithic trepanation (the oldest documented surgical procedure, ~7,000 BCE, with survival rates exceeding 70% in some populations) through the classical traditions of Hippocrates, Gale
X_4_04 — Nursing and Caregiving History
Nursing — the professional practice of patient care, health promotion, and illness prevention — has evolved from informal family and religious caregiving to a scientifically grounded profession. Pre-modern: caregiving fe
X_3_14 — Cardiology: The Science of the Heart
Cardiology — the branch of medicine dealing with disorders of the heart and cardiovascular system — addresses the leading cause of death worldwide: cardiovascular disease (CVD), responsible for ~17.9 million deaths per y
W_1_14 — Carthage: Punic Civilization, Navigation, and Tophet
Carthage (from Phoenician Qart-ḥadašt — "New City") was a Phoenician colony founded c. 814 BCE on the coast of modern-day Tunisia that grew into the dominant maritime and commercial power of the western Mediterranean — a
W_1_24 — Tartessos: Iberian Peninsula's Lost Civilization
Tartessos was an ancient civilization or polity centered in southwestern Iberia (modern Andalusia, Spain), flourishing from approximately 1100–550 BCE in the lower Guadalquivir River valley, the Huelva coastal region, an
ZH_4_09 — Astronomical Petroglyphs and Rock Art
Humans have carved, painted, and pecked celestial imagery into rock surfaces for at least 10,000 years — and possibly far longer. Astronomical petroglyphs and pictographs are found on every inhabited continent: images of
ZH_2_09 — Celestial Cartography: Star Maps and Globes Through History
Celestial cartography — the art and science of mapping the sky — is one of humanity's oldest intellectual undertakings, spanning from Mesopotamian star lists (~1200 BCE), through Hipparchus's star catalog (~129 BCE), the
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