Moreau's interest in the past could have resulted in mere academicism had he not pursued his passion for exoticism, stylistic eclecticism and physical experimentation to the extent he did.
32.
The 19th century saw the classical age as being the precursor of academicism, including such movements as uniformitarianism in the sciences, and the creation of rigorous categories in artistic fields.
33.
"' Academic art "', or "'Academicism "', is a style of painting and sculpture produced under the influence of European academies of art.
34.
A Colonel d'�tat-Major of the academicism than contemporary art-he refused to acquire works by some already-acclaimed artists such as Camille Corot who he did not appreciate.
35.
And particularly in the more labored second half of the book, Harrison's eloquence is undone by academicisms or the rhetoric of Heidegger ( " The hic of the hic jacet,"
36.
It had lost the energy that had given it life in the 1960s, and had become a very dry, cerebral, desiccated academicism which was throttling the life out of possibilities for lots of things.
37.
He stayed in Kingskettle for three years, during which he learned Greek from a local priest, an experience that increased his interest in academicism and sublimated his interest in priesthood into desire to attend university.
38.
The Muses wore a traditional academicism resurfaced in the stretching out and upward leaping of the body, but the Balanchine bent the angles of the arms and hands to define instead the genre of neoclassical ballet.
39.
The younger architect not only revived the harmony and balance associated with the work of the elder Mansart but also set the tone for Late Baroque French architecture, with its grand ponderousness and increasing concessions to academicism.
40.
He was one of the last representatives of Academicism in his country and worked in a wide variety of genres, including portraits, history painting, interior portraits, allegories, marine art and still-lifes.