Somehow the new Perfecta band, with three trombones, three percussionists, trumpet, flute, bass and piano and fronted by the singers Herman Olivera and Ray Viera, completely escapes the academicism of a repertory project.
42.
The liberation from academicism offered by Cubism, as instigated by C�zanne, resulted from the fact that the artist was no longer restricted to the representation of the subject ( or the world ) as seen in a photograph.
43.
Indeed, on many occasions, this professor has expressed his differences with a discipline mired in old-fashioned academicism and has not hesitated to defend original subjects in order to bring a little fresh air into a moribund sociology.
44.
In addition to the local influences, Silva reflects the interests of the Arts and Crafts movement and the academicism of the Ecole des Beaux Arts in the facade treatment, resulting in an austere and grand, yet lightweight elevation.
45.
This was an all-out multi-frontal attack on the narrow limitations of academicism, on pre-20th century empiricism, on positivism, determinism and the untenable notions of absolute space, absolute time and absolute truth.
46.
From 1878 until his death, he was the Director of the �cole des Beaux-Arts d'Avignon; steering his students away from Academicism by taking them on plein aire excursions to Les Angles and along the Rh�ne.
47.
In 1663, he became director of the " Acad�mie royale de peinture et de sculpture ", where he laid the basis of academicism and became the all-powerful, peerless master of 17th-century French art.
48.
Whether it was in a landscape, in framing a photograph, etching a vignette, conceiving a poster for an ad or drawing a design for a fabric, he permanently rejected academicism, hackneyed tradition and ready-made solutions.
49.
Between 1935 and 1936 he joined the UAM ( the Union des Artistes Modernes ) a movement founded in 1929 by architect Robert Mallet-Stevens in reaction to the academicism of the era and the established hierarchies between major and minor arts.
50.
Note the decadent gentleman in 18th-century attire in J . P . Monroe's " Permanent Death " at China Art Objects; the German painter Neo Rauch's latest foray into mysterious Neo-academicism at Eigen and Art.