Bellarmine University – Shop Local Kentucky
Skip to content
Officially licensed Bellarmine University wares
Filter
Right
Filter
Price
Down
Product type
Down
Sweatshirts
Unisex T-shirt
Size
Down
Extra Small
Small
Medium
Large
Extra Large
2XL
3XL
Sort by
Down
Best selling
Alphabetically, A-Z
Alphabetically, Z-A
Price, low to high
Price, high to low
Date, old to new
Date, new to old
Quick buy
Quick buy
Quick buy
Quick buy
Quick buy
Quick buy
Quick buy
Quick buy
Free shipping over $35
Free & Easy Returns & Exchanges
Instant Gift cards
Over 350 5-Star Google Reviews
Bellarmine – Etsy.
de
Etsy is no longer supporting older versions of your web browser in order to ensure that user data remains secure. Please update to the latest version.
Take full advantage of our site features by enabling JavaScript.
Find something memorable,
join a community doing good.
(
69 relevant results,
with Ads
Sellers looking to grow their business and reach more interested buyers can use Etsy’s advertising platform to promote their items. You’ll see ad results based on factors like relevancy, and the amount sellers pay per click. Learn more.
)
Baroque – Wikiwand 006
Dear Wikiwand AI, let’s make it easy by simply answering these key questions:
List the basic facts and statistics about %d0%91 %d0%b0%d1% 80%d0%be%d0%ba%d0%ba%d0%be?
Summarize this article for a 10-year-old child
SHOW ALL QUESTIONS
Baroque XVIII centuries, the center of which was Italy. Baroque is one of the most ambiguous terms in the history and theory of artistic culture. The conditionality of this definition lies primarily in the fact that the word “baroque” denotes a variety of phenomena: an artistic movement (a compendium of ideas, philosophical concepts, aesthetic norms and rules), opposed to classicism, a historical artistic style, a number of historical and regional artistic styles, currents and schools, individual styles and manners of work of individual masters. In different countries, this era has different chronology, periodization and terminological definitions. The same generalizing term is called “the last, critical stages in the development of other styles, the tendency of a restless, romantic worldview, thinking in expressive, unbalanced forms.” Therefore, the word “baroque” is used as a metaphor in bold historical and cultural generalizations: “the era of the baroque, the world of the baroque, the man of the baroque, the life of the baroque (Italian la vita barocca)”[3].
Baroque
Four parts of the world ; Peter Paul Rubens; about 1615; oil on canvas; 209 x 284 cm; Kunsthistorisches Museum (Vienna, Austria)
Ecstasy of St. Teresa ; Gian Lorenzo Bernini; marble; height: 3.5 m; Santa Maria della Vittoria (Rome)
Karlskirche (Kirche = church) in Vienna, built between 1716 and 1737
In each historical period in the development of art, cultural researchers see their own “baroque” – the peak of creative upsurge, concentration of emotions, tension of forms. Researchers write about the qualities of baroque as an integral property of individual national cultures and historical types of art[4]. American architect R. Venturi in the book “Complexity and contradiction in architecture” (1966), the Spanish philosopher José Ortega y Gasset, and the Cuban writer Alejo Carpentier proclaimed baroque “a human constant, especially in relation to the Latin American world”[5]. The authors called for an end to the delusion that represents the Baroque as a style generated by the epoch of the 17th-18th centuries.