About This Book
A sculptor guides the reader through his atelier and garden, using careful descriptions of antique fragments and finished works as a basis for broader reflections on artistic practice. He presents art as contemplative inquiry and taste manifested in objects and surroundings, insists that nature and classical models inform true beauty, and laments a modern, industrial emphasis on utility and mass production that displaces aesthetic care. Throughout, he considers the artist’s responsibility to cultivate perception, to integrate art into daily life, and to preserve craftsmanship and feeling against mechanical, utilitarian tendencies.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
1 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
El Criterio
by Jaime Luciano Balmes
The Doctrine and Practice of Yoga / Including the Practices and Exercises of Concentration, both Objective and Subjective, and Active and Passive Mentation, an Elucidation of Maya, Guru Worship, and the Worship of the Terrible, also the Mystery of Will-Force
by swámi A. P. Mukerji
Colloquium heptaplomeres de rerum sublimium arcanis abditis
by Jean Bodin
The History of the Devil, As Well Ancient as Modern: In Two Parts
by Daniel Defoe
Human Nature and Conduct: An introduction to social psychology
by John Dewey
Modern French Philosophy: a Study of the Development Since Comte
by John Alexander Gunn
