Other shows he curated also linked primitiveart with the work of modern masters.
2
As prayers they are ritual, as surfaces decorated they are specimens of primitiveart.
3
Penck has anthropological interests and certainly is highly aware of primitiveart, even prehistoric art.
4
We still see a relic of this primitiveart form in the Oberammergau Passion Play.
5
Yet it is not necessary to give primitiveart a considerable place in a general aesthetics.
6
As a result we find it difficult to realize the simplicity and conservatism of primitiveart.
7
Rhythmic gesture then, or dancing, is the most primitiveart, and it is purely lyric, i.e.
8
In time would appear traps, weapons, tools, submarine agriculture, the blossoming of primitiveart, the ritual of primitive religion.
9
The primitiveart of all nations shows that it has taken the direction of symmetry about a vertical line.
10
In Smollett's time we must remember that Hellenic and primitiveart, whether antique or medieval, were unknown or unappreciated.
11
But primitiveart, which is a given fact to be interpreted, cannot ever become its own criterion of interpretation.
12
They stowed away the luggage with the deft capacity of men who have returned to the primitiveart of using their hands.
13
Such is the case in primitiveart; the maker of beauty is upheld and rewarded by a popular appreciation of her work-orhis.
14
Although slightly tinged with pedantism and preciosity, its freshness, its grace, its inspiration and sincerity, give it a flavour almost of primitiveart.
15
The two men have in common a contagious sociability, a vast energy, a liking for modern art, and a consuming enthusiasm for primitiveart.
16
She let the matter rest with him-thisman with great shoulders and firm hands, who knew the primitiveart of "waiting on himself."