 | Lewis Edwards Gates - 1900 - 254 pages
...characteristic moments and phases of this development ; and, finally, he must be alive to its worth as a delicately transparent illustration of aesthetic...aspects, his aim is primarily not to explain and not to judgeoraogmatiz&fbut to realize tJitTmappxild charm_the jwprk^ of art has gathered -into, itself from... | |
 | Ethel Puffer Howes - 1905 - 306 pages
...Gates, is the appreciative critic ; and he it is who shall fulfill the true function of criticism. He is to consider the work of art in its historical...delicately transparent illustration of aesthetic law." But, " in regarding the work of art under all these aspects, his ami is, primarily, not to explain,... | |
 | Ethel Puffer Howes - 1905 - 308 pages
...Gates, is the appreciative critic ; and he it is who shall fulfill the true function of criticism. He is to consider the work of art in its historical...delicately transparent illustration of aesthetic law." But, " in regarding the work of art under all these aspects, his aim is, primarily, not to explain,... | |
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