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" There is no people without art. We have seen that even the rudest and most miserable tribes devote a large part of their time and strength to art — art, which is looked down upon and treated by civilized nations, from the height of their practical and... "
A Comparative Study of Art Definitions and Their Application to the Art of ... - Page 6
by Hilda Ovidia Hendrickson - 1929 - 140 pages
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The Beginnings of art

Ernst Grosse - 1897 - 362 pages
...expression in the development of art. There is no people without art. We have seen that even the rudest and most miserable tribes devote a large part of their...scientific achievements, more and more as idle play. And yet it seems wholly inconceivable, from the point of view of modern science, that a function to...
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The Beginnings of Art

Ernst Grosse - 1897 - 370 pages
...expression in the development of art. There is no people without art. We have seen that even the rudest and most miserable tribes devote a large part of their time and strength to art — art, Avhich is looked down upon and treated by civilized nations, from the height of their practical and...
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THE BEGINNINGS OF ART

ERNST GROSSE, PH.D. - 1897 - 474 pages
...expression in the development of art. There is no people without art. We have seen that even the rudest and most miserable tribes devote a large part of their time and strength to art—art, which is looked down upon and treated by civilized nations, from the height of their practical...
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The Beginnings of Art

Ernst Grosse - 1897 - 370 pages
...expression in the development of art. There is no people without art. "We have seen that even the rudest and most miserable tribes devote a large part of their time and strengtli to art — art, which is looked down upon and treated by civilized nations, from the height...
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Aesthetics: a Critical Theory of Art

Henry G. Hartman - 1919 - 260 pages
...peoples. Ernst Grosse, in his Beginnings of Art, writes that "there is no people without art. The rudest and most miserable tribes devote a large part of their...scientific achievements, more and more as idle play. And yet * * * if art were indeed only idle play, then natural selection should have long ago rejected...
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The Child and His School: An Interpretation of Elementary Education as a ...

Gertrude Hartman - 1922 - 272 pages
...progress. Grosse in his Beginnings of Art, says: "Therg__is no people without art . . . even the rudest and most miserable tribes devote a large part of their...scientific achievements, more and more as idle play. And yet it seems wholly inconceivable, from the point of view of modern science, that a function to...
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