As dicotomias peso/leveza e forma/ideia na escultura : a desmaterialização progressiva do objecto artístico


Autoria(s): Pinelas, Andreia, 1991-
Contribuinte(s)

Pereira, José Carlos, 1970-

Data(s)

07/06/2016

07/06/2016

20/04/2016

06/06/2016

Resumo

The dichotomies Weight/Lightness and Form/Idea formed the theory and the practice of Art, existing a correspondence between them. The weight exists thanks to the existence of a form that is made of matter; in the other hand, the lightness comes from the idea that is always present when the creation exists. This dichotomies were always interconnected during the centuries, and there are variations in relevancy of form and/or idea. In sculpture´s tradition, the physical weight was a essential reality, and the idea of sculpture, without the immaterial side was underlined to the form. During the centuries, new artistic approaches were born and re-born focused on the frailty, lightness and idea of the artistic object, fact that came to cancel the classic notion of work of art. The concept of image became the focus of the esthetical experience of the subject, which alone, tended to substantiate the artistic object itself. In the same way that lightness, when taken to the extreme, and despite the tridimensionality materiality of the object, begun to relate the art with the own action of the body, the gesture of the artist, rising both to the status of art

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10451/23957

Idioma(s)

por

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Alberti, Leon Battista, 1404-1472 #Buonarroti, Michel Angelo, 1475-1564 #Bernini, Gian Lorenzo, 1598-1680 #Giacometti, Alberto, 1901-1966 #Calder, Alexander, 1898-1976 #Kosuth, Joseph, 1945- #Graham, Dan, 1942- #LeWitt, Sol, 1928-2007 #LeWitt, Sol, 1928-2007 #Andre, Carl, 1935- #Serra, Richard, 1939- #Becher, Hilla, 1934- #Becher, Bernd #Chafes, Rui, 1966- #Reis, Pedro Cabrita, 1956- #Escultura #Forma #Peso #Leveza #Conceito #História da arte #Desmaterialização #Escultura (Especialização em Estudos de Pintura)
Tipo

masterThesis