91 resultados para Rintala, Päivi: Iha köyhän laihakin : tutkimus itämerensuomen iha-kantaisista sanoista
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in Varia, Revista do IHA, N.5 (2008), pp.259-271
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in Varia, Revista do IHA, N.5 (2008), pp.272-287
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in Varia: notícia, Revista do IHA, N.5 (2008), pp.288-289
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Neste breve texto da comunicação apresentada na Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, a 11 de Julho de 2008, no âmbito do I Ciclo Internacional de Palestras promovido pela APECMA – Associação Portuguesa para o Estudo e Conservação do Mosaico Antigo e IHA, Instituto de História da Arte, UNL, versamos sobre a ideografia das águas em mosaicos elaborados no espaço do actual território português (correspondente a parte das Províncias romanas da Lusitânia e da Galécia) e destacamos as dimensões decorativas e simbólicas que os motivos ictiográficos assumem nos conjuntos mais significativos.
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Livro de actas Encontro Portugal – Galiza, dedicado ao tema “Mosaicos Romanos – Fragmentos de Cultura nas Proximidades do Atlântico”, realizado entre 6 e 7 de Julho de 2013 no Museu da Villa Romana do Rabaçal – Município de Penela, Beira Litoral, Museu D. Diogo Sousa – Direcção Regional de Cultura do Norte, e Museu Provincial de Lugo – Galiza.Livro coordenado por Miguel Pessoa, conta com colaboração de inúmeros investigadores da especialidade.
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The hegemonic definition of Modernism has been subjected to an intense critical revision process that began several decades ago. This process has contributed to the significant broadening of the modernist canon by challenging its primal essentialist assumptions and formalist interpretations in the fields of both the visual arts and architecture. This conference aims to further expand this revision, as it seeks to discuss the notion of “Southern Modernisms” by considering the hypothesis that regional appropriations, both in Southern Europe and the Southern hemisphere, entailed important critical stances that have remained unseen or poorly explored by art and architectural historians. In association with the Southern Modernisms research project (FCT – EXPL/CPC-HAT/0191/2013), we want to consider the entrenchment of southern modernisms in popular culture (folk art and vernacular architecture) as anticipating some of the premises of what would later become known as critical regionalism. It is therefore our purpose to explore a research path that runs parallel to key claims on modernism’s intertwinement with bourgeois society and mass culture, by questioning the idea that an aesthetically significant regionalism – one that resists to the colonization of international styles and is supported by critical awareness – occurred only in the field of architecture, and can only be represented as a postmodernist turn. (...)
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The book now being published results from a research project entitled Southern Modernisms that ran from March 2014 to May 2015 with FCT funding. The aim of the project was to explore the possibility of constructing a more inclusive, plural notion of modernism through the revision of Modernism’s prevailing definition – its stylistic focus, its formalist and anti-representative bias, as well as its autonomic assumptions, or, as far as architecture is concerned, its functionalist credo. This critical undertaking was grounded on the hypothesis that southern European modernisms featured a strong entrenchment in popular culture (folk art and vernacular architecture), and that this characteristic could be understood as anticipating some of the premises of, what would later become known as, critical regionalismo. (...)
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Neste breve texto da comunicação apresentada na Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, a 11 de Julho de 2008, no âmbito do I Ciclo Internacional de Palestras promovido pela APECMA – Associação Portuguesa para o Estudo e Conservação do Mosaico Antigo e IHA, Instituto de História da Arte, UNL, versamos sobre a ideografia das águas em mosaicos elaborados no espaço do actual território português (correspondente a parte das Províncias romanas da Lusitânia e da Galécia) e destacamos as dimensões decorativas e simbólicas que os motivos ictiográficos assumem nos conjuntos mais significativos.
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Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT), Fundação Millennium bcp
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Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT), Fundação Millennium bcp
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Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT), Fundação Millennium bcp
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Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT), Fundação Millennium bcp
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This article aims to reconstruct the critical debate regarding the examination of the crisis in the disciplines of art history and criticism with a particular focus on the proposal formulated by U.S. theorists who contributed to October journal. The discrediting of many modernist critical methods, particularly that of Clement Greenberg – the formalist diktat – marked the birth of the journal and gave rise to proposals set forth by critics committed to a new approach. Their divergent positions, nonetheless, have contributed to undermining the traditional concepts of the autonomy of art and criticism. The proposals discussed over the course of publication were the result of a reappraisal of the disciplinary instruments of art history and criticism pursuant to the crucial cultural changes which took place in the 1980s.
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This article addresses the work of Mizrahi women artists, i.e., Israeli-Jewish women of Asian or African ethnic origin, using the artist Vered Nissim as a case study. Nissim seeks to affirm the politics of identity and recognition, as well as feminism in order to create a paradigm shift with regards to the local regime of cultural representations in the Israeli art scene. Endeavouring to find ways of undermining the rigid imbalances between different social groups, she calls for a comprehensive reform of the status quo through artistic activism. Nissim employs a style, content, and medium that disrupts the accepted social order, using humour and irony as unique weapons with which she takes liberties with conventional moral, social, and economic values. Placing issues of race, class and gender at the centre of her work, she seeks to undermine and problematize essentialist attitudes, highlighting the political intersections of different identity categories as the critical analysis of intersectionality unfolds.
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This article proposes an investigation of the history and memory of the Carnation Revolution through the lens of contemporary art. Drawing upon the argument according to which history and memory are investigated by visual artists by means other, but no less relevant, than those of professional historians, this article will argue for the importance of attending to the visual, auditory, textual, object- and research-based ways in which artists from several generations and geographies have been unearthing the repressed histories and memories of the Carnation Revolution in Portugal and of anticolonial struggles, decolonization and post-independence nation-building in Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau and Angola. The discussion focuses on several works by Ângela Ferreira, but attention will also be paid to precursors in imaging the Revolution, such as Ana Hatherly, and to a younger generation of artists such as Filipa César, Kiluanji Kia Henda and Daniel Barroca.