Journalism Versus Art |
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Page 10
Max Eastman. rather humble mood , and enabled me to receive at their hands a very liberal education in the apprecia- tion of art . I have learned to perceive a great many qualities in pictures that I might never have known to exist , and ...
Max Eastman. rather humble mood , and enabled me to receive at their hands a very liberal education in the apprecia- tion of art . I have learned to perceive a great many qualities in pictures that I might never have known to exist , and ...
Page 27
... hands look like mit- " They're not hands ! " tens ! " they say . No - they are not hands , not objective hands , hands in the abstract , hands from a hand factory . They are a certain peculiar individual's perception of the hands of a ...
... hands look like mit- " They're not hands ! " tens ! " they say . No - they are not hands , not objective hands , hands in the abstract , hands from a hand factory . They are a certain peculiar individual's perception of the hands of a ...
Page 28
Max Eastman. the hands of a certain peculiar man , a tired man , a man sunk onto a chair at the end of a dirty day's work , a man who feels bad and smells bad to him- self , and wishes he were abed . However , there is no entering a ...
Max Eastman. the hands of a certain peculiar man , a tired man , a man sunk onto a chair at the end of a dirty day's work , a man who feels bad and smells bad to him- self , and wishes he were abed . However , there is no entering a ...
Page 46
... hand , and the pages run off rapidly by the right thumb , a sort of kaleido- scopic motion - picture results . Black spots and queer blotches are seen dashing from one part of the page to another , and the effect is quite stimulating to ...
... hand , and the pages run off rapidly by the right thumb , a sort of kaleido- scopic motion - picture results . Black spots and queer blotches are seen dashing from one part of the page to another , and the effect is quite stimulating to ...
Page 51
... hands a manuscript to a poor man who is - metaphorically at least - hungry . " We want two illustrations for this , " he says , " and we must have them by the fourteenth - play up the woman . ' " " The artist goes home and reads the ...
... hands a manuscript to a poor man who is - metaphorically at least - hungry . " We want two illustrations for this , " he says , " and we must have them by the fourteenth - play up the woman . ' " " The artist goes home and reads the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Arthur artists beauty BORZOI Charles Lamb choir commercial DAVIES editorial art English language essay everything expression feeling forms free verse free-verse freedom genius GEORGE BELLOWS Girl GOOSE GIRL hands Historical Propriety HONORÉ DAUMIER human interest ideal illustrate individual intense JEAN FRANÇOIS MILLET JOHN SLOAN JOURNALISM VERSUS ART journalistic lamb LAZY VERSE letters literary art literature living look magazine art magazine drawings magazine editors magazine writing Masses matter with magazine MAURICE BECKER MAX EASTMAN MELODY motive mutilate ness never Nice Cool Sewer PABLO PICASSO paragraph passion perception persons pleasure poem poet poetry Polyrhythmic popular magazine practical economy preterit profit prose Psychology of Beauty reason reform ROBERT MINOR Russian scientific regularity sell Simplified Spelling Spelling Board spirit story subtle supplanting things tied fast tion tire true art ture unique values variety verbs words written young zine
Popular passages
Page 126 - ... the ear; find it fired again at you in a whole broadside; or find it pass into congenerous sounds, one liquid or labial melting away into another. And you will find another and much stranger circumstance. Literature is written by and for two senses: a sort of internal ear, quick to perceive " unheard melodies "; and the eye, which directs the pen and deciphers the printed phrase.
Page 140 - For in wealth, good sense, and closeness of structure no other of the languages at this day spoken deserves to be compared with it...
Page 102 - In all arts it is the tendency of those who are ungrown to confuse the expression of intense feeling with the intense expression of feeling — which last is all the world will long listen to." Shakspere, Milton, Keats are masters of concentrated, intensest expression: their verse, at its best, is structural as an oak. Those of us who have read with keen momentary enjoyment thousands of pages of the "New Verse," are frequently surprised to find how little of it stamps itself upon the memory.
Page 140 - a veritable power of expression, such as perhaps never stood at the command of any other language of men," he goes on to say, ".Its highly spiritual genius, and wonderfully happy development and condition, have been the result of a surprisingly intimate union of the two noblest languages in modern Europe, the Teutonic and the Romance.