Fame
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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There are certain paintings and sculpture from [[art history]], and recently from [[20th century]] [[modernism]] like [[Auguste Rodin]]'s ''[[The Thinker]],'' [[Leonardo Da Vinci]]'s ''[[Mona Lisa]],'' [[Edward Hopper]]'s ''[[Nighthawks]],'' ''[[The Persistence of Memory]]'' by [[Salvador Dali]], ''[[Christina's World]]'' by [[Andrew Wyeth]] and a few others that seem to have a life of their own outside the world of [[art museum]]s. Deeply rooted in the [[collective unconscious]], these paintings and sculptures inspire [[parody]], [[emulation]], [[satire]], and [[admiration]]. | There are certain paintings and sculpture from [[art history]], and recently from [[20th century]] [[modernism]] like [[Auguste Rodin]]'s ''[[The Thinker]],'' [[Leonardo Da Vinci]]'s ''[[Mona Lisa]],'' [[Edward Hopper]]'s ''[[Nighthawks]],'' ''[[The Persistence of Memory]]'' by [[Salvador Dali]], ''[[Christina's World]]'' by [[Andrew Wyeth]] and a few others that seem to have a life of their own outside the world of [[art museum]]s. Deeply rooted in the [[collective unconscious]], these paintings and sculptures inspire [[parody]], [[emulation]], [[satire]], and [[admiration]]. | ||
+ | ==See also== | ||
+ | *[[15 minutes of fame]] | ||
==Compare== | ==Compare== | ||
- | *[[infamous]] | + | *[[Infamous]] |
{{GFDL}} | {{GFDL}} |
Revision as of 07:33, 16 November 2010
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Featured: |
Fame or Famous may refer to:
- The condition of being a celebrity
Contents |
Etymology
From Latin fama ‘talk, rumor, report, reputation’, from Greek φήμη pheme ‘talk’, from Proto-Indo-European *bheH₂-mā-, from *bheH₂- ‘to speak’.
Works of art in the collective unconscious
There are certain paintings and sculpture from art history, and recently from 20th century modernism like Auguste Rodin's The Thinker, Leonardo Da Vinci's Mona Lisa, Edward Hopper's Nighthawks, The Persistence of Memory by Salvador Dali, Christina's World by Andrew Wyeth and a few others that seem to have a life of their own outside the world of art museums. Deeply rooted in the collective unconscious, these paintings and sculptures inspire parody, emulation, satire, and admiration.
See also
Compare
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