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    Depicting the moment of greatest pain and a full scream w... — Carmelics
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    Supports→The sculptor of the Laocoön group was correct not to depict Laocoön at the moment of his greatest pain and full scream.

    Depicting the moment of greatest pain and a full scream would foreclose the free play of the imagination of the audience.

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    Lessingmodern
    Mendelssohnmodern

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    The sculptor of the Laocoön group was correct not to depict Laocoön at the momen...Visual art must choose moments that leave the imagination free to explore furthe...

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    The depiction of Laocoön's scream had to be softened to a sigh in visu...72%The sculptor of the Laocoön group was correct not to depict Laocoön at...71%Visual arts must choose a depicted moment that gives free rein to the ...70%The greatest beauty can coexist with the expression of the greatest pa...70%

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    SEP: aesthetics-18th-german
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    Lessing does not appeal to any philosophical theory to back up this insistence. But his next step is to buttress his argument by borrowing Mendelssohn’s idea that since the visual arts present objects in a single moment, they must choose that moment carefully, and in particular they must choose a moment that gives “free rein” to the imagination. Even if it were to be conceded that “Truth and expression are art’s first law,” which Lessing is not actually willing to concede, this would still hold.

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