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    Religious art subordinated beauty to the communication of... — Carmelics
    Home/Aesthetics
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    Supports→Art produced in service of religion does not qualify as art in the fullest sense.

    Religious art subordinated beauty to the communication of meaning.

    Aesthetics
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    Art produced in service of religion does not qualify as art in the fullest sense...Art produced in service of religion was not worked for art's own sake.Genuine art requires that the artist work for art's own sake.

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    When beauty is communicated from mental signified to material sign, th...84%Conceptual art aims to convey meaning through a vehicular medium rathe...81%Perceiving beauty engages imagination, reason, and (in the case of art...79%Works of art have beauty, although in some lesser measure than the bea...79%

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    SEP: aesthetics-18th-german
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    I should prefer that only those be called works of art in which the artist had occasion to show himself as such and in which beauty was his first and ultimate aim. None of the others, which betray too obvious traces of religious conventions, deserves this name because in their case the artist did not create for art’s sake [weil die Kunst hier nicht um ihren selbst willen gearbeitet, literally “because here art did not work for its own sake”], but his art was merely a handmaid of religion, which

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