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    The classical Greek soul possesses noble simplicity and q... — Carmelics
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    Supports→The Laocoön statue achieves the highest level of beauty despite depicting supreme suffering.

    The classical Greek soul possesses noble simplicity and quiet grandeur.

    Aesthetics
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    Noble simplicity and quiet grandeur elevate figures caught in suffering to the h...The Greek artist's soul inevitably manifests itself in the artwork produced.The Laocoön statue achieves the highest level of beauty despite depicting suprem...The Laocoön statue was made by a classical Greek artist.

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    The last paragraph of this is somewhat contorted: since Laocoön was not himself a classical Greek, but a pre-classical Trojan, Winckelmann does not quite attribute the “noble simplicity and quiet grandeur” that shines through his face even in the midst of his suffering to him and to nature as it might have been at work in Troy, but rather to the classical Greek artist whom he supposes did make the statue. But his basic point remains: since in his view the statue itself was Greek, the noble simpl

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