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    Yet the face and gesture do not express violence or angui... — Carmelics
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    Supports→The Laocoön sculpture achieves a balance between physical suffering and composed expression, with the soul shining through the face despite extreme bodily pain

    Yet the face and gesture do not express violence or anguish disproportionate to the pain

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    The Laocoön sculpture achieves a balance between physical suffering and composed...The belly is visibly contracted by excruciating pains, showing the physical inte...The struggling body and the supporting mind exert themselves with equal strength...

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    Art should avoid violent or forced gestures as much as possible75%Even beauty in life can become displeasing through forced gestures75%The demands of beauty in visual art cannot be reconciled with pain dep...73%The Laocoön sculpture achieves a balance between physical suffering an...71%

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    SEP: aesthetics-18th-german
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    ’Tis in the face of Laocoön this soul shines with full lustre, not confined however to the face, amidst the most violent sufferings. Pangs piercing every muscle, every labouring nerve; pangs which we almost feel ourselves, while we consider—not the face, nor the most expressive parts—only the belly contracted by excruciating pains: these however, I say, exert not themselves with violence, either in the face or gesture. He pierces not heaven, like the Laocoön of Virgil; his mouth is rather opened

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