Erlebacher, Steve Hawley, David Ligare, Vincent Arcilesi, John Nava, Delmas Howe, Leon Golub, Eric Fischl, Jeff Koons. Exemplary artist. Kalev Mark Kostabi (late-C20). He neither paints nor conceives of most of the works that bear his name. He employs an assistant-base mode of artistic production. Teams produce his paintings and there is an intricate division of labor (painters, canvas stretchers, idea persons, color theorists, rhetoricians, creative consultants etc.). His figures are faceless. He quotes imagery from art history (especially those of Edward Hopper). This is associated with the theme of American alienation. He considers the titles of his paintings of the utmost importance. He uses poet and translator Joachim Neugroschel as his "titling person". He was born to Estonian parents and has included elements of Estonia in some of his works (e.g. the flag). Native American Art
Erlebacher, Steve Hawley, David Ligare, Vincent Arcilesi, John Nava, Delmas Howe, Leon Golub, Eric Fischl, Jeff Koons. Exemplary artist. Kalev Mark Kostabi (late-C20). He neither paints nor conceives of most of the works that bear his name. He employs an assistant-base mode of artistic production. Teams produce his paintings and there is an intricate division of labor (painters, canvas stretchers, idea persons, color theorists, rhetoricians, creative consultants etc.). His figures are faceless. He quotes imagery from art history (especially those of Edward Hopper). This is associated with the theme of American alienation. He considers the titles of his paintings of the utmost importance. He uses poet and translator Joachim Neugroschel as his "titling person". He was born to Estonian parents and has included elements of Estonia in some of his works (e.g. the flag). Native American Art
stylistics, german or russian. The very term stylistics came into more common use in english only some 30-40 years ago. It was however recorded much earlier that is in 1882 for the first time, meaning ,,The Study of literary style, the study of stylistic features." A short history of the development of stylistics Stylistics is regarded a relatively new branch of philology, yet its roots go back as far as ancient Greece and Rome, where the rhetoricians (retoorikud) cultivated the art of clear and elegant use of language by developing and polishing stylistic devices. In the 18th century, an individualistic-psychological view on style and stylistics emerges. The late 19th and and early 20th centuries witnessed a utilitarian approach to stylistics. The tendency to regard stylistics as an applied science has been particularly marked in english- 1
Stylistics studies everything that makes the text or the utterance special. It cuts across all the basic linguistic sciences: · Phonetics--silent, sleepy streets · Morphology--speak, spoke, spake · Syntax--he came in-in came he · Lexicology--finish-terminate (synonymic pairs) A survey of the development of stylistic studies: It is a relatively new branch in philology; yet, its roots go back as far as ancient Greek and Rome where the rhetoricians cultivated the art of clear and elegant use of language. 18th cent--emerged an individualistic-psychological view on style and stylistics. According to that, style bears the stamps of individual usage: every writer has a unique pattern of habits and abilities that form his style. Fr. Poet Buffon: "Style is the man himself." Late 19th, early 20th century--appeared a utilitarian approach to style remotely linked with ancient rhetoric
J. Joyce "Ulysses" in last chapter for 44 pages comes no single mark of punctuation but nevertheless it has 8 paragraphs. Why? Because his wife's birthday is on the 8 th of some month. It is very individual. STYLISTICS AS A SCIENCE. SURVEY OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF STYLISTIC STUDIES. Stylistics is regarded as a relatively new branch of philology, yet its roots go back as far as ancient Greece and Rome, when the rhetoricians cultivated the art of clear and elegant use of language developing and polishing stylistic devices basically. In the 18th century there emerged an individualistic psychological view of style and stylistics. According to this view style bears the stamp of individual usage, that is every writer has a unique pattern of habits that form his style (e.g. W. Woolf - some of her starting phrases begin with "For")