This essay aims to contribute comparative points of contact between two influential figures of nineteenth century aesthetic reflection; namely, Victor Hugo’s artful considerations on architecture in his novel Notre-Dame de Paris and G.W.F. Hegel’s philosophical appraisal of the artform in his Lectures on Fine Art. Although their individual views on architecture are widely recognized, there is scant comparative commentary on these two thinkers, which seems odd because of the relative convergence of their historically situated observations. Owing to this shortage, I note that, while certainly not identical, Hugo and Hegel share an aesthetic family resemblance in how they hold similar ideas on architecture’s symbolic function, cognitive conten...
In this article I would like to present three main areas of my interest in the aesthetics of Georg F...
This article examines Hegel’s aesthetic judgment of the German romantic painter Caspar David Friedri...
The essay argues for the modernity of Hegel's concept of the ‘profane work of art’. (1) The first pa...
This essay aims to contribute comparative points of contact between two influential figures of ninet...
abstract: Victor Hugo crafted a relationship with architecture that demonstrated his nuanced experie...
In an effort to look at Hegel's thoughts about Gothic architecture and their limitations, this pape...
Architecture and architectural space are topics that Victor Hugo dealt with both as a monument conse...
Victor Hugo’s Notre-Dame de Paris is an exemplification of his ideas on Romanticism. Hugo illustrate...
Victor Hugo’s character, Claude Frollo, expressed Hugo’s linguistic analogy for architecture in his ...
Commentary upon ten papers on the subject of Hegel's Lectures on Fine Art, his Aesthetics
This volume explores one of modernity’s most profound and far-reaching philosophies of art: the Vorl...
Book synopsis: That aesthetics is central to Hegel's philosophical enterprise is not widely acknowle...
In the following paper, I will attempt to argue that Hegel’s theory concerning the end of art is pos...
This essay examines the design by French architect Simon-Claude Constant-Dufeux of a tomb of the mar...
International audienceIn this period of global pandemic and confinement to our homes, the end of art...
In this article I would like to present three main areas of my interest in the aesthetics of Georg F...
This article examines Hegel’s aesthetic judgment of the German romantic painter Caspar David Friedri...
The essay argues for the modernity of Hegel's concept of the ‘profane work of art’. (1) The first pa...
This essay aims to contribute comparative points of contact between two influential figures of ninet...
abstract: Victor Hugo crafted a relationship with architecture that demonstrated his nuanced experie...
In an effort to look at Hegel's thoughts about Gothic architecture and their limitations, this pape...
Architecture and architectural space are topics that Victor Hugo dealt with both as a monument conse...
Victor Hugo’s Notre-Dame de Paris is an exemplification of his ideas on Romanticism. Hugo illustrate...
Victor Hugo’s character, Claude Frollo, expressed Hugo’s linguistic analogy for architecture in his ...
Commentary upon ten papers on the subject of Hegel's Lectures on Fine Art, his Aesthetics
This volume explores one of modernity’s most profound and far-reaching philosophies of art: the Vorl...
Book synopsis: That aesthetics is central to Hegel's philosophical enterprise is not widely acknowle...
In the following paper, I will attempt to argue that Hegel’s theory concerning the end of art is pos...
This essay examines the design by French architect Simon-Claude Constant-Dufeux of a tomb of the mar...
International audienceIn this period of global pandemic and confinement to our homes, the end of art...
In this article I would like to present three main areas of my interest in the aesthetics of Georg F...
This article examines Hegel’s aesthetic judgment of the German romantic painter Caspar David Friedri...
The essay argues for the modernity of Hegel's concept of the ‘profane work of art’. (1) The first pa...