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词汇 classicism
释义

Definition of classicism in English:

classicism

noun ˈklasɪsɪz(ə)mˈklæsəˌsɪzəm
mass noun
  • 1The following of ancient Greek or Roman principles and style in art and literature, generally associated with harmony, restraint, and adherence to recognized standards of form and craftsmanship, especially from the Renaissance to the 18th century.

    古典主义(尤指从文艺复兴时期至十八世纪期间,遵从古希腊或古罗马艺术、文学的原则和风格,此类原则和风格通常与和谐、克制、坚持遵守形式、技能的公认标准有关)。常与 R OMANTICISM相对

    Often contrasted with romanticism
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In spite of postmodernism's loosening of the modernist canon, the stigma against classicism remains robust.
    • Architecture after about 1580 was inspired by medieval ideals of chivalry as much as by Renaissance classicism.
    • Art historians today emphasize his fundamental role in the complex cultural evolution of Renaissance ideals, successfully integrating Christianity and classicism in a perfect synthesis.
    • This involved a step from classicism towards romanticism - which was also a shift from civilisation towards barbarism.
    • This last consideration is too often forgotten in the tiresomely polarised debate about modernism and classicism which continues to rage.
    • Projecting onto Homeric poetry the aesthetic principles of classicism, she wanted its perfection of form and content always to be emphasized.
    • In this fertile period he has embraced aspects of classicism, formalism, surrealism and most obviously, postmodernism.
    • Greek and Roman classicism had been an important part of that tradition.
    • He was also influenced, though, by ancient Roman architecture and Scandinavian modern classicism.
    • Roman classicism had inspired Palladian architecture which was favoured by the Whig ascendancy in Britain.
    • Mies also was influenced by the pure classicism of ancient Greek architecture, as seen in his proposal for the Bismarck Monument of 1910, which includes a super-scaled colonnade.
    • A period of classicism in the eighteenth century saw the development of political and social satire, comedy, and romanticism.
    • Increased consciousness of empire and respect for the clarity of French classicism had much to do with this change.
    • This robust, indecorous, and accommodating vernacular tradition was not universally hostile to the spirit or methods of Renaissance classicism: it simply took from them what it wanted and adapted it to local practice.
    • The range of his pictorial language remained broad, with a variety of classicism and naturalism from one large canvas to the next, and sometimes within individual works.
    • That's the difference between romanticism and classicism.
    • It is easy to appreciate the breadth of the works on display, as they cover artistic concepts ranging from classicism to abstraction, and record the influence of European as well as local movements.
    • Roman classicism was the inspiration for this popular pattern.
    • Principles typically associated with classicism include order, proportion, balance, harmony, decorum, avoidance of excess.
    • There was no simple retreat from austere aristocratic classicism to bourgeois romanticism.
    1. 1.1 The following of traditional and long-established theories or styles.
      对长期存在的传统理论(或风格)的遵从;古典崇拜
      he would never substitute arid classicism for personal taste and character
      Example sentencesExamples
      • If this is classicism, it's classicism at its highest artistic point of subtlety and complexity.
      • A stickler for classicism, he follows the traditional style in composing ghazals.
      • It starts with three friends with deeply personal agendas to condemn fascism, elitism, classicism, racism and sexism.
      • Elegance, classicism and restraint are never out of style.
      • The classicism associated with Indian spin is clearly a post-war phenomenon.

Definition of classicism in US English:

classicism

nounˈklæsəˌsɪzəmˈklasəˌsizəm
  • 1The following of ancient Greek or Roman principles and style in art and literature, generally associated with harmony, restraint, and adherence to recognized standards of form and craftsmanship, especially from the Renaissance to the 18th century.

    古典主义(尤指从文艺复兴时期至十八世纪期间,遵从古希腊或古罗马艺术、文学的原则和风格,此类原则和风格通常与和谐、克制、坚持遵守形式、技能的公认标准有关)。常与 R OMANTICISM相对

    Often contrasted with romanticism
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Greek and Roman classicism had been an important part of that tradition.
    • This involved a step from classicism towards romanticism - which was also a shift from civilisation towards barbarism.
    • Mies also was influenced by the pure classicism of ancient Greek architecture, as seen in his proposal for the Bismarck Monument of 1910, which includes a super-scaled colonnade.
    • This robust, indecorous, and accommodating vernacular tradition was not universally hostile to the spirit or methods of Renaissance classicism: it simply took from them what it wanted and adapted it to local practice.
    • It is easy to appreciate the breadth of the works on display, as they cover artistic concepts ranging from classicism to abstraction, and record the influence of European as well as local movements.
    • Roman classicism was the inspiration for this popular pattern.
    • The range of his pictorial language remained broad, with a variety of classicism and naturalism from one large canvas to the next, and sometimes within individual works.
    • In spite of postmodernism's loosening of the modernist canon, the stigma against classicism remains robust.
    • That's the difference between romanticism and classicism.
    • He was also influenced, though, by ancient Roman architecture and Scandinavian modern classicism.
    • Architecture after about 1580 was inspired by medieval ideals of chivalry as much as by Renaissance classicism.
    • Projecting onto Homeric poetry the aesthetic principles of classicism, she wanted its perfection of form and content always to be emphasized.
    • In this fertile period he has embraced aspects of classicism, formalism, surrealism and most obviously, postmodernism.
    • This last consideration is too often forgotten in the tiresomely polarised debate about modernism and classicism which continues to rage.
    • There was no simple retreat from austere aristocratic classicism to bourgeois romanticism.
    • Art historians today emphasize his fundamental role in the complex cultural evolution of Renaissance ideals, successfully integrating Christianity and classicism in a perfect synthesis.
    • A period of classicism in the eighteenth century saw the development of political and social satire, comedy, and romanticism.
    • Roman classicism had inspired Palladian architecture which was favoured by the Whig ascendancy in Britain.
    • Principles typically associated with classicism include order, proportion, balance, harmony, decorum, avoidance of excess.
    • Increased consciousness of empire and respect for the clarity of French classicism had much to do with this change.
    1. 1.1 The following of traditional and long-established theories or styles.
      对长期存在的传统理论(或风格)的遵从;古典崇拜
      he would never substitute arid classicism for personal taste and character
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The classicism associated with Indian spin is clearly a post-war phenomenon.
      • It starts with three friends with deeply personal agendas to condemn fascism, elitism, classicism, racism and sexism.
      • If this is classicism, it's classicism at its highest artistic point of subtlety and complexity.
      • A stickler for classicism, he follows the traditional style in composing ghazals.
      • Elegance, classicism and restraint are never out of style.
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