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Aesthetic Movement.
Term used to describe a movement of the 1870s and 1880s that manifested itself in the fine and decorative arts and architecture in Britain and subsequently in the USA. Reacting to what was seen as evidence of philistinism in art and design, it was characterized by the cult of the beautiful and an emphasis on the sheer pleasure to be derived from it. In painting there was a belief in the autonomy of art, the concept of ART FOR ARTS SAKE, which originated in France as a literary movement and was introduced into Britain around 1860.
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- Aesthetic Movement
- Armstrong, Thomas
- Art for Arts Sake
- Arts and Crafts Movement, §2: British Isles
- Display of art, §II, 4: Paintings, after c 1870
- Gay and lesbian art, §2: Assertion and evasion of identity, 1890s1960s
- Ionides
- Moore: (1) Albert Joseph Moore
- Orientalism, §2(iii): Harems and slave and street markets
- Romanticism, §4: The legacy
- Victorian style
- Whistler, James McNeill
- Wilde, Oscar
- architecture
- etchings
- exhibitions
- frames
- furniture
- interior decoration
- Australia, §V: Interior decoration
- England, §V, 6: Interior decoration, 18311900
- Scotland, §V, 3: Interior decoration, 17911914
- Whistler, James McNeill, §1(iii): Life and work, 186677
- ornament
- textiles
- see also ART FOR ART'S SAKE
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