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eduard hanslick German music critic, aesthetician and pioneer of musical appreciation. He studied music with Tom??šek and read law at Prague University, writing his earliest essays for the Prague journal Ost und West and for the Wiener Musikzeitung, the Sonntagsblätter and the Wiener Zeitung. From 1849 to 1861 he was a civil servant, chiefly for the ministry of culture, meanwhile writing for the Presse, publishing his important book Vom Musikalisch-Schönen (1854) and lecturing on music appreciation at Vienna University, becoming full professor in 1870. He was also active as a musical emissary and helped promote the standardization of musical pitch. Among his long-standing friends were Brahms and the philosopher Robert Zimmermann. Though his aesthetic enshrined the classical ideals of orderliness and formal perfection, his interests were limited to the music of his own time. |
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Pintura identificación:: 60388 senta leaps toher death an art nouveau illustration of the final scene of the flying futchman
mk270 senta leaps toher death an art nouveau illustration of the final scene of the flying futchman.
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Pintura identificación:: 60389 daughter of franz liszt
mk270 a domestic vision of wagner at home wih his second wife cosima, daughter of franz liszt.
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Pintura identificación:: 60390 a romantic impression of wagner compoing his epic saga der ring des nibelungen
mk270 a romantic impression of wagner compoing his epic saga der ring des nibelungen, a cycle of four operas completed in 1874
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Pintura identificación:: 60391 designed by thomas edwin mostyn
mk270 a 1914 stage set for in parsifal, designed by thomas edwin mostyn
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Pintura identificación:: 60392 brunnhilde
mk270 brunnhilde, from arthur rackham s 1910 watercolour illustrations to the rhinegold and the valkyrie.
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| ARTISTA PREVIO PROXIMO ARTISTA
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eduard hanslick German music critic, aesthetician and pioneer of musical appreciation. He studied music with Tom??šek and read law at Prague University, writing his earliest essays for the Prague journal Ost und West and for the Wiener Musikzeitung, the Sonntagsblätter and the Wiener Zeitung. From 1849 to 1861 he was a civil servant, chiefly for the ministry of culture, meanwhile writing for the Presse, publishing his important book Vom Musikalisch-Schönen (1854) and lecturing on music appreciation at Vienna University, becoming full professor in 1870. He was also active as a musical emissary and helped promote the standardization of musical pitch. Among his long-standing friends were Brahms and the philosopher Robert Zimmermann. Though his aesthetic enshrined the classical ideals of orderliness and formal perfection, his interests were limited to the music of his own time.
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