Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Anton_Ehrenzweig> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 54 of
54
with 100 items per page.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig abstract "Anton Ehrenzweig (b. 1908 d.1966) a trained lawyer who was very interested in modern art and modern music and who abandoned his formal career after fleeing Austria after the "Anschluss" with Germany in 1938. He studied law, psychology and art in Vienna and settled in England in 1938. He was a lecturer in Art Education at Goldsmiths College, University of London. He wrote The Psychoanalysis of Artistic Vision and Hearing (1953) and The Hidden Order of Art (1967). He also published numerous articles. His ideas can be summarized as the discovery of the organizing role of the unconscious mind in any act of creativity & an analysis of the layered structure of the unconscious mind & of the dynamic mental processes which an artist undergoes in the creative act.The Hidden Order of Art has been in continuous publication since 1967, and is considered one of the three classics of art psychology, along with Rudolf Arnheim's Art and Visual Perception and Herschel Chipp's Theories of Modern Art.Ehrenzweig wrote the introduction to the catalogue for an early show by Bridget RIley at London's Gallery One, May 1962. He also reviewed one of her exhibitions for "Art International" in February 1965.".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig birthDate "1908".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig birthYear "1908".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig deathDate "1966".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig deathYear "1966".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig viafId "69097053".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig wikiPageID "14394496".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig wikiPageRevisionID "576461359".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig dateOfBirth "1908".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig dateOfDeath "1966".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig hasPhotoCollection Anton_Ehrenzweig.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig name "Ehrenzweig, Anton".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig shortDescription "Austrian lawyer".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig description "Austrian lawyer".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig description "Austrian lawyer".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig subject Category:1908_births.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig subject Category:1966_deaths.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig subject Category:Austrian_Jews.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig subject Category:Austrian_lawyers.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig subject Category:Jews_who_emigrated_to_the_United_Kingdom_to_escape_Nazism.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Adult109605289.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type AustrianLawyers.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type CausalAgent100007347.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Lawyer110249950.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type LivingThing100004258.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Object100002684.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Organism100004475.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Person100007846.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Professional110480253.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Whole100003553.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type YagoLegalActor.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type YagoLegalActorGeo.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Agent.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Person.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Person.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Q215627.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Q5.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Agent.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type NaturalPerson.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Thing.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig type Person.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig comment "Anton Ehrenzweig (b. 1908 d.1966) a trained lawyer who was very interested in modern art and modern music and who abandoned his formal career after fleeing Austria after the "Anschluss" with Germany in 1938. He studied law, psychology and art in Vienna and settled in England in 1938. He was a lecturer in Art Education at Goldsmiths College, University of London. He wrote The Psychoanalysis of Artistic Vision and Hearing (1953) and The Hidden Order of Art (1967).".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig label "Anton Ehrenzweig".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig sameAs m.03d2d2j.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig sameAs Q4775736.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig sameAs Q4775736.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig sameAs Anton_Ehrenzweig.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig wasDerivedFrom Anton_Ehrenzweig?oldid=576461359.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig givenName "Anton".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig isPrimaryTopicOf Anton_Ehrenzweig.
- Anton_Ehrenzweig name "Anton Ehrenzweig".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig name "Ehrenzweig, Anton".
- Anton_Ehrenzweig surname "Ehrenzweig".