Studienarbeit aus dem Jahr 2004 im Fachbereich Kunst - Malerei; Note: 1;3; Freie Universitauml;t Berlin; Veranstaltung: PS Kunst in der VR China; 8 Quellen im Literaturverzeichnis; Sprache: Deutsch; Abstract: Nach dem Ende der Kulturrevolution erfuhr China durch Deng Xiaopings Reformen eine Periode der Liberalisierung; die sich sowohl auf die Wirtschaft; als auch auf die Kunst des Landes auswirkte. Mitte der 80er Jahre; im Zuge der Ouml;ffnung zum Westen; wurden die Stilrichtungen Dadaismus; Expressionismus und Surrealismus von der jungen Kuuml;nstlergeneration ausprobiert und nachgeholt. Verschiedene Kuuml;nstlergruppierungen entstanden; zum Beispiel die Gruppen bdquo;Ohne Namenldquo;; bdquo;Sterneldquo; und bdquo;Neuer Raum 85ldquo;. Im Verlauf der intensiven Auseinandersetzung mit westlicher Kunst entstand in der VR China eine konflikttrauml;chtige; kontroverse Debatte; da die chinesischen Kuuml;nste traditionell eine wichtige Komponente der chinesischen Kultur und politischen Identitauml;t darstellten. Das traditionelle Ideal war immer die philosophische Weltsicht und die politische Ordnung; die immer als untrennbares Ganzes verstanden wurden. Aufgrund der Fuuml;lle von neuen Kuuml;nstlergruppen und Stilrichtungen; die sich nach Dengs neuer Kulturpolitik gruuml;ndeten und entwickelten; soll die vorliegende Arbeit als ein Einblick in die neue chinesische Gegenwartsmalerei verstanden werden. Hierzu werden einige ausgewauml;hlte Gruppen und Stile vorgestellt. Des Weiteren soll untersucht werden; ob der chinesischen zeitgenouml;ssischen Malerei durch die Liberalisierung des gesellschaftlichen Systems der Weg fuuml;r eine sich frei entfaltende Moderne bereitet wurde. Das Bild bdquo;Der zweite Zustandldquo; (1987; Ouml;l auf Leinwand; 145 x 200 cm) von Geng Jianyi dient exemplarisch zur Louml;sung der Aufgabenstellung.
#4487693 in eBooks 2008-08-05 2008-08-05File Name: B00CJ88ULC
Review
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Dont get the Kindle Edition!!! Sheet Music on Kindle is a miserable experience.By Michael W WisniewskiFirst off I LOVE KINDLE BOOKS (iPad) and I had really high hopes for this book BUT I cannot not recommend the Kindle Edition of this book. Get the Physical Book (I would give the physical book 5 stars; the Kindle Edition only gets 2 stars). The main reason I got this book was to practice sight-reading simple pieces. In this; it excels; you cant beat the Bach pieces for good practice. The text and examples are excellent for helping the musician determine how to play the pieces. So if you are considering this book; get the Physical Edition; its worth it.Kindle Edition is BrokenI DO NOT RECOMMEND the Kindle edition. In fact; I cannot recommend the Kindle Edition of ANY Songbooks or Sheet Music. The Kindle software is a new level of miserable for musicians. It is designed for text ... and handles graphics very poorly. It treats sheet music as graphics ... and because of that ... sheet music is handled poorly.My Complaints:1. The music is treated as a graphic ... a small graphic; too small to read comfortably even 1 foot away on my piano.2. There is always a border; you can never get the music to naturally fill the screen naturally. The iPad already has a physical border and then the onscreen image has a 2nd border; so now everything is even smaller than it has to be. In contrast; if you have use a PDF reader for your sheet music (ForScore or iBooks) the music will naturally fill the the screen almost to the edge. The iPad is a compromise for sheet music; it is just a little smaller than "just right"; so anything that makes the music any smaller makes it unsuitable for reading music ESPECIALLY while playing an instrument. Which is what most people do with sheet music right?3. If I "pinch zoom" so I can see the music better it creates 2 problems. A. It slides around the screen like its on ice??!? Its hard enough sometimes to read music; we dont need sheet music moving around while we are playing. B. the worst thing; you cant swipe immediately to the next page!!! You have to exit the "zoom" so that the graphic goes back to regular size AND THEN YOU CAN SWIPE to the next page. Try that while playing music and see what happens. Obviously the designers didnt test any of this sheet music in front of a real musician trying to read the music.Audio Preview is NeatThe one Kindle feature I did like was the ability to preview the audio inside Kindle. There is a little player next to each piece so can hear it played. A very neat feature.LAPTOP version of KindleSo I tried viewing this book on a Macbook Pro version of Kindle. It sorta solved the size problem; but then it created two more issues: 1. now Ive got a laptop on my piano; not really optimal; or easy to switch if I wanna bring my sheet music to another location 2. the laptop version of Kindle doesnt support the Sound Preview!!! Geez. In comparison; the PDF viewer is actually usable on a laptop. So once again; plain old PDF readers win over any sort of Kindle version of sheet music.My Final WorkaroundBecause of all the problems with the Kindle Edition; my final workaround was to read the excellent introductory material that is part of the book. I found it interesting; informative and useful. Then I went online and found public domain/PDF versions of the pieces so I could practice them on the piano using my iPad and a PDF reader!!!2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Can not use as digital sheet musicBy Wo Wei YanThis review is for Kindle edition. The two stars is for has playing notes otherwise zero star only. I have the yellow Schimers Library Vol. 2066 printed copy. The intention for this book is for play with tablet. The music sheet is a scaled down scanned image. Its far too small to view in normal play position. Although it can click to enlarge the image; not practical in real playing. Finally bought again from musicnotes dot com. It not easier for eye; have midi playback function too. Worth the extra dollar.This book is not for use as a digital music sheet; non can serve this purpose. The attached photo explained.2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Graded pieces; reasonable editingBy ejw2010It starts with That Piece; you know the one; but then its out of the way and as you progress through the book; they get more and more interesting and difficult. Some of the fingering I find awkward at first; sometimes I see the reasoning and follow it; sometimes my fingers simply prefer something else; but I dont see that as a fault. Clear printing; and everything makes sense (whether its original or not; I cant say; Im not a musicologist). If youre looking for some nice classical pieces to fiddle with while youre working through exercise books; this is perfect. If you dont like Bach; steer clear.