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Icarus (Greek mythology) --- Daedalus (Greek mythology) --- Arts --- Fine Arts - General --- Art, Architecture & Applied Arts --- Mythology, Greek --- Arts, Fine --- Arts, Occidental --- Arts, Western --- Fine arts --- Icarus --- Daedalus --- Humanities --- Δαίδαλος --- Daidalos --- Taitale --- Íkaros --- Vikare --- Ίκαρος --- Arts, Primitive --- Icare dans l'art --- Icare dans la litterature
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Créer des automates, inventer des labyrinthes complexes à s’y perdre, remodeler les lois de la nature et s'envoler vers le soleil : les figures associées à Dédale continuent d’animer nos rêves en dépit d’un essor des techniques qui a transformé ces défis en expériences familières. Le mythe grec du premier artiste-ingénieur mobilise en effet un symbolisme universel en construisant la scène – masculine – des origines de la culture, quand la chute de son fils, Icare, illustre le statut tragique de sa transmission. La culture européenne, des lettres aux arts - peinture, sculpture, musique, danse, cinéma -, a constamment interprété la fable au fil des siècles. Le Moyen Âge marque le mythe du sens chrétien de la faute, alors que la poésie baroque célèbre l’énergique Icare, fils émancipé que tout oppose au fils déraisonnable de l’Antiquité. Du xviiie au début du xixe siècle, les utopies politiques et techniques annexent Dédale et Icare, mais à l'Âge industriel, c'est le seul Icare qui devient à la fois le pionnier de l’aéronautique et la figure impuissante de la sublimation artistique. La culture contemporaine, plus que jamais, retisse la fable. Les artistes découvrent de nouveau la figure de Dédale l’inventeur de labyrinthe en même temps que celle de son autre fils, le Minotaure, part d’ombre des multiples visages de l’artiste. Michèle Dancourt déchiffre l’histoire et les métamorphoses des fictions singulières forgées autour des deux noms mythiques à travers textes et images, et leurs jeux. Elle ouvre des chemins inédits dans le dédale des inventions artistiques, de Gilgamesh à Joyce, du skyphos Rayet à Brazil de Terry Gillian.
Arts --- Fine Arts - General --- Art, Architecture & Applied Arts --- Arts, Fine --- Arts, Occidental --- Arts, Western --- Fine arts --- Humanities --- Icarus --- Daedalus --- Δαίδαλος --- Daidalos --- Taitale --- Íkaros --- Vikare --- Ίκαρος --- Dédalo --- Dédale --- Ícaro --- Ícare --- Arts, Primitive --- Dédale --- art --- littérature --- Icare --- mythologie
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In a major revisionary approach to ancient Greek culture, Sarah Morris invokes as a paradigm the myths surrounding Daidalos to describe the profound influence of the Near East on Greece's artistic and literary origins.
Art, Greek. --- Arts --- Greek art --- Art, Aegean --- Classical antiquities --- Art, Greco-Bactrian --- History. --- Daedalus --- Δαίδαλος --- Daidalos --- Taitale --- Dédalo --- Dédale --- Acropolis. --- Aeschylus. --- Ancient Greece. --- Ancient Greek art. --- Ancient Greek comedy. --- Ancient Greek sculpture. --- Ancient Greek temple. --- Anecdote. --- Archaeology. --- Archaic Greece. --- Athenian Democracy. --- Barbarian. --- Baruch Spinoza. --- Battle of Salamis. --- Classical Athens. --- Classical Greece. --- Classical archaeology. --- Classical mythology. --- Colonies in antiquity. --- Copernican Revolution (metaphor). --- Crete. --- Criticism of religion. --- Critique. --- Culture of Greece. --- Cumae. --- Daedalus. --- Deus. --- Erechtheus. --- Etruscan civilization. --- Euripides. --- Explanation. --- Fifth-century Athens. --- First principle. --- Funeral oration (ancient Greece). --- Greco-Persian Wars. --- Greek Philosophy. --- Greek Ship. --- Greek literature. --- Greek mythology. --- Greek name. --- Greek tragedy. --- Greeks. --- Hellenistic-era warships. --- Hephaestus. --- Hermeneutics. --- Herodotus. --- Hesiod. --- Histories (Herodotus). --- Immanence. --- Ionians. --- Iphigenia in Aulis. --- Law court (ancient Athens). --- Literature. --- Lykourgos (king). --- Maimonides. --- Marrano. --- Materialism. --- Medism. --- Mycenae. --- Naval warfare. --- Northern Greece. --- Odysseus. --- Oedipus the King. --- Pantheism. --- Peloponnesian War. --- Persian people. --- Philo of Byblos. --- Philoctetes. --- Philosopher. --- Philosophical analysis. --- Philosophy. --- Phoenicia. --- Phoenician alphabet. --- Phrygians. --- Plutarch. --- Poetry. --- Politics. --- Reality. --- Reason. --- Religio. --- Religion. --- Sanchuniathon. --- Scientific revolution. --- Scythia. --- Sensibility. --- Sola scriptura. --- Sophocles. --- Teleology. --- Temple of Artemis. --- Temple of Olympian Zeus, Athens. --- Terracotta. --- The Persians. --- Theatre of ancient Greece. --- Thebes, Greece. --- Themistocles. --- Theology. --- Thessaly. --- Vitruvius. --- Western Greece. --- Writing.
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