Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 4Department of Archaeology - Archaeology |
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Page 153
... important . If we think , as Swiss researchers do , that the maximum number of dots corres- ponds to the maximum number the artists could count to , then the maximum number is important not only as a figure for the size of a flock , but ...
... important . If we think , as Swiss researchers do , that the maximum number of dots corres- ponds to the maximum number the artists could count to , then the maximum number is important not only as a figure for the size of a flock , but ...
Page 160
... importance : first , the general descriptive parameters used , or the aspects of varia- bility chosen , for measurement ; second , the resolution of the measure- ment of those chosen aspects . It is also important to realize , however ...
... importance : first , the general descriptive parameters used , or the aspects of varia- bility chosen , for measurement ; second , the resolution of the measure- ment of those chosen aspects . It is also important to realize , however ...
Page 204
... important factor . The last major concern is that of trying to explain why styles change . The evidence from the eighteenth - century regarding stylistic change suggests that much of this explanation lies outside the realm of aesthetic ...
... important factor . The last major concern is that of trying to explain why styles change . The evidence from the eighteenth - century regarding stylistic change suggests that much of this explanation lies outside the realm of aesthetic ...
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academic aesthetic African Alentejo analysis Anthropology archaeo Archaeological Review Archaeology areas artefacts artist Beaker Bohuslän British Cambridge 4:2 Cambridge University Press candlesticks ceramic Chippindale Christopher Chippindale Clarke classical concern considered contemporary decoration descriptive method design systematics economy and ideology elements Europe example geometric Gombrich Greek art halberd Hodder human Hyenstrand ideas images important individual interpretation James Whitley Late Bronze Age logic London material culture material record means Mesolithic Mont Bégo motifs Museum Mycenaean Neolithic Neolithic Europe objects OPMAE organisation Oxford painting particular pastoral Paul Lane period Peterborough ware picture Piggott pottery prehistoric art prehistoric record production relationship representation Review from Cambridge ritual rock carvings rock-art Rococo rôle schist plaques seen semiotic settlement shape silversmiths social society South Africa spatial specific Stonehenge structure style stylistic change stylistic patterns suggest Sweden symbolism theory types visual Welinder Wobst