| John Landseer - 1834 - 534 páginas
...life, and on every occasion he knew how to transfer the result of his observations to his canvas. " The smallest perceptible motion of the eyes, of the...themselves to a diversity of CHARACTER without ever risking propriety."—Roscoe's Translation. Thus far Lanzi. From the head of Rembrandt's Hebrew Adultress,... | |
| Shearjashub Spooner - 1865 - 662 páginas
...transfer the result of his observations to his canvass. Even his silence is eloquent, and in every actor the smallest perceptible motion of the eyes, of the nostrils, of the month, and of the fingers, corresponds to the chief movements of every passion ; the most animated... | |
| Shearjashub Spooner - 1867 - 654 páginas
...transfer the result of his observations to his canvass. Even his silence is eloquent, and in every actor the smallest perceptible motion of the eyes, of the...and what is more, they vary in innumerable degrees, wi thout ever departing from nature, and conform themselves to a diversity of character without ever... | |
| Shearjashub Spooner - 1873 - 664 páginas
...transfer the result of his observations to his canvass. Even his silence is eloquent, and in every actor the smallest perceptible motion of the eyes, of the...the passion that excites them ; and what is more. th»y vary in innumerable degrees, without ever departing from nature, and conform themselves to a... | |
| Shearjashub Spooner - 1873 - 666 páginas
...transfer the result of his observations Co his canvass. Even his silence is eloquent, anil in every actor the smallest perceptible motion of the eyes, of the...movements of every passion ; the most animated and vivi.l actions discover the violence of the passion that excites them ; and what is more, they varv... | |
| Arnold Gesell - 1925 - 472 páginas
...independence in the activity of these three or four zones. There is no synchronization in the activity of the eyes, of the nostrils, of the mouth and of the hands. The moving and energizing factors seem to be unrelated and surely unintegrated. Yet as one looks... | |
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