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  1. Podcast: Sacred & Profane Love. Through wide ranging conversations with philosophers, literary critics, artists, and theologians, philosopher Jennifer A. Frey explores the nature of love and happiness as depicted in important works of literature, poetry, and film. Episode 1: Redemptive love and comic mercy in the short stories of Flannery O ...

  2. 26 de fev. de 2022 · Two Minute MuseumSacred and Profane Love - Titian"Your subscription will be my motivation!"Music usedFlow of Life by Jonny Easton: https: ...

  3. Episode 68: The Poetry of Jonathan Swift with Steve Karian. In this episode, I speak with Stephen Karian, renowned scholar of 18th century British literature, on the poems of Jonathan Swift, the promise and perils of satire, and the pleasures of reading profane poetry written by one of the great Divines. I hope you enjoy our conversation.

  4. Sacred and Profane Love. 1881 - 1882. Oil on canvas. Copying masterpieces that were unknown in Spain formed part of the training of the artists awarded pensions to study in Rome during the 19th century. The students had to reproduce the scenes to full scale and imitate their pictorial technique as far as possible.

  5. transient and eternal love and beauty.5 Later, in 1939, Panofsky elaborated on his earlier explanation by com- paring Sacred and Profane Love with an engraving after Baccio Bandinelli, the Combat of Ratio and Libido, commenting that the painting is a Venetian translation of the Neoplatonic theory of love into

  6. Sacred and Profane Love (Italian: Amor Sacro e Amor Profano) is an oil painting by Titian, probably painted in 1514, early in his career. The painting is presumed to have been commissioned by Niccolò Aurelio, a secretary to the Venetian Council of Ten, whose coat of arms appears on the sarcophagus or fountain, to celebrate his marriage to a young widow, Laura Bagarotto. It perhaps depicts a ...

  7. 12 de out. de 2017 · In ‘The Elementary Forms of Religious life,’ Durkheim argued that all societies divide the world into two categories: sacred and profane. Religion is based upon this division: it is a unified system of beliefs and practices related to sacred things – things set apart and forbidden. Profane things are mundane.