Everyday beauty comes to
New York, New York, 10012
Mayra Mack
Everyday beauty comes to our house, our garden, a covered table, woodwork all determined by fashion and style.
Then we come to the artistic beauty which Scruton is dear to his heart: he elevates art to something religious and criticizes the contemporary art vulgarity and calls the flight of beauty.
Interestingly, the part about art and eros: here he discusses a number of famous paintings and the kind of desire they generate, for example by analyzing the posture or the look in the eyes.
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