When Oscar Wilde wrote that "The imitation art of life far exceeds the art of imitating life" what does he mean? In short, the phrase quoted by The Lay of Lying (1891) is about how art influences the way we see the world around us. I will take a fog as an example.
J. M. W. Turner, Kilmann rises to coal in the moonlight in 1835, Washington DC National Museum of Art
One of the ideas of Wild is that we are highly appreciating the beauty of the mist in today's nature. Painters like Turner have revealed beauty.
Another famous example is how Nietzsche was touched by Nicholas Poussin and Claude Lorrain's work. The two masters made Nietzsche the strongest emotion in front of his picture, so whenever he sees the beautiful natural landscape, he will see it as Poussin or Claude Lorrain. A picture, his work confirms this.
"The beauty of the whole is wonderful, it will be a trigger for quiet worship for present and its revelation.It seems that there is nothing more natural than this unconsciously.You are in this pure, I think that it all resembles Pusan and his school - once heroic and idyllic feelings, "Friedrich Nietzsche, wanderers and his shadows (1880) were translated from German by Paul V.
Claude Lorrain, Delphi View and Parade, 1673, Chicago Art Museum - One of Claude Lorraine's paintings Nietzsche viewed in Rome in 1883
"In my life I have never experienced such a fall and never thought that this would happen on the planet - Claude Lorraine expanded indefinitely and every day was full of its wild Equivalent to the end of sex One, "Friedrich Nietzsche, Ecce Homo (written in 1888, published in 1908, translated from German by Anthony L. Lodovich)
Marcel Proust also has a similar idea in Volume 1 of "Searching for lost time" (1913 - 1927), but this time it was related to people. In the novel, Swan fell in love with Odette. Odette was not his type. That's because she suddenly remembered dipola in the mural painting of Botticelli.
Our idea is that the perception of our life will change with art, so nature sometimes seems to imitate the picture we saw before. When this happens, life seems to imitate art
As Wilde said in "The lie of lying", "Things depend on what we see and watch them, the way we see it, the way art is influenced on us."
My second argument is that imitating the so-called stories and stories of life is a two-way relationship. In the same way that art mimics Aristotle 's sense of life, in the life of Oscar Wilde, life imitates art. The story imitates life and life imitates the story. "Life" in this sense is a composition of the same kind of human imagination, just like the "story". It is composed by humans through positive reasoning through the same reasoning that we make up the story. When someone is talking about his life - and this is mainly when we intend to talk about it - it's always a cognitive credit, not a clear crystal solo. so
Oscar Wilde wrote that "Life imitates art, not imitating art." It is different to discuss their results. Now you can add that our stamps prefer to imitate both. Deane R. Briggs, the chairman of the federal stamp federation, wrote in the fourth quarter of 2015: "Explain the options and require the members to express their preferences. It will be interesting to see how this move ends.While the league's reformists wish to win, the background is a hill Regardless of whether it is a huge sculpture on the top or a stamp size printed image, more extensive discussion will follow.