Art Eats Art
Artistic Masters Harmonize in "Art Eats ArtLyrics
Art Eats Art
Art is consumed by other forms of art.
Giotto, Botticelli
Referencing famous painters from the Renaissance period.
Michelangelo, da Vinci
Continuation of references to Renaissance artists.
Rubens, Rembrandt and Bernini
Listing additional painters, expanding the scope of artistic influence.
Art Eats Art
Reiteration of the theme that art consumes and transforms other art.
Donatello, Titian, Durer
Referring to sculptors and painters from various periods.
Manet, Monet, Gaugin, Degas
Naming impressionist and post-impressionist painters.
Toulouse Lautrec and Renoir
Continuing with references to artists, this time focusing on French painters.
Art Eats Art
Restating the concept that art consumes and transforms its predecessors.
Pieter Breughel, Bosch, el Greco
Listing artists known for their distinctive styles and contributions.
Max Ernst, Pablo Picasso
Referring to influential 20th-century artists, including surrealists.
And Duchamp, Matisse and Miró
Naming artists associated with various modern art movements.
Art Eats Art
Emphasizing the continuous cycle of art influencing and absorbing other art.
Art Eats Art
Reiteration of the central theme that art consumes and transforms.
Amadeus Mozart, Hayden
Introducing classical composers from different eras.
Mahler, Bach and Aaron Copland
Expanding the list of composers, spanning various musical styles.
Richard Wagner, Schubert
Continuing with references to notable composers.
Schumann
Adding more classical composers to emphasize the diversity of influences.
Art Eats Art
Reiterating that art, in this case, music, is part of the cycle of consumption.
And Antonio Vivaldi
Listing additional classical composers, emphasizing their contributions.
Béla Bartók, Strauss, Puccini
Including notable composers from different periods and styles.
Monteverdi, Paganini
Adding more composers to the list, showcasing the broad spectrum of influences.
Art Eats Art
Stating that music, like other art forms, is subject to consumption and transformation.
Ralph Vaughan Williams and Debussy
Introducing composers from the Romantic and Impressionist periods.
Schoenberg, Cage and Orff and Fauré
Referencing 20th-century composers known for innovative styles.
Ives, Stockhausen, Glass and Boulez
Expanding the list to include influential modern composers.
Art Eats Art
Reiterating the theme that art continually consumes and transforms.
Alessi, Brunelleschi
Shifting focus to architects and artists associated with architectural design.
Palladio, Vasari
Continuing with references to architects known for their contributions.
Gilbert Scott and Wren and Gaudi
Listing architects who played a role in shaping architectural history.
Art Eats Art
Reiterating that architecture, like other art forms, undergoes a process of consumption and transformation.
Le Corbusier and Alto
Introducing influential architects, emphasizing their impact on the field.
Frank Lloyd Wright and Mies Van der Rohe
Continuing with references to architects known for their modernist contributions.
Hadid, Rogers, Piano
Listing contemporary architects known for their distinctive designs.
Art Eats Art
Reiterating the overarching theme that art consumes and transforms.
Walter Gropius and Breuer
Referring to influential architects known for their modernist designs.
Louis Sullivan and Foster
Continuing with references to architects who left a significant impact on the field.
And Frank Gehry, Pei and Fuller
Listing architects known for their contemporary and innovative designs.
Art Eats Art
Reiterating the central theme that art, regardless of form, is subject to a perpetual cycle of consumption and transformation.
Comment