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1 I | rice-wine, - masking their faces with sheets of white paper,
2 I | girl dared not show their faces abroad; they were expected
3 V | V~ABOUT FACES IN JAPANESE ART~I~ A VERY
4 V | prints; and he described the faces therein portrayed as "absolutely
5 V | say truthfully that the faces in the old picture-books
6 V | feel sure that, if these faces seem to most Occidentals
7 V(1)| intentional conventionalism of the faces is hardly noticeable when
8 V | pictures. I confess that the faces, although not even then
9 V | conventionalism~{p. 104}~of the faces to indicate the arrested
10 V | remarks about the treatment of faces in ordinary Japanese drawing
11 V | immature youth (boy and girl faces), there is merely a general
12 V | grand natures behind plain faces, and although fine countenances
13 V | certain strong aquiline faces, certain so-called Roman
14 V | true that we do not admire faces in which only brutal, or
15 V | artless comments upon the faces therein depicted. A complete
16 V | very good."~ "But the faces! There cannot really be
17 V | There cannot really be such faces in the world."~ "We think
18 V | ordinary men. Really horrible faces we very seldom draw."~
19 V | Those are good, common faces, - mostly country folk,
20 V | nothing very bad in those faces. We have faces in the West
21 V | in those faces. We have faces in the West very much worse."~ "
22 VII | loved toys~{p. 159}~and faces. The plaintive murmur of
23 VII | passionless. I turned from the faces of the statues to the faces
24 VII | faces of the statues to the faces of the people about me to
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