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Re: White spaces legislation
by Jim Fleming
Apology: s/Dilitant/Dilettant/ The Society of Dilettanti was a society of noblemen and gentlemen which sponsored the study of ancient Greek and Roman art and the creation of new work in the style. It was founded as a London dining club in 1734 by a group of people who had been on the Grand Tour. The group, initially led by Francis Dashwood, contained several dukes and was later joined by Joshua Reynolds, David Garrick, Uvedale Price and Richard Payne Knight, among others. The club quickly became wealthy and influential, through a system in which members had to pay it 4% of their income in any year in which they received certain forms of windfall, such as a marriage. The group aimed to correct and purify the public taste of the country; from the 1740s, it began to support Italian opera, and from the 1750s, it was the prime mover in establishing the Royal Academy. It also funded scholarships for youths to go on the Grand Tour, or for archaeological expeditions such as that of Richard Chandler, William Pars and Nicholas Revett, the results of which they published in Ionian Antiquities, a major influence on neo-Classicism in Britain. Modern manifestations of the society have popped up on campuses in England and the United States, most notably at Cambridge University where the society, comprised mostly of fellows and students at Clare College, meets every so often to discuss topics of interest [1]. Another, more obliquitous version of the society originates in Seattle, Washington and is devoted primarily to publishing art criticism. The society has since surreptitiously expanded to campuses across the United States.
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