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Modeling

Fine arts Mixed mediaModelling

Color modeling
Extending the range of a color from light to dark determines its brilliance and contrast, as well as the sense of depth in a painting.

 


Modeling Paste -- How to Apply Texture of Modeling Paste
Acrylic Paint Mediums - Paint Additives that Create Texture
Acrylic Paint Mediums - Paint Additives That Create Texture
Critique Corner Gallery ...

Modeling Material
Material that is formed into a shape. Most modeling materials harden when the moisture in them evaporates, such as clay. Some do not harden, such as plastecine and can be used again.

modeling clay - A nonhardening substance used for modeling sculptures — for sketches, models for casting, and by students. It is plastic (in the sense of being workable).

Modeling: Representing color and lighting effects to make an image appear three-dimensional.
Monochromatic: A single color in all it's values.
Motif: A term meaning "subject". Flowers or roses can be a motif.

modeling In sculpture, the shaping of a form in some plastic material, such as clay or plaster; in drawing, painting, and printmaking, the rendering of a form, usually by means of hatching or chiaroscuro, ...

modeling 1. Working pliable material such as clay or wax into three-dimensional forms. 2.

modeling - Three-dimensional effect created by the use of changes in color, the use of lights and darks, cross-hatching, etc.

Modeling: Representing color and lighting effects to make an image appear three-dimensional. Return to top
Monochromatic: A single color in all it's values. Consisting of only a single color or hue; may include its tints and shades. Return to top ...

Modeling himself after the style of Andy Warhol's Pop Art, and Marcel Duchamp's ready-mades, Koons delighted in the controversy and artistic debate that accompanied his works.

These modeling sessions resulted in such idyllic works as Summer of 1909, now in the Rhode Island School of Design, Providence.

The careful modeling of the woman's face gives particular emphasis to the details, but it makes the figure intensely expressive, with a sense of ineffable melancholy, concealed beneath an exterior of toughness and diligent attention to her work.

A technique of modeling, indicating tone and suggesting light and shade in drawing or tempera painting, using closely set parallel lines.

Quantifying and Modeling the Strength of Motion Illusions Perceived in Static Patterns
By Johannes M. Zanker, Frouke Hermens, Robin Walker
Journal of Vision
Video ...

Additive sculpture
Modeling a sculpture by adding materials to it until the desired effect is achieved.

sculpture - three-dimensional art object; art or practice of shaping figures or designs in the round or in relief, as by carving, modeling or casting ...

Superimposed layers of parallel lines (hatching) at an angle to one another; used to create shadow and modeling. Culture.

Carving: The cutting of a figure or design out of a solid material such as stone or wood, as contrasted to the additive technique of modeling.

If traditional perspective and modeling had been rejected, first by Edouard Manet and then by Cezanne, Monet, Georges Seurat, and Gauguin, it was because they realized that such procedures had reached a dead end.

Chase, who founded one of the first outdoor painting schools in 1878 in New York and his student, Charles Hawthorne who founded the Cape Cod School of Art in1899, espoused painting the changing effects of light with masses of color while modeling and ...

1772 appeared later than Fleischman's but are considered transitional and partly retrogressive with a return to lower contrast, smooth transaxial modeling, finely-modeled bracketed serifs, and long stems.

The modeling of the Count's face is competent and expressive, while Argunov's fondness for detailed rendering of his sujects' clothing and for warm colors does not violate the unity of the composition.

Neue Sachlichkeit gathered momentum when Karl Blossfeldt's breathtaking, detailed magnifications of plants, which he had taken around 1900 to assist him in modeling plants, were published in Original Forms of Art (1928), ...

The Cubist emphasized a flat, two-dimensional surface and rejected the idea that art should imitate nature, refusing traditional techniques such as perspective, foreshortening, modeling, and chiaroscuro.

Although these works show Sienese influence, they are also closely related to Tommaso da Modena's paintings in their naturalism, psychological penetration, and solid modeling.

Apelles is described as the greatest painter of Antiquity, and is noted for perfect technique in drawing, brilliant color, and modeling.

chiaroscuro - The term chiaroscuro refers to the fine art painting modeling effect of using a strong contrast between light and dark to give the illusion of depth or three-dimensionality.

A certain amount of chiaroscuro has the effect of light modeling in painting, where three-dimensional volume is suggested by highlights and shadow.

Artfully applied, a surface patina highlights the modeling of the bronze and therefore enhances its beauty and value.

Instruction progressed from drawing from classical statues or plaster casts to modeling from nudes to applying paint to original work.

A term (Italian: "light" and "dark") referring to the modeling of mass by carefully arranging the tones from dark to light creating a dramatic three-dimensional realism.

The Cubist painters rejected the inherited concept that art should copy nature, or that they should adopt the traditional techniques of perspective, modeling, and foreshortening. They wanted instead to emphasize the two-dimensionality of the canvas.

Wax from honeycombs, used as a medium in modeling, in encaustic painting, in wax varnishes, in etching grounds, as a resist in batik, and other techniques and media.

A word borrowed from Italian ("light" and "dark") referring to the modeling of volume and depth by depicting light and shade by contrasting them boldly
Classical ...

modeling The formation of an image in clay, wax, etc., to be reproduced in some more durable material, such as bronze; also, the representation of a structure, such as a building.

The Cubist style emphasized the flat, two-dimensional surface of the picture plane, rejecting the traditional techniques of perspective, foreshortening, modeling, and chiaroscuro and refuting time-honoured theories of art as the imitation of nature.

Disjunctive narrative, International style, Siennese, maniera greca, altarpiece, tempera, polyptych, triptych, patron, modeling, fresco (buono fresco, fresco secco)
4. 15th century Outside Italy (1400-1500) ...

To draw does not mean simply to reproduce contours: drawing does not consist merely of line. Drawing is also expression, the inner form, the plane and modeling. See what remains after that.

In the "Bread Series", I use a variety of textural elements on the canvas, including bread, either burned or not burned, which is chemically preserved into an immortal durability in a monthlong process, as well as fibers, earth, wire mesh, modeling ...

Like black chalk, it is cut into sticks and sharpened to a point for use as a drawing instrument. It has been popular since the Renaissance and can produce both sharp contours and delicate, smooth modeling, as in this drawing by Jusepe de Ribera.

But while the northern panels show a dry, linear treatment of drapery, the later panel has a smoother overlapping of folds, better understood modeling, and a far more subtle and sophisticated handling of relief - all derived from Byzantine models.

See also: Painting, Sculpture, Movement, Composition, Renaissance