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Modelling

Fine arts ModelingModern art

Modelling
Working pliable material, such as clay or wax, into three-dimensional forms.
Modernism ...

 


Modelling: additive process, direct method 1. in sculpture; manipulation of soft, pliable, malleable material such as clay or wax 2. posing for an artist 3.

MODELLING
1. In sculpture, shaping a form in some plastic material, such as clay, wax, or plaster. 2. In drawing, painting, or printmaking, the illusion of three-dimensionality on a flat surface created by simulating effects of light and shadow.

modeling or modelling - A sculpture technique in which a three-dimensional form is manipulated in a soft material such as clay — either modeling clay (Plasticine is a well-known brand) or ceramic clay — or wax.

TONAL MODELLING:
Graduated light to dark tones to make a two-dimensional shape three dimensional.
TONE: ...

In painting, the modelling of form (the creation of a sense of three-dimensionality in objects) through the use of light and shade.

The modelling was done by hand in the case of the earlier figures, and small objects such as toys and dolls, which are solid;. the clay was worked up into a mass with the fingers, the marks. of which may often be seen.

During this period, Tiepolo was influenced by the robust plastic modelling of his Venetian contemporary Giovanni Battista Piazzetta, as in such works as the monumental "Madonna of Carmelo and the Souls of Purgatory" (c. 1720).

These are carving (in stone, wood, ivory or bone); modelling in clay; modelling (in clay or wax) and then casting the model in bronze; constructing (a twentieth-century development).

Modelling - 3-D Modelling in art is a process by which the forms of a sculpture are built up piece by piece out of a plastic material like clay, wax or plaster ...more info ...

The energy emanating from these grim and powerful figures is obtained by the contrast between the continuous modelling of the head and the visible parts of the body, and the shadow-broken modelling of the heavy drapery, ...

The term "plastic art" - derived from the word "plasticize", meaning "to mould" - describes any art form which involves modelling or moulding in three dimensions. The most common example of the plastic arts is sculpture.

Three-dimensional modelling and animation (virtual and physical) assists in the conception of very complicated spaces, ...

He admired the new discoveries in the field of colour and modelling. He, too, wanted to surrender to his impressions, to paint the forms and colours he saw, not those he knew about or had learned about.

Work with a friend to take turns in modelling and drawing each other.
When drawing in large scale, concentrate on simplifying the outline, on the recognition of basic shapes and forms of the figure, and use a diversity of materials.

STAGE 1 - Polystyrene and chicken wire were formed to make an ‘armature' for modelling the first of two clay heads in deep relief.
STAGE 2 - A simple plaster mould was made with ‘legs' to enable it to be free-standing.

applied to bold contrasts affecting a whole composition, but is also more technically used by artists and art historians for the use of effects representing contrasts of light, not necessarily strong, to achieve a sense of volume in modelling ...

BEESWAX - Art material made from from honeycombs, used as a medium in modelling and in wax varnishes.
BINDER - Used to ensure particles of pigment stick to one another in artist paint such as Oil or Acrylic ...

materials: any physical substances used to make art works, including media (for example, wax, crayons, oil paint, modelling clay) and found objects (for example, leaves, shells, wire).

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