Pastoral From LoveToKnow 1911 PASTORAL (from Lat. pastor, a shepherd), the name given to a certain class of modern literature in which the "idyll" of the Greeks and the "eclogue" of the Latins are imitated.
Pastoral Get Babylon's Translation Software! Free Download Now! Babylon 8 - Your all-in-one solution ...
pastoral pastose - Thickly painted. The adjectival form of impasto.
Pastorale sur la naissance de notre Seigneur Evaristo Baschenis Still-life with Musical Instruments (1617-1677) ...
The Pastoral Concert ca. 1510, by Giorgione or Titian, has been cited as an inspiration for Manet's painting.
The scene is a pastoral idyll. The young "shepherdesses" wear fine silks, and a contemporary audience would understand an erotic promise in the display of pink toes.
Tahitian Pastoral (1898 AD) Tahitian Pastorals (1893 AD) Tahitian Woman's Head Tahitian Women Bathing (1892 AD) Tahitian Women under the Palms (1892 AD) Tahitians at Rest (1891 AD) Taperaa Mahana (1892 AD) Te Poipoi (1892 AD) ...
Pastoral idealized landscape painting or country scene. Pensieri small models made as preliminaries to larger models, when making sculpture. Perspective ...
His trees exist for pleasant shade; his peasants to give us the illusion of pastoral life, not to toil for a living. His world is not to be lived in, only to be looked at in a mood of pleasing melancholy or suave revery.
Generally they were devoted to pastoral and welfare work. The first, the Theatines, founded by Giampietro Caraffa (later Paul IV) and the Vicentine aristocrat S. Gaetano da Thiene, emerged from the Roman Oratory of Divine Love in 1524.
These pastoral images of his native Holland depict windmills, fields, and rivers, initially in the Dutch Impressionist manner of the Hague School and then in a variety of styles and techniques documenting his search for a personal voice.
Caravaggio combines a hint of horror with pastoral beauty. In the foreground the sharp knife is silhouetted against the light on Isaac's arm.
Their lifestyles depended on hunting and foraging for food or later on pastoral agriculture.
the eighteenth centurv to describe a n oil painting of a dream­like pastoral setting which shows people, often in extravagant costume, amusing themselves with dancing, music-making and courtship.
The suggestion of melancholy, perhaps also longing, is a strong theatrical element in almost all of his work. Giorgione's Pastoral Symphony, circa 1508, is one of the greatest masterpieces of the High Renaissance.
As popular as Watson's work was, its time in the forefront of Canadian art was limited because of the development of a new artistic movement which consciously set itself in opposition to Watson's pastoralism... The Group of Seven ...
Sometimes an artist describes aerial perspective by allowing the white, or color of the paper to dominate as the depth increases. A good example of this occurs in Claude Lorraine's Landscape with Ruins, Pastoral Figures, ...
The paintings also depict the American landscape as a pastoral setting, where human beings and nature coexist peacefully.
See also: Painting, School, Movement, Roman, Classic
 
|