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Pictorial

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Pictorialism was a photographic term used to describe images that emphasized the artistic quality of the photograph rather than the scene it depicted. The movement's primary aim was to bring photography into the fine art realm.

 


As regards Tarot claims, it should be remembered that some considerable part of the imputed Secret Doctrine has been presented in the pictorial emblems of Alchemy, ...

Pictorial Space
The illusionary space in a painting or other two-dimensional art that appears to recede backward into depth from the picture plane.
Pigment(s) ...

pictorial device: a technique in which a visual strategy or an aspect of design is used for a particular picture-making purpose (for example, using linear perspective and tonal devices to give the illusion of space in a drawing).

pictorial space In a painting or other two-dimensional art, illusionary space which appears to recede backward into depth from the picture plane.
picture plane The two-dimensional picture surface.

pictorial/picture surface - The flat plane of the canvas or other support, which is the two-dimensional arena of the image.

[edit] Pictorial art
Gustav Friedrich Hartlaub, who was the director of the Kunsthalle in Mannheim, coined the term in 1923 in a letter he sent to colleagues describing an exhibition he was planning.

Pictorial structure and clarity are the foundation of Cassatt's art. Under Edgar Degas' tutelage, she began to collect and study Japanese prints; their patterns and asymmetric designs greatly influenced her work.

PICTORIAL DEPTH:
How deep or shallow the picture looks ? window to infinity.
PLEIN AIR: ...

A pictorial composition made by covering sheet of paper or card with overlapping photographs or fragments of photographs.
Plaster or plaster of Paris ...

a pictorial theme showing the intervention of the Virgin Mary, or of other saints, with God the Father or with Christ on behalf of individuals or whole families, usually the donors of a work of art. International Gothic ...

Many pictorial themes in Flemish Baroque painting, particularly that of the humanist and diplomat Rubens, are by no means confined to depicting events.

Other pictorial cues are easily recognized by optical characteristics:
Relative Size ...

Raphael's pictorial research had been enriched by his solutions regarding the use of light in the Expulsion of Heliodorus and the Liberation of St Peter. These pictorial devices reappear in the Madonna of Foligno, now in the Vatican Museum.

Elaborate pictorial marquetry or inlaid paneling, used in Renaissance Italy and also 16th-century Germany.
J
Jacobean ...

term for a pictorial illustration of a subject
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Define Iconography ...

In Flanders, pictorial in character, largely decorative, sculpture was predominantly in wood. Certain families of artists excelled in this the Duquesnoy, the Verbruggen, the Quellin.

"Hopper became a pictorial poet who recorded the starkness and vastness of America.

Iconography - Pictorial material relating to or illustrating a subject. The traditional or conventional images or symbols associated with a subject and especially a religious or legendary subject.

montage - A single pictorial composition made by juxtaposing or overlapping many pictures or designs. The art or process of making such a composition. Also, a rapid succession of different images or shots in a movie. (pr. mahn-tahzh') ...

pictograph - pictorial symbol used to convey an idea; graph, chart or record using symbolic pictures
pictorial space - illusionary space appearing to recede backward into depth from a picture plane ...

Cubism is based on the simultaneous presentation of multiple views, disintegration, and the geometric reconstruction of objects in flattened, ambiguous pictorial so space; figure and ground merge into one interwoven surface of shifting planes.

- During the later 19th century the term caricature, somewhat loosely used at all times, came gradually to cover almost every form of humorous art, from the pictorial wit and wisdom of Sir John Tenniel to the weird grotesques of Mr S. H.

[6] Lyrical Abstraction is a type of freewheeling abstract painting that emerged in the mid-sixties when abstract painters returned to various forms of painterly, pictorial, expressionism with a predominate focus on process, ...

(also termed: sand mosaic, sand altar, earth picture, ground-painting) A rather odd method of pictorial expression first practised by the North American Indians, especially the Navaho. The pictures are often up to 20 ft (6 m) across.

Until the first decade of the 20th century, art, whether drawing, painting, or sculpture, was always essentially pictorial, and was based on themes and compositions representing real world ideas... The Minneapolis Institute of Arts: Modernism ...

A feeling or mood created pictorially by the manipulation of light and spatial affects.

In a convulsed epoch he alone maintained classic repose; in an age in which painting was pictorial he was "le peintre le plus sculpteur qui fut jamais.

marquetry - Inlay or veneers of wood form a pictorial image; as related to parquetry which forms geometric designs.

The impulse was, in general, reflective and cerebral, with pictorial means simplified in order to create a kind of elemental impact.

Like the Cubists, Boccioni's pictorial language is based on shallow spaces and shifting planes.

Leonardo da Vinci's unfinished Adoration of the Magi (1481; Uffizi Gallery, Florence) is regarded as a landmark of unified pictorial composition, later realized fully in his fresco The Last Supper (1495-97; Santa Maria delle Grazie, Milan).

Carpet with pictorial design. Northern India, Lahore, late 16th or early 17th century. Wool pile on cotton foundation. 27'4" x 9'6". The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Gift of J. Pierpont Morgan, 1917, New York (17.190.858).

Line - In art line is one of the pictorial elements. Line is a stroke or mark long in proportion to its width, made with a pen, a tool, etc. upon a surface ...more info ...

Its name derived from Malevich's belief that Suprematist art would be superior to all the art of the past, and that it would lead to the "supremacy of pure feeling or perception in the pictorial arts.

In first eleven issues of the journal De Stijl Mondrian published his long essay Neo-Plasticism in Pictorial Art in which among much else he wrote: 'As a pure representation of the human mind, art will express itself in an aesthetically purified, ...

Among these were: a rejection of traditional standards of composition and design; an ambivalent and often brittle emotional tone that reflected contemporary urban life and values; a general lack of concern for pictorial idealization; ...

Artistic content depends on internal form rather than pictorial representation. Abstract Art can be a representation having no reference to concrete objects or specific examples. Pablo Picasso is known for his abstract art creations. Accents ...

Braque and Pablo Picasso were soon after dubbed Cubists, and their innovative approach to pictorial space and subject matter exercised vast influence on modern painting.

When there is any illusion of depth in the picture, the picture plane is similar to a plate of glass behind which pictorial elements are arranged in depth.

The most evident change in his work is his increased interest in patterns and the continued flattening of pictorial space. Matisse is, along with Picasso, regarded as one of the most influential artists of the 20th century.

A montage is a single pictorial composition made by juxtaposing or superimposing many pictures or designs.
Photomontage
A photomontage is a single pictorial composition made by juxtaposing or superimposing photographic imagery.

The Nation's Art Critic Arthur C Danto says: "Eroticism and pictorial representation have coexisted since the beginning of art, and many great artists have a few erotic images in their 'X Portfolios' (to use Robert Mapplethorpe's term).

Seascape: a painting or work of pictorial art that depicts the sea or a scene that includes the sea; a painting representing an expansive view of the ocean or sea; picture or painting depicting life around the sea. Return to top ...

A pictorial technique in which the artist creates the image, or a portion of it, by adhering real materials that possess actual textures to the picture-plane surface, often combining them with painted or drawn passages.

For a long time I studied this sacred image, lived in its presence, but was afraid to make it part of my pictorial world. I dared not challenge the terrible power of the photograph's authenticity.

(1907) which, emphasized not the surface appearance but the structure position and the Idea of the subject In effect this came to mean presenting several views of the same subject within the same pictorial space The term 'Cubism' was first used by ...

Computer graphics: Use of computers to display and manipulate information in pictorial form. Input may be achieved by scanning an image, by drawing with a mouse or stylus on a graphics tablet, or by drawing directly on the screen with a light pen.

A pictorial technique of arranging cutout, ready-made illustrations, photographs, or fragments of them to create a composite image, either by gluing to a surface, or with computer graphics. 1. It is often used in screen printing and advertising. 2.

Cubism - An art style developed in 1908 by Picasso and Braque whereby the artist breaks down the natural forms of the subjects into geometric shapes and creates a new kind of pictorial space.

Surrealism - An art style developed in Europe in the 1920's, characterized by using the subconscious as a source of creativity to liberate pictorial subjects and ideas.

Illusionism: In artistic terms, the technique of manipulating pictorial or other means in order to cause the eye to perceive a particular reality.
Impasto: From the Italian word meaning "in paste." Paint, usually oil paint, applied very thickly.

SPACE
Actual: 2D space as in drawings, paintings or prints on flat surfaces, or 3D as in sculptures, architecture or ceramics.
Pictorial: the flat surface of the paper, canvas, or other material and is also known as the picture plane.

In the most developed form of Cubism, forms are fragmented into planes or geometric facets, like the facets in a diamond; these planes are rearranged to foster a pictorial, but not naturalistic, reality; ...

These artists used colour and paint expressively in their work to convey feelings and moods. Their paintings are characterised by shallow pictorial space and all over composition.

Analytic Cubism- An art movement developed jointly by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque in which the artists analyzed form from ever possible vantage point to combine the various views into one pictorial whole. Return to top ...

influential style of the twentieth century, beginning in 1907 and ending around 1914, cubism is based on the simultaneous presentation of multiple views, disintegration, and the geometric reconstruction of objects in flattened, ambiguous pictorial so ...

German Expressionism and Fauvism were going on simultaneously, and the works of those artists also tended towards flattened pictorial space.

This improvement on the technique of producing a printing plate from a photograph evolved from the traditional printmaking process of etching, as well as Talbot's photoglyphic engraving, an early photogravure process. Pictorialist photographers in ...

This visual language is one in which pictorial statements are slowly and intricately constructed, but when they are completed they can be understood quickly and easily by everyone.

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