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 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.
The way that the pictorial space draws the viewer in is accentuated in the triptychs, a format virtually reinvented by Bacon for modern art.
pictorial space - illusionary space appearing to recede backward into depth from a picture plane picture plane - flat surface of a two-dimensional art work ...
His figures were after all but regimentations of the same urgent and sweeping gestures that were the mark of his driving first abstractionist manner, and were set into pictorial spaces that did not exist in painting before Abstract Expressionism ...
By connecting the saints with the architecture which opens out at the sides, the entire pictorial space seems to open out for the observer.
Rational inquiry was believed to be the key to success; therefore, efforts were made to discover the correct laws of proportion for architecture and for the representation of the human body and to systematize the rendering of pictorial space.
Artists and audiences have always perceived pictorial space in ways that suit their worldview -- their way, literally, of "looking at the world.
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.
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.
Other forms of pictorial space art bring the viewer to inner visions inspired directly or otherwise by the fruits of the expanding vision of Humanity.
(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 ...
Pictorial space in these paintings was created by the spectator's perception of the shifting and mixing of the colors, which he achieved by using equiluminance.
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.
terms and phrase associated with Whistler's style - obscured details, single-figure themes, the natural and spiritual domain, waking, monochromatic , sleep, dreams, death, aura, religious implication, emotionalism, emotionalists, pictorial space, ...
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.
German Expressionism and Fauvism were going on simultaneously, and the works of those artists also tended towards flattened pictorial space.
The pictorial space had to be emptied of all symbolic content and all content signifying form. It had to be decongested and cleared, so as to show a new reality where thought was of prime importance.
style of the twentieth century, Cubism was developed in Paris by Picasso and Braque, beginning in 1907. The style is based on the simultaneous presentation of multiple views of objects, reconfigured to form a flattened and ambiguous pictorial space.
organic forms; a style of painting created by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque in the early 20th century whereby the artist breaks down the natural forms of the subjects into geometric shapes and creates a new kind of pictorial space.
an astonishing anticipation of the fifteenth-century perspective system. Though their significance was once ignored, these small scenes are now recognized as an extremely important phase in the development of Giotto's conception of pictorial space.
See also: Pictorial, Painting, Expression, Movement, Composition
 
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