SCULPTURING - definition. What is SCULPTURING
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%ما هو (من)٪ 1 - تعريف

SCULPTURE MADE FROM STONE
Stone sculpturing
  • Carved stone human figures, known as [[Moai]], on [[Easter Island]]
  • Boundary wall featuring a [[dry stone]] sculpture, in the [[Forest of Dean]], [[Gloucestershire]], UK
  • Sculptor [[Karen LaMonte]] examines ''Cumulus'', a stone sculpture that she created with the help of weather models, a super computer, and robots.
  • different mallets and pitching tool
  • This shows the process of "pointing", the traditional method of making exact copies in stone carving. A point machine is used to measure points on the original sculpture (seen on the right) and transfer those points onto the stone copy (left). Here we see the very early stages, where points have been measured and marked on the stone copy. These markings point out the high points of the surface so that the stone carver knows which surfaces to sink and which to leave alone.
  • Roughed out carvings
  • Ancient Egyptian triple portrait in [[greywacke]], a very hard [[sandstone]] that takes a fine polish
  • [[Unakoti]] group of [[rock relief]]s of [[Shiva]], [[Tripura]], India. 11th century

Sculpturing      
·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Sculpture.
Stone sculpture         
A stone sculpture is an object made of stone which has been shaped, usually by carving, or assembled to form a visually interesting three-dimensional shape. Stone is more durable than most alternative materials, making it especially important in architectural sculpture on the outside of buildings.
sculpture         
  • Psyche Revived by Love's Kiss]]'', 1787
  • ''Device to Root Out Evil'' (1997) sculpture by Dennis Oppenheim at <br />[[Palma de Mallorca]], Plaça de la Porta de Santa Catalina
  • Dacian Wars]]
  • [[Nuremberg]] sculptor [[Adam Kraft]], self-portrait from ''St Lorenz Church'', 1490s
  • ''[[The Angel of the North]]'' by [[Antony Gormley]], 1998
  • Apollo and Daphne]]'' in the [[Galleria Borghese]], 1622–1625
  • Augustan]] state Greco-Roman style on the [[Ara Pacis]], 13 BCE
  • The [[Brunswick Lion]], 1166, the first large hollow casting of a figure since antiquity, 1.78 metres tall and 2.79 metres long
  • [[Dale Chihuly]], 2006, ([[Blown glass]])
  • Two [[Chiwara]] c. late 19th early 20th centuries, [[Art Institute of Chicago]]. Female (left) and male Vertical styles
  • [[Cylinder seal]] with its impression on clay; [[serpopard]]s and eagles, Uruk Period, 4100–3000 BCE
  • Little Dancer of Fourteen Years]]'', cast in 1922 from a [[mixed-media]] sculpture modeled c. 1879–80, Bronze, partly tinted, with cotton
  • Detail of Crucifixion of Jesus Christ, Spanish, wood and polychrome, 1793.
  • [[Adriaen de Vries]], ''Mercury and Psyche'' [[Northern Mannerist]] life-size bronze, made in 1593 for [[Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor]].
  • The Pergamene style of the Hellenistic period, from the [[Pergamon Altar]], early 2nd century
  • Buddha]], 1st–2nd century CE, [[Gandhara]]
  • [[Gaston Lachaise]], ''Floating Figure'' 1927, bronze, no. 5 from an edition of 7, [[National Gallery of Australia]]
  • 965–970}}, Cologne, Germany. The first great example of the revival of large sculpture
  • Seated [[Bodhisattva]] [[Guanyin]], wood and pigment, 11th century, [[Northern Song dynasty]].
  • [[Henry Moore]], ''[[Large Reclining Figure]]'', 1984 (based on a smaller model of 1938), [[Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge]]
  • 500 BCE}}
  • Assyrian]] ''[[lamassu]]'' gate guardian from [[Khorsabad]], circa 800–721 BCE
  • 9th-century Khmer [[lintel]]
  • Mask from [[Gabon]]
  • [[Sumer]]ian male worshipper, alabaster with shell eyes, 2750−2600 BCE
  • Keshi]]
  • Pietà]]'', 1499
  • [[Netsuke]] of tigress with two cubs, mid-19th-century Japan, ivory with shell inlay
  • 1513–1515}}), [[San Pietro in Vincoli]], [[Rome]], for the tomb of [[Pope Julius II]]
  • ''[[Moai]]'' from [[Easter Island]], where the concentration of resources on large sculpture may have had serious political effects.
  • Nara]], [[Japan]]
  • Thutmose]], ''[[Bust of Nefertiti]]'', 1345 BCE, [[Egyptian Museum of Berlin]]
  • Ivory with traces of paint, 11th–12th century, Egypt
  • 1435}}, by [[Pisanello]], the first portrait medal, a medium essentially made for collecting.
  • Visible damage due to [[acid rain]] on a sculpture
  • [[Ludwig Gies]], cast iron [[plaquette]], 8 x 9.8 cm, ''Refugees'', 1915
  • Moses]]''
  • David Smith]], ''CUBI VI,'' (1963), [[Israel Museum]], [[Jerusalem]].
  • High Classical high relief from the [[Elgin Marbles]], which originally decorated the [[Parthenon]], c. 447–433 BCE
  • ''[[Spiral Jetty]]'' by [[Robert Smithson]], in 2005
  • St. James]] panel, from [[reredos]] in Cristo Rey Church, [[Santa Fe, New Mexico]], c. 1760
  • 800}}?
  • Small [[Greek terracotta figurines]] were very popular as ornaments in the home
  •  date = 28 October 1991}}</ref>
  • figurative]] [[prehistoric art]] in general.
  • French ivory Virgin and Child, end of 13th century, 25 cm high, curving to fit the shape of the ivory tusk
  • ancient Greek]] [[bronze sculpture]], 5th century BCE, close up head detail
  • A carved wooden [[Bodhisattva]] from China's [[Song dynasty]] 960–1279, [[Shanghai Museum]]
  • Open air Buddhist [[rock relief]]s at the [[Longmen Grottoes]], China
BRANCH OF THE VISUAL ARTS THAT OPERATES IN THREE DIMENSIONS
Sculptor; Sculpting; Sculptor (artist); Sculptures; History of sculpture; Sculpter; Sculptors; Sculptural; Sculptress; Sculptor (profession); Sculptor (occupation); Anaglyphice; Outdoor sculptures; Representational sculpture; American sculptor; Outdoor sculpture; History of sculpting; Stonecarving; Stacked Art; Sculpturer; History of Western sculpture; Prehistoric sculpture; Sculpture in-the-round; Sculpted; Sculpts; Steel sculpture; Cutting ornaments and figures from wood; Sculpture (artifact); Islamic sculpture; Native American sculpture; Indigenous American sculpture; Early Medieval sculpture; Byzantine sculpture; Southeast Asian sculpture; Latin American sculpture; Ancient Egyptian sculpture; Sculpture in ancient Sudan; History of African sculpture; History of Asian sculpture; Mesopotamian sculpture; Stone Age sculpture; Paleolithic sculpture; Neolithic sculpture
n.
1) to create, produce a sculpture
2) to cast a sculpture

ويكيبيديا

Stone sculpture

A stone sculpture is an object made of stone which has been shaped, usually by carving, or assembled to form a visually interesting three-dimensional shape. Stone is more durable than most alternative materials, making it especially important in architectural sculpture on the outside of buildings.

Stone carving includes a number of techniques where pieces of rough natural stone are shaped by the controlled removal of stone. Owing to the permanence of the material, evidence can be found that even the earliest societies indulged in some form of stonework, though not all areas of the world have such abundance of good stone for carving as Egypt, Persia(Iran), Greece, Central America, India and most of Europe. Often, as in Indian sculpture, stone is the only material in which ancient monumental sculpture has survived (along with smaller terracottas), although there was almost certainly more wooden sculpture created at the time.

Petroglyphs (also called rock engravings) are perhaps the earliest form: images created by removing part of a rock surface which remains in situ, by incising, pecking, carving, and abrading. Rock reliefs, carved into "living" rock, are a more advanced stage of this. Monumental sculpture covers large works, and architectural sculpture, which is attached to buildings. Historically, much of these types were painted, usually after a thin coat of plaster was applied. Hardstone carving is the carving for artistic purposes of semi-precious stones such as jade, agate, onyx, rock crystal, sard or carnelian, and a general term for an object made in this way. Alabaster or mineral gypsum is a soft mineral that is easy to carve for smaller works and still relatively durable. Engraved gems are small carved gems, including cameos, originally used as seal rings.

Carving stone into sculpture is an activity older than civilization itself, beginning perhaps with incised images on cave walls. Prehistoric sculptures were usually human forms, such as the Venus of Willendorf and the faceless statues of the Cycladic cultures of ancient Greece. Later cultures devised animal, human-animal and abstract forms in stone. The earliest cultures used abrasive techniques, and modern technology employs pneumatic hammers and other devices. But for most of human history, sculptors used a hammer and chisel as the basic tools for carving stone.

أمثلة من مجموعة نصية لـ٪ 1
1. Public awareness brochures about the importance of preserving the environment and encouraging community work are also being distributed, said Aqeel, adding that a series of contests — including a competition on sand sculpturing and the best participating school — and other activities will be held at various locations across the city.