LANDSCAPIST - translation to arabic
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LANDSCAPIST - translation to arabic

DEPICTION OF LANDSCAPES IN ART
Landscape painter; Landscape Painting; Landspcape painting; Landscape (visual arts); Landscape artist; Landscape (art); Zero-point perspective; Landscape artists; Landscapist; Ideal landscape; Topographical view; Landscape art; Landscape paintings; Landscape (painting); History of landscape painting; Medieval landscape painting
  • Green Lakes]], 1955, USSR (Lithuania), Socialist realism.
  • 1528}}, one of the earliest Western pure landscapes. He was the leader of the [[Danube School]] in southern Germany.
  • [[Claude Lorrain]], ''[[Ascanius Shooting the Stag of Sylvia]]'', 1682. The landscape as [[history painting]].
  • Four from a set of sixteen sliding room partitions made for a 16th-century Japanese abbot. Typically for later Japanese landscapes, the main focus is on a feature in the foreground.
  • [[Carlos de Haes]], ''Los Picos de Europa'', 1876
  • [[Caspar David Friedrich]], ''[[Wanderer above the Sea of Fog]]'', 1818. A classic image of German [[Romanticism]].
  • ''Cowley Place, near [[Exeter]]'', by [[Francis Towne]], c. 1812
  • [[Joachim Patinir]] (1480–1524), ''[[Landscape with Charon Crossing the Styx]]'', 1515–1524. Patinir pioneered the "[[world landscape]]" style.
  • [[Rembrandt]], ''The Three Trees'', 1643, etching
  • A rare pure landscape in a [[Persian miniature]], with a river, Tabriz (?), 1st quarter of 14th century
  • t=洞天山堂圖}}). 10th century, the [[Five Dynasties]] (Chinese). [[National Palace Museum]], Taipei.
  • Akrotiri]], 1600–1500 BCE
  • 松林図 屏風}}, one of a pair of [[folding screen]]s, Japan, 1593. 156.8 × 356 cm (61.73 × 140.16 in)
  • [[Jan van Goyen]], ''Dune landscape'', c. 1630–1635, an example of the "tonal" style in [[Dutch Golden Age painting]]
  • Korean version]] of the Chinese literati style by [[Jeong Seon]] who was unusual in often painting landscapes from life.
  • [[Watercolour]] in the English tradition, [[John Robert Cozens]], ''Lake of Vico Between Rome and Florence'', c. 1783
  • [[Kuo Hsi]], ''Clearing Autumn Skies over Mountains and Valleys'', Northern [[Song Dynasty]] c. 1070, detail from a horizontal scroll.<ref>Sickman, 219-220</ref>
  • [[Titian]], ''La Vierge au Lapin à la Loupe'' (The Virgin of the Rabbit), 1530, [[Louvre]], [[Paris]]. Idealized Italianate landscape background.
  • w=Li Ch'eng}}; 919&ndash;967),''Luxuriant Forest among Distant Peaks'', detail, 10th century China, [[Liaoning Provincial Museum]].
  • t=踏歌圖}}), 13th century, Southern Song (Chinese), Collected in the [[Palace Museum]].
  • realism]], 1871
  • Landscape with scene from the ''[[Odyssey]]'', Rome, c.&nbsp;60–40 BCE
  • Ming]] civil servant, who valued expressiveness over delicacy, with collector's seals and poems.

LANDSCAPIST         

ألاسم

فُرْجَة ; مَرْأًى ; مَشْهَد ; مَنْظَر

landscape artist         
رسام مناظر طبيعية
فن التصوير الطبيعي         
landscape

Definition

Landscapist
·noun A painter of landscapes.

Wikipedia

Landscape painting

Landscape painting, also known as landscape art, is the depiction of natural scenery such as mountains, valleys, trees, rivers, and forests, especially where the main subject is a wide view—with its elements arranged into a coherent composition. In other works, landscape backgrounds for figures can still form an important part of the work. Sky is almost always included in the view, and weather is often an element of the composition. Detailed landscapes as a distinct subject are not found in all artistic traditions, and develop when there is already a sophisticated tradition of representing other subjects.

Two main traditions spring from Western painting and Chinese art, going back well over a thousand years in both cases. The recognition of a spiritual element in landscape art is present from its beginnings in East Asian art, drawing on Daoism and other philosophical traditions, but in the West only becomes explicit with Romanticism.

Landscape views in art may be entirely imaginary, or copied from reality with varying degrees of accuracy. If the primary purpose of a picture is to depict an actual, specific place, especially including buildings prominently, it is called a topographical view. Such views, extremely common as prints in the West, are often seen as inferior to fine art landscapes, although the distinction is not always meaningful; similar prejudices existed in Chinese art, where literati painting usually depicted imaginary views, while professional artists painted real views.

The word "landscape" entered the modern English language as landskip (variously spelt), an anglicization of the Dutch landschap, around the start of the 17th century, purely as a term for works of art, with its first use as a word for a painting in 1598. Within a few decades it was used to describe vistas in poetry, and eventually as a term for real views. However the cognate term landscaef or landskipe for a cleared patch of land had existed in Old English, though it is not recorded from Middle English.

Examples of use of LANDSCAPIST
1. This week Marcel saw the paintings of Jacob van Ruisdael at the Royal Academy: "The greatest landscapist of them all.