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GALLERIES
THEME GALLERIES
THE ESSENTIALS
- A - Abatti Alexander Alma-Tadema Ancher Asai Chu - B - Backer Bandinni Bartlett Bassano Bazille Beal Bellows Benoist Benson Berckheyde Bernard Beruete Bichall Bierstadt Blarenberghe Boldini Bonnard Borch Bosch Botticelli Bouguereau Braun Breck Brett Bricher Brouwer Brown Bruce Bruegel Bunker Burne-Jones - C - Cabanel Canaletto Caravaggio Cassat Cezanne Chadwick Champaigne Chardin Chase Cherubino Church Claesz Clausen Corot Cozzens Cropsey Cullen Cooper Cuyp - D - David Louis Daubigny Dawson De Witte Degas De Heem De Hooch Delacroix Dewing De La Porte De Morgan De Nittis Dou Durand Durer - E - Eakins El Greco Elgood Enneking Everett Millais Eysen - F - Fabritius Fattory Fitzpatrick Flinck Fox Fra Angelico Fragonard Friedrich Frieseke - G - Garber Gauguin Ghirlandaio Gigante Giorgione Giotto Glackens Godward Gothart Goya Grabar Granet Grimshaw Guzman - H - Hale Hals Harnett Harris Hassam Hemy Hollman Holt Homer Hughes Hunt - I - Inchbold Ingres Inness - J - Jansz Jaede Johnson Jordaens - K - Kalckreuth Kandinsky Kensett Kielland Klee Klimt Konstantinova Korovin Krafft Kroyer Kuindzhi - L - La Farge Larsson La Thangue La Tour Langshaw Lawrence Lawson Le Brun Leighton Le Nain Leonardo Le Sueur Levitan Libermann Lievens Lippi Lorrain Lumis - M - Macs Manet Margetson Magritte Mantegna Matisse McKay Melchers Melendez Metcalf Metsu Michelangelo Miller Millet Mitchell Molenaer Modigliani Mondrian Monet Moore Moran Morisot Morris Muddle Muir Munch Murillo - N - Naojiro Nordstrom - O - Ochtervelt Ostade - P - Palizzi Parrish Parsons Paxton Perugino Petersen Peto Pissarro Pocock Potthast Poussin Prendergast - R - Raphael Regoyos Reid Rembrandt Remington Renault Renoir Richards Riviere Roberts Robinson Rossetti Rousseau Roux Rowe Rubens Russell Ruterdahl Rysselberghe - S - Sandys Sargent Schedone Schjerfbeck Scott Seiki Sernessi Serusier Seurat Sherrin Signac Signorini Sisley Somerscales Sorolla Spada Spiers Steffan Stephens Stoskopff Strachan Streeton Strindberg Stubbs Suzor-Cote - T - Tarbell Teniers Ter Brugghen Thaulow Tiepolo Tissot Titian Toororp Toulouse Tournier Turner Turner Helen Twachtman - U - Ury - V - Valencia Van De Velde Van Dyck Van Gogh Van Mieris Velazquez Vermeer Veronese Von Honthorst Vonnoh Von Weding Verspronck Vuillard - W - Wallis Warren Waterhouse Watson Watteau Watts Weenix Weir Wendel Weyden Whiles White Whittredge Whistler Wilhelmson Wisinger Wylie Ship - Z - Zurbaran
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Landscape Art
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The word landscape art as most westerners use it is completely entrenched in western notions of land, nature and art. It is generally only conceived of in terms of an emerging post-Renaissance dichotomy of nature vs. culture or pristine vs. mundane and contaminated. Alternatively, the genesis of the western concept of landscape art is tied to the discovery of linear perspective and map-making. It is not true, however, that understandings of landscape art, even within western culture, are necessarily formed around concepts of untouched nature or which locate the observer (as in the trope of the painted landscape art) outside of the picture, the landscape itself. For many people, the dense mesh of city buildings is their landscape and their art may reflect this. For others, human intervention in the natural world may be seen as the ideal environment and "visual pleasure" may be brought about by views of cleared tracts of land juxtaposed with threatening wilderness. The actual word "Landscape Art" is derived from the Dutch, "Landschap" or German "'Landschaft' meaning a sheaf, a patch of cultivated ground, something small-scale that corresponded to a peasant's perception, a mere fragment of a feudal estate, an inset in a Breugel landscape. This usage had gone out of vogue by the eleventh century, replaced by words that corresponded to the larger political spaces of those with power - territoire, pays, domain. And then in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries it re-emerged, tightly tied to a particular 'way of seeing', a particular experience, whether in pictures, extolling nature or landscaping an estate" (B. Bender in Landscape Art: Politics and Perspectives 1995:2). Through tracing the history of the term we come to see that even within the realm of art, it is tied to politics and power of conceptual organization, ownership and perspective. That landscape art painting as form of representation was established in 15th century Italy and Flanders was due to new politics of vision. In fact, landscape art, be it used to describe a genre of painting or the world we locate ourselves within, is never empty, never just a 'vista'. And, equally as significantly, never only experienced visually.
Landscape refers to the layout in terms of a land area and to its visual representation, particularly as portrayed by members of the painting community.
The term landscape art even in terms of the physical sense implies the visual interpretation of the configuration in terms of the land, because that is the primary way in terms of which a landscape is perceived.
A landscape comprises several principal categories in terms of elements:
· landforms
· vegetation
· human-built structural elements
· depth and breadth in terms of view
A landscape art may also include:
· water bodies
· other life forms, particularly in terms of members of fauna and wildlife communities
· human presence
· human-made artistic representations
· direction of lighting
weather forms .
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Landforms are based on a set of elements that include elevation, slope, orientation, stratification, rock exposure, and soil type. Landforms by name include berms, mounds, hills, cliffs, valleys, and so forth.
The practice of designing landscapes to engage with issues around visual pleasure and other aspects in terms of function is landscape architecture. A member of the landscape architecture community who has passed a state registration exam is termed a landscape architect.
When the term landscape art refers to a static painting, weather and sky conditions are also important elements.
The term landscape also is applied to the orientation of a rectangular page, painting or other graphic, denoting that the long axis is horizontal. When the long axis is vertical, it is termed portrait.
The Habitat Theory claims that people like open landscapes because the human species originates in the African Savanna. This theory has been applied to expla
in why open landscapes are valued, but it fails to explain why this is not universally true.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
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