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3 DIMENSIONAL ART

3 DIMENSIONAL ART

• Three-dimensional art is defined as art with all the dimensions


of height, width, and depth.
• Unlike 2D art, it occupies greater physical space and can be
viewed and interpreted from all sides and angles.
• Sculpture

- are three-dimensional forms constructed to represent the natural or imaginary shape


• Architecture

- the art of designing and constructing a building that serves specific functions from providing shelter
to meeting the technological demands of modern cities.
• Interior Design
- is concerned with the selection of space and furnishings to transform an empty shell of a building into
a livable area. Interior designers work with furniture, appliances, fixtures, draperies, and rugs with an
eye for texture and color
• MOSAIC-wall or floor decorations made of small cubes of irregularly cut pieces of
colored stone or glass called tesserae, These are fitted together to form a pattern and
glued on a surface with plaster or cement.
• STAINED GLASS- developed as a major art when it appeared as an important part of the
Gothic cathedral. It is translucent glass colored by mixing metallic oxides into the moiten
glass or by fixing them into the surface of clear glass.
• TAPESTRY-these are fabrics into which colored designs have been woven. Wails of
palaces, castles and chapels in Europe were decorated in the middle ages with tapestries.
• DRAWING-is the most fundamental of all skills needed in visual art. A
drawing may be a study, sketch, cartoon, or finished work in itself.
Drawing can be done using graphite (pencil), pen and ink, pastel, chalk,
charcoal, crayons, or silverpoint.
• PRINTMAKING-is a graphic image that results from a duplicating
process. Each print is an original work, not a reproduction..

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