enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Scroll (art) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scroll_(art)

    The scroll in art is an element of ornament and graphic design featuring spirals and rolling incomplete circle motifs, some of which resemble the edge-on view of a book or document in scroll form, though many types are plant-scrolls, which loosely represent plant forms such as vines, with leaves or flowers attached.

  3. Handscroll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Handscroll

    In Chinese art, the handscroll usually consists of a frontispiece (引首) at the beginning (right side), the artwork (畫心) itself in the middle, and a colophon section (拖尾) at the end for various inscriptions. [5] [6] [8] The beginning of the scroll, where the frontispiece was located, is known as the "heaven" (天頭). [6]

  4. Hanging scroll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanging_scroll

    Description. Hanging scrolls provide a vertical format to display art on walls. [3][6] They are one of the most common types of scrolls for Chinese painting and calligraphy. [10] They are made in many different sizes and proportions. [5] Horizontal hanging scrolls are also a common form. [10] Hanging scrolls are different from the handscrolls.

  5. Kakemono - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kakemono

    A kakemono (掛物, "hanging thing"), more commonly referred to as a kakejiku (掛軸, "hung scroll"), is a Japanese hanging scroll used to display and exhibit paintings and calligraphy inscriptions and designs mounted usually with silk fabric edges on a flexible backing, so that it can be rolled for storage. The "Maruhyōsō" style of kakejiku ...

  6. Emakimono - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emakimono

    The term emakimono or e-makimono, often abbreviated as emaki, is made up of the kanji e (絵, "painting"), maki (巻, "scroll" or "book") and mono (物, "thing"). [1] The term refers to long scrolls of painted paper or silk, which range in length from under a metre to several metres long; some are reported as measuring up to 12 metres (40 ft) in length. [2]

  7. Scroll painting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scroll_painting

    Scroll painting usually refers to a painting on a scroll in Asian traditions, distinguishing between: Handscroll, such a painting in horizontal format;

  8. Cheriyal scroll painting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheriyal_scroll_painting

    Cheriyal scroll painting is a stylized version of Nakashi art, rich in the local motifs peculiar to the Telangana. They are at present made only in Hyderabad, Telangana, India. [1] The scrolls are painted in a narrative format, much like a film roll or a comic strip, depicting stories from Indian mythology, [2] and intimately tied to the ...

  9. Scroll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scroll

    A scroll is usually partitioned into pages, which are sometimes separate sheets of papyrus or parchment glued together at the edges. Scrolls may be marked divisions of a continuous roll of writing material. The scroll is usually unrolled so that one page is exposed at a time, for writing or reading, with the remaining pages rolled and stowed to ...