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  2. Fourth dimension in art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourth_dimension_in_art

    The definition of the fourth-dimension differed from artist to artist: before Einstein, artists would associate the term with an extra spatial dimension; after Einstein's theory of relativity was vindicated in 1919, the fourth-dimension became associated with time rather than space. [1]

  3. Astrid Kruse Jensen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astrid_Kruse_Jensen

    Born in 1975 in Aarhus, Jutland, Astrid Kruse Jensen began her education as a visual artist in 1995, when she studied at the School for Photography in Aarhus.In 1998, she continued her studies in the Netherlands at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy of Design in Amsterdam, and in 2002, she graduated after having spent two years at the Glasgow School of Art's Fine Art Photography department.

  4. Zuzana Bachoríková - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zuzana_Bachoríková

    Each painting has many layers of meaning, a lot of symbolism and fantasy, transcending the boundaries of time and space. Each composition is based on effort to use maximum imagination, on bold colouring, and sometimes on sharp colour pigments as dominant structural elements and on the author´s independent poetics resulting from projection and ...

  5. The arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_arts

    Performance art is a performance over time that combines any number of instruments, objects, and art within a predefined or less well-defined structure, some of which can be improvised. Performance art may be scripted, unscripted, random, or carefully organized—even audience participation may occur.

  6. Art as Experience - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_as_Experience

    Dewey discusses another matter that is common to the substance of all works of art: space and time. Both space and time have qualities of room, extent, and position. For the concept of space, he identifies these qualities as spaciousness, spatiality, and spacing. And for the concept of time: transition, endurance, and date.

  7. Ephemeral art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ephemeral_art

    The Umbrella Project (1991), art installation by Christo, Ibaraki, Japan The ephemeral nature of certain artistic expressions is above all a subjective concept subject to the very definition of art, a controversial term open to multiple meanings, which have oscillated and evolved over time and geographic space, since the term "art" has not been understood in the same way in all times and places.

  8. Elements of art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elements_of_art

    Positive space refers to the areas of the work with a subject, while negative space is the space without a subject. [6] Open and closed space coincides with three-dimensional art, like sculptures, where open spaces are empty, and closed spaces contain physical sculptural elements.

  9. Indigenous Futurisms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_Futurisms

    The definition of genocide is the deliberate and systematic destruction of a group of people because of their ethnicity, nationality, religion, or race. [8] American Indian boarding schools in the last 100 years have been responsible for beating Indigenous children into learning and accepting customs from America at the time. [9]