enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Artistic canons of body proportions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artistic_canons_of_body...

    Canon (basic principle), a rule or a body of rules or principles generally established as valid and fundamental in a field of art or philosophy Western canon – Cultural classics valued in the West; Chibi (style) – Style of caricature originating in Japan; Figurative artArt that depicts real object sources

  3. Beuron school - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beuron_school

    Beuronese art is principally known for its murals with "muted, tranquil and seemingly mysterious colouring". [3] Though several different principles were in competition to form the canon for the school, "[t]he most significant principle or canon of the Beuronese school is the role which geometry played in determining proportions."

  4. Body proportions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_proportions

    Body proportions is the study of artistic anatomy, which attempts to explore the relation of the elements of the human body to each other and to the whole. These ratios are used in depictions of the human figure and may become part of an artistic canon of body proportion within a culture.

  5. Vitruvius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitruvius

    It gave them a sense of proportion, culminating in understanding the proportions of the greatest work of art: the human body. This led Vitruvius in defining his Vitruvian Man , as drawn later by Leonardo da Vinci : the human body inscribed in the circle and the square (the fundamental geometric patterns of the cosmic order).

  6. Polykleitos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polykleitos

    It is a typical Greek sculpture depicting the beauty of the male body. "Polykleitos sought to capture the ideal proportions of the human figure in his statues and developed a set of aesthetic principles governing these proportions that was known as the Canon or 'Rule'. [7] He created the system based on mathematical ratios.

  7. Classical Greek sculpture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_Greek_sculpture

    Around 455 B.C., Myron, a sculptor of the transition, created his Discobolus, a work that already shows a more advanced degree of naturalism, and soon after, around 450 B.C., Polykleitos consolidated a new canon of proportions, a synthesis that convincingly expressed the beauty, harmony and vitality of the body and gave it an aspect of eternity ...

  8. Classicism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classicism

    Classicism is a specific genre of philosophy, expressing itself in literature, architecture, art, and music, which has Ancient Greek and Roman sources and an emphasis on society. It was particularly expressed in the Neoclassicism [4] of the Age of Enlightenment.

  9. Canon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canon

    Literary canon, an accepted body of works considered as high culture Western canon, the body of high culture literature, music, philosophy, and works of art that is highly valued in the West; Canon of proportions, a formally codified set of criteria deemed mandatory for a particular artistic style of figurative art; Canon (music), a type of ...