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Digital art refers to any artistic work or practice that uses digital technology as part of the creative or presentation process.
Unlike the French Baccalaureate, the Romanian one has a single degree.The subjects (except subject A) depend on the profile studied (Romanian: profil de studiu): mathematics and computer science (Romanian: matematică-informatică), philology (Romanian: filologie), natural sciences (Romanian: științe ale naturii), social sciences (Romanian: științe sociale), or various other vocational ...
Brâncuși had experimented with this form as early as 1918, with an oak version now found in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. [3] The modules were made in the central workshop of Petroșani ( Atelierele Centrale Petroșani ), assembled by Brâncuși's friend engineer Ștefan Georgescu-Gorjan (1905–1985), and ...
A Faculty of Stage Direction opened in 1948 within the Romanian Art Institute, at that time the center of all Romanian higher education in the arts. The year 1950 saw the founding of the Institute for Film and the Institute for Theatre I. L. Caragiale (named after the classic Romanian playwright).
Il ponte degli angeli (The Bridge of Angels,1930), painting by Scipione (Gino Bonichi). Scuola romana or Scuola di via Cavour was a 20th-century art movement defined by a group of painters within Expressionism and active in Rome between 1928 and 1945, and with a second phase in the mid-1950s.
Where a work of art is produced in multiple copies, as with a cast bronze sculpture, a print, or works of decorative art produced under factory conditions, the article should as far as possible cover all copies, and normally should reflect this in its title and text, rather than specifying one location. The same generally goes for objects ...
Ion Vidu National College of Art (Romanian: Colegiul Național de Artă „Ion Vidu”) is an arts high school located at 2 Cluj Street, Timișoara, Romania.Founded in 1906, the school has 18 classrooms, 54 instrumental study rooms, and the 340-seat Mihai Perian Concert Hall.
Virgil Cioflec (1876 - 1948), authored monographs dedicated to painters Stefan Luchian (1924) and Nicolae Grigorescu (1925), as well as some published writings about art, and brought together a collection of great significance for the life of interwar Cluj. He donated his Romanian art collection to Cluj University between 1929 and