Projection
(noun)
The image that a translucent object casts onto another object.
Examples of Projection in the following topics:
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Tax-Supported Art
- In the USA and Canada, grants are available to fund artistic projects in all media, including drawing, painting, sculpture, theater, music, dance, new media, and interdisciplinary art forms.
- In the United States, the National Endowment of the Arts (NEA) is an independent agency of the federal government that offers funding to projects it deems exhibit artistic excellence.
- In Canada, the Canada Council for the Arts funds the projects of artists in much the same way as the NEA, but allots more funding to the arts based on population.
- The grant application typically entails submitting a project proposal in relationship to one's artistic practice, as well as a detailed budget, timeline, and curriculum vitae (c.v.).
- Project grants are intended to cover the immediate costs of a project as well as the living expenses of the artist for the duration of the project.
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Distortions of Space and Foreshortening
- Perspective projection distortion is the inevitable misrepresentation of three-dimensional space when drawn or "projected" onto a two-dimensional surface.
- The most common of these is perspective projection.
- Perspective projection can be used to mirror how the eye sees by making use of one or more vanishing points.
- In photography, the projection mechanism is light reflected from an object.
- The resulting image on the projection plane reproduces the image of the object as it is beheld from the station point.
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Digital Art
- Digitized text, raw audio, and video recordings are usually not considered digital art on their own, but can be part of larger digital art projects.
- Digital visual art consists of, firstly, 2D visual information displayed on a monitor, and secondly, information mathematically translated into 3D information and then viewed through perspective projection on a monitor.
- There are many software programs that can enable collaboration, lending such artwork to sharing and augmentation so users can collaborate on a project to create art.
- Some resemble video installations, particularly large scale works involving projections and live video capture.
- By using projection techniques that enhance an audience's impression of sensory development, many digital installations attempt to create immersive environments.
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Hatshepsut
- Hatshepsut's reign was very successful, marked by an extended period of peace and wealth-building, trading expeditions and great building projects.
- Hatshepsut was one of the most prolific builders in ancient Egypt, commissioning hundreds of construction projects throughout both Upper Egypt and Lower Egypt.
- Another project, Karnak's Red Chapel or Chapelle Rouge, was lined with carved stones that depicted significant events in Hatshepsut's life.
- Following the tradition of many pharaohs, the masterpiece of Hatshepsut's building projects was her mortuary temple.
- Identify the most important construction projects carried out by the Egyptian pharaoh Hatshepsut
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European Expressionist Architecture
- An example of a built expressionist project that is formally inventive is Erich Mendelsohn's Einstein Tower .
- Ludwig Mies van der Rohe's Friedrichstrasse Skyscraper Project, Berlin-Mitte, Germany, 1921.
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Two-Dimensional Space
- Two-dimensional, or bi-dimensional, space is a geometric model of the planar projection of the physical universe in which we live.
- Two dimensional, or bi-dimensional, space is a geometric model of the planar projection of the physical universe in which we live.
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Earthworks
- Exponents of land art rejected the museum and gallery setting and developed monumental landscape projects which were beyond the reach of traditional transportable sculptures and the commercial art market.
- Land artists in America mostly relied on wealthy patrons and private foundations to fund their often costly projects.
- Perhaps the most well-known artist who worked in the genre of Land Art was the American artist Robert Smithson, whose 1968 essay "The Sedimentation of the Mind: Earth Projects" provided a critical framework for the movement as a reaction to the disengagement of Modernism from social issues as represented by the critic Clement Greenberg.
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Dur Sharrukin
- Sargon, who ordered the project, was killed during a battle in 705.
- After his death, his son and successor Sennacherib abandoned the project and relocated the capital with its administration to the city of Nineveh.
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Rome and the Papal States
- His main construction project was the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican Palace .
- The city hosted artists like Bramante, who built the Temple of San Pietro in Montorio and planned a great project to renovate the Vatican.
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Chicago School of Architecture
- The arrangement of windows on the facade typically creates a grid pattern, with some projecting out from the facade forming bay windows.
- These windows were often deployed in bays, known as oriel windows, that projected out over the street.