static
(adjective)
Fixed in place; having no motion.
Examples of static in the following topics:
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Time and Motion
- Motion, a principle of art, is a tool artists use to organize the artistic elements in a work; it is employed in both static and time-based mediums.
- Motion is employed in both static and in time-based mediums and can show a direct action or the intended path for the viewer's eye to follow through a piece.
- Techniques such as scale and proportion are used to create the feeling of motion or the passing of time in static visual artwork.
- Film is many static images that are quickly passed through a lens.
- Name some techniques and mediums used by artists to convey motion in both static and time-based art forms
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Time
- One of the problems artists face in creating static (singular, fixed) images is how to imbue them with a sense of time and/or motion.
- In the modern era, the rise of Cubism and subsequent related styles in modern painting and sculpture had a major effect on how static works of art depicted time and movement.
- While static art forms have the ability to imply or suggest time and motion, the time-based mediums of film, video, kinetic sculpture, dance and performance make use of actual motion by their very definitions as mediums.
- Film is a process whereby many static images are quickly passed through a lens.
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Motion
- Motion can show a direct action or it can show the intended path for the viewer's eye to follow through a static artwork.
- All art works employ the principle of motion in some way, whether they are static or time-based mediums.
- While static art forms have the ability to imply motion via the path of the viewer's eye, there are a number of mediums which are defined by their use of motion (and time).
- Film involves many static images that are quickly passed through a lens, allowing the eye to view them as successive and in motion.
- Nude Descending a Staircase by Marcel Duchamp exemplifies motion in a static work of art.
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Marble Sculpture and Architecture in the Greek Early Classical Period
- The figures on the east pediment await the start of a chariot race, and the whole composition is still and static.
- Unlike the static composition of the eastern pediment, the Centauromachy on the western pediment depicts movement that radiates out from its center.
- Some are static with two or three figures standing rigidly, while others, such as Herakles and the Cretan Bull convey a sense of liveliness through their diagonal composition and overlapping bodies.
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Sculpture in the Greek High Classical Period
- High Classical sculpture demonstrates the shifting style in Greek sculptural work as figures became more dynamic and less static.
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The Southwest
- Men, seen as static in nature, create sand paintings for healing rituals.
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Implied Line
- By visually connecting the space between the heads of all the figures in the painting, a sense of jagged motion is created that keeps the lower part of the composition in motion, balanced against the darker, more static upper areas of the painting.
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Nayak Painting
- The figures are static and often located inside decorated arches or curtains.
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Symbolism
- In Belgium, symbolism became so popular that it came to be thought of as a national style: the static strangeness of painters like René Magritte can be considered as a direct continuation of symbolism.
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Aegina
- The two battle scenes also add movement and excitement to the scene, elements not seen in earlier pedimental sculpture, which were often static and heraldic.