what is the difference between the painting and scuptur ?discuss about it which comparative studies.(The value of this question is number 10, I think writing this will not be the correct answer ... so please write a bigger answer. )
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its simple
go to this link:-https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-difference-between-painting-and-sculpture
What is the difference between painting and sculpture?Juan Pablo Forero, Artist for more than 10 years. Usually sell pieces of art. Done some expositions
Answered Aug 20, 2016The answer has been given already so I just want to add something to the discussion. Yes, sculpture is three dimensional and painting is two dimensional, in fact, flatness of the surface has been a strong discussion among art. But there is more to say about that. Painting has broken the limits between those two. Picasso for example, started to create paintings where those limits became less and less clear:This works are papier collé. The difference with collage is that the first one is related only to paper while the last can incorporate other elements. See this image for example. See the newspaper. In some parts is behind, in some parts is at the front, breaking the idea of two dimensions. There are other works where this is even more obvious but I couldn't find them, but I have seen them and the paper really sticks out and you see it going out of the canvas.Other artists like Rauschenberg has taken this idea farther:“Canyon”Is this work a painting or a sculpture? We could say is both, so where is the limit? (Funny fact about this work. It's value is 52 million dollars but its price in the market is 0 because he used a dissected eagle so it cannot be sold). In fact, this distinction was made by Rauschenberg by using a new term, “combine”, a mix between painting and sculpture:“Pilgrim”, 1950“First landing jump”, 1961Is it painting? Is it sculpture? Is both. I believe the distinction is not as much if it's two and three dimensional only, but also, it can be “traveled”? Can you see it from different points of view? It's an sculpture. Can you see part from one point and other parts from different points? Is a combine. Can you see it only from one point? It's a painting.The idea in a painting was usually to create the illusion of three dimensions without having it in reality (something Plato hated it), and that idea changed in the XX century. This limits started to disappear until we see the limits are not as clear today. But we could say painting is two dimensional and sculpture is three dimensional but knowing that limits can be broken.
go to this link:-https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-difference-between-painting-and-sculpture
What is the difference between painting and sculpture?Juan Pablo Forero, Artist for more than 10 years. Usually sell pieces of art. Done some expositions
Answered Aug 20, 2016The answer has been given already so I just want to add something to the discussion. Yes, sculpture is three dimensional and painting is two dimensional, in fact, flatness of the surface has been a strong discussion among art. But there is more to say about that. Painting has broken the limits between those two. Picasso for example, started to create paintings where those limits became less and less clear:This works are papier collé. The difference with collage is that the first one is related only to paper while the last can incorporate other elements. See this image for example. See the newspaper. In some parts is behind, in some parts is at the front, breaking the idea of two dimensions. There are other works where this is even more obvious but I couldn't find them, but I have seen them and the paper really sticks out and you see it going out of the canvas.Other artists like Rauschenberg has taken this idea farther:“Canyon”Is this work a painting or a sculpture? We could say is both, so where is the limit? (Funny fact about this work. It's value is 52 million dollars but its price in the market is 0 because he used a dissected eagle so it cannot be sold). In fact, this distinction was made by Rauschenberg by using a new term, “combine”, a mix between painting and sculpture:“Pilgrim”, 1950“First landing jump”, 1961Is it painting? Is it sculpture? Is both. I believe the distinction is not as much if it's two and three dimensional only, but also, it can be “traveled”? Can you see it from different points of view? It's an sculpture. Can you see part from one point and other parts from different points? Is a combine. Can you see it only from one point? It's a painting.The idea in a painting was usually to create the illusion of three dimensions without having it in reality (something Plato hated it), and that idea changed in the XX century. This limits started to disappear until we see the limits are not as clear today. But we could say painting is two dimensional and sculpture is three dimensional but knowing that limits can be broken.
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