How To Use Diptych In A Sentence

  • They are usually found in the form of triptychs or diptychs.
  • Adorned with pearls, distracted or in reverie, a plump child with pointed ears and a pale blue face graces one panel of Diane's Puppies as though unaware of her companion at play in the other panel of the diptych.
  • In 1864, Kunisada died and Kunichika designed two memorial prints - one as a diptych - of the deceased master.
  • But in the 14th century it quickly spread over western Europe and was freely used in the decoration of chalices, crosses, diptychs, and other objects of religious use as well as for domestic plate and jewellery.
  • Altarpieces and private devotional diptychs were commissioned from the painters de Beaumetz, Jean Malouel, Henri Bellechose, and Melchior Broederlam, all of whom were court painters at various times.
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • The names of the two families are preserved on the two leaves of an ivory diptych, respectively in the Victoria and Albert, and Cluny, Museums.
  • The painting, divided in half vertically, resembles a diptych.
  • A codex of two leaves was called a diptych; of three, a triptych, etc. Illuminated Manuscripts
  • [51] A picture with one door of two panels is called a diptych, with two doors of three panels a triptych, with many doors and panels a polyptych. The Old Masters and Their Pictures For the Use of Schools and Learners in Art
  • In each auxiliary altar, diptychs display the most prominent saints.
  • There was more on the subject of Simeon's deterioration around the time of the diptych, but Will skimmed it. SACRAMENT
  • The novel has a schematism or geometric quality, as in the abstract shape of the diptych or the dyad of the book's two sections, which are titled ‘The Prince’ and ‘The Princess.’
  • Some consist of a single panel; others are diptychs or polyptychs in which the panels abut or hang a few inches apart.
  • See the separated-at-birth diptych above: not quite punctuation mark and not quite ligature, the ampersand is a confection to be savored, indeed.
  • Featured are 29 oils, including two diptychs (the largest being 66 by 108 inches), and six smaller gouaches that span a period of 30 years.
  • The painting may originally have served as the left panel of a small-scale portable diptych - the right side would have depicted a donor in adoration.
  • Two of the paintings were actually diptychs, abutting so tightly that they appeared to be a single surface scored by a palette knife.
  • Occasionally, two sections form a diptych - or three sections a triptych - that can stand alone, underscoring Tse's allusions to painting.
  • It is therefore difficult even for an expert to recognize if a single sheet print was originally part of a diptych or a triptych.
  • Though he painted altarpieces and other religious panels (the only signed work is a diptych with the Carrying of the Cross and Vanitas, 1560; Bonn, Rheinisches Landesmus.), he is best known for his portraits.
  • There were 14 works in the show, the smallest measuring 8 by 10 inches, the largest an 8-by - 8-foot gridded diptych.
  • He had been an antiquary and collector, who at one time owned the Wilton Diptych, now in the National Gallery, London, and was also one of the people who refounded the Society of Antiquaries of London in 1717.
  • He had been an antiquary and collector, who at one time owned the Wilton Diptych, now in the National Gallery, London, and was also one of the people who refounded the Society of Antiquaries of London in 1717.
  • Elliott Carter's rippling toccata "Catenaires," composed in 2006 when he was in his late 90s he recently celebrated his 102nd birthday, formed a pleasing diptych with the Ligeti and had in pianist Audrey Andrist a performer just as technically daring. On the Verge of experimental dissolution
  • The term diptych is often restricted to a highly ornamented type of notebooks. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 5: Diocese-Fathers of Mercy
  • It is to this kind of diptychs that the later necrologies owe their origin. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 5: Diocese-Fathers of Mercy
  • It can be seen in the soldiers surrounding Theodosius on his missorium, and in the shield and spear held by Stilicho, the sword at his side and the great military fibula on his shoulder, all portrayed in detail on his diptych.
  • Steven Soderbergh's monumental two-movie portrait of Che Guevara has arrived: opaque and enigmatic enough, probably, to count as a "diptych". Film | guardian.co.uk
  • Her painting career begins with a huge fantastical mural of historical, religious, and cultural imagery and ‘progresses’ to paintings of fractured worlds to diptychs and triptychs to a final sinister palimpsest.
  • I would like to think people come to the Met to see the David Lavoisier, the Van Eyck diptych of the Crucifixion and Last Judgement, and the Velazquez Juan de Pareja.
  • The airport's colorful and undeniably creepy diptych murals depicting things such as a gas-mask wearing Gestapo officer impaling a dove with his saber, and three dead women in coffins, don't help quell the rumors that DIA is some kind of grand mystic lodge for the reptilian overlords who secretly run everything. Boing Boing
  • For that reason one is amused rather than taken aback by a Flemish diptych of the turn of the fifteenth century from the Catharijneconvent in Utrecht.
  • The Pope continued: When the 'diptych' of consecration-mission is not taken into due account, it becomes truly difficulty to understand the identity of priests and of their ministry in the Church. ... Pope on the Essential Elements of Priestly Ministry
  • There was a time when rock movies had a certain vivacity that went with the music – That'll Be the Day and Stardust, the 1970s diptych of David Puttnam productions starring David Essex for example. Powder – review
  • Triptychs and diptychs in good condition are more sought after.
  • David Bierk's long romance with art history was evident in this show of 21 oil paintings, mostly diptychs and triptychs, which included, among other things, reproductions of specific well-known paintings.
  • All of them are diptychs assembled from four squares of wood about a half-inch thick.
  • A diptych is a sort of notebook, formed by the union of two tablets, placed one upon the other and united by rings or by a hinge. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 5: Diocese-Fathers of Mercy

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy