[
UK
/skˈʌlptʃɐ/
]
[ US /ˈskəɫptʃɝ/ ]
[ US /ˈskəɫptʃɝ/ ]
NOUN
- a three-dimensional work of plastic art
- creating figures or designs in three dimensions
VERB
-
shape (a material like stone or wood) by whittling away at it
She is sculpting the block of marble into an image of her husband -
create by shaping stone or wood or any other hard material
sculpt a swan out of a block of ice
How To Use sculpture In A Sentence
- Next follows the cella, and beyond that, the adytum; there are a few sculptures on the walls of the adytum; on those of the pronaos Travels in Nubia
- Other procedures available are otoplasty (ear correction), rhinoplasty, liposculpture, penile enhancement and face, neck and brow lifts to name but a few.
- The 27 models on display in Washington, supplemented by paintings, drawings, sculpture and medallions, show the products of a rising social structure and new technique.
- The team apparently circumvented locked gates and an alarm system, while the sculpture was in the process of being moved to another location.
- VARIOUS LEATHER PICTURE, It's a high classic decoration , made by hand, use nature color and veins of leather to make design, it shows obvious stereoscopy like relief sculpture but softly .
- The Art Gallery of Ontario has the world's largest collection of sculptures by Henry Moore.
- The plaque tells us the sculpture is ‘a symbol of universal human endeavour.’
- More than 70 marble, bronze, terracotta and plaster busts and life-size sculptures are on display together for the first time in nearly two centuries.
- The Archaic period (c. early 6th century - 480 BC) saw a great flowering of Etruscan art with the production of fine tomb paintings, funerary sculptures, and architectural terracottas.
- Ajmal Aqtash, writes that, "The exhibition traces the evolution of Lalvani's genomic art as filtered through two major series, AlgoRhythms ™ and XURF ™, each exploring Lalvani's principal concern with the relationship between genetic codes and sculptural creation, and more specifically, between" genomics "- sculpture derived from formal rules, and" epigenomics "- works created through external agents like forces, respectively. Steven Mesler: Form Follows Force: Haresh Lalvani