[ UK /skˈʌlpt‍ʃɐ/ ]
[ US /ˈskəɫptʃɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a three-dimensional work of plastic art
  2. creating figures or designs in three dimensions
VERB
  1. 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
  2. create by shaping stone or wood or any other hard material
    sculpt a swan out of a block of ice
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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
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