Definition, Betydelse & Anagram | Engelska ordet SITTER'S


SITTER'S

Definition av SITTER'S

  1. böjningsform av sitter

1

Antal bokstäver

8

Är palindrom

Nej

11
ER
IT
ITT
R'
R'S
SI
SIT

2

2

307
E'S
EI
EIR
EIS
EIT
ER


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Exempel på hur man kan använda SITTER'S i en mening

  • The chairs were popularized in nearby tuberculosis sanatoriums, where they were favored for the way the armrests helped open up the sitter's chest.
  • If Mapplethorpe reduced his subjects to abstract forms, his sitter's faces to masks, his nude models to sculptures, then Hujar emphasized his sitters' idiosyncrasies, their irreducible qualities, their human sentience over their fleshy geometry.
  • A successful portrait isn't about the sitter's physical characteristics — his nose, eyeballs and whatnot — but more the mood and the overall effect.
  • The sitter's three-quarter profile was already common in Early Netherlandish painting, where portraits were often set against a flat black background.
  • In 1940 Charles Wisner Barrell examined the portrait using X-ray and infrared photography, as well as rubbings of the concealed paint on the sitter's thumb ring, and concluded that the painting was a retouched portrait of Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, painted by Cornelius Ketel.
  • The arc of the sitter's dark eyebrows and saucily tilted nose in that pleasant, rosy-cheeked face are common to works by Renoir.
  • Jerome Witkin (born September 13, 1939) is an American figurative artist whose paintings deal with political, social and cultural themes, along with serious portraiture that melds the sitter's social position with a speaking likeness that reveals inner character.
  • In the Portrait of Esmé Stuart he shows his qualities as a colourist in the golden amber of the sitter's coat and the red evening light which suffuses the picture.
  • Indeed, he employed several standard devices: an undifferentiated background; over-large, staring eyes; a frontal composition designed to focus attention directly upon the subject's confronting gaze; a sense of sagacity heightened by indications of the sitter's self-possession; no distracting detail in vestment or jewellery; and a framing of the features by long hair and a beard.


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