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  2. www.tate.org.uk › art › art-termsPicture plane - Tate

    A picture plane refers to the physical surface of the painting. 17. 3. 69 (1969) In traditional illusionistic painting using perspective, the picture plane can be thought of as the glass of the notional window through which the viewer looks into the representation of reality that lies beyond.

  3. In painting, photography, graphical perspective and descriptive geometry, a picture plane is an image plane located between the "eye point" (or oculus) and the object being viewed and is usually coextensive to the material surface of the work.

  4. Picture plane. When an artist creates an impression of space within a painting the picture plane is the transparent division between this fictive internal space and the real space outside, in which the viewer is placed.

  5. The picture plane is an imaginary plane (flat surface) which corresponds to the surface of the canvas (but sitting above it), directly at the viewers line of sight. It's commonly associated with the foreground of a painting, just at the viewer's line of sight.

  6. To make a painting–whether it be a landscape, still life, portrait or abstract–that captures visual interest, one of the basic principles of composition you must learn to master is division of the picture plane.”

  7. The picture plane is an imaginary flat surface that acts as the boundary between the three-dimensional world and the two-dimensional representation of that world on a drawing or painting.

  8. Aug 10, 2020 · A term applied to the visual elements of a painting that are in the viewer???s most direct line of sight, usually the foreground. The word ???plane??? is used because the subject is often compared to a window separating viewers from the images.

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