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Sculpture   /skˈəlptʃər/   Listen
Sculpture

noun
1.
A three-dimensional work of plastic art.
2.
Creating figures or designs in three dimensions.  Synonym: carving.
verb
(past & past part. sculptured; pres. part. sculpturing)
1.
Create by shaping stone or wood or any other hard material.  Synonym: sculpt.
2.
Shape (a material like stone or wood) by whittling away at it.  Synonyms: grave, sculpt.



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"Sculpture" Quotes from Famous Books



... ashamed of the view," he said to himself. The size of the chimneypiece impressed him, and also its rich carving. "But what an old-fashioned grate!" he said to himself. "They need gilt radiators here." The doorway was a marvel of ornate sculpture, and he liked it. He liked, too, the effect of the oil-paintings—mainly portraits—on the walls, and the immensity of the brass fender, and the rugs, and the leather-work of the chairs. But there could be no question ...
— The Regent • E. Arnold Bennett

... father and I went to visit Macdonald's collection of sculpture to-day. I was very much pleased with some of the things; there are some good colossal figures, and an exquisite statue of a kneeling girl, that charmed me greatly; there are some excellent busts, too. How wonderfully that irrevocable substance assumes the soft, round ...
— Records of a Girlhood • Frances Anne Kemble

... helped man to know the world he was living in and his power over it. To the artist the change offered a field of the freest activity. It is always his business to reveal to an age its ideals. But what room was there for sculpture and painting,—arts whose first purpose it is to make us realise the material significance of things—in a period like the Middle Ages, when the human body was denied all intrinsic significance? In such an age the figure artist can thrive, as Giotto did, only in spite of it, ...
— The Florentine Painters of the Renaissance - With An Index To Their Works • Bernhard Berenson

... art stall, over which Mrs. Henderson was to preside. Here were to be the very graceful and beautiful articles of sculpture and Italian bijouterie that the Whites had sent home, and that were spared from the marble works; also Mrs. Grinstead's drawings, Captain Henderson's, those of others, screens and scrap- books and ...
— The Long Vacation • Charlotte M. Yonge

... Surely he should have perceived that, so long as Civilisation compels her children to wear clothes, the thoughtless multitude will never acknowledge dandyism to be an art. If considerations of modesty or hygiene compelled every one to stain canvas or chip marble every morning, painting and sculpture would in like manner be despised. Now, as these considerations do compel every one to envelop himself in things made of cloth and linen, this common duty is confounded with that fair procedure, elaborate of many thoughts, in whose accord the fop ...
— The Works of Max Beerbohm • Max Beerbohm


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