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单词 scenography
释义

Definition of scenography in English:

scenography

noun siːˈnɒɡrəfisiˈnɑɡrəfi
mass noun
  • 1The design and painting of theatrical scenery.

    舞台布景设计,舞台布景绘制

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The exhibition will also showcase the work of other designers highlighting the modern trends in international scenography for the theatre.
    • As well as offering courses in acting, the academy teaches scenography, stage management, and specialist technical matters.
    • Every scene in a David Cronenberg film - particularly his set pieces - has a shape, and is meticulously based around a quite theatrical scenography.
    • This exhibition of some seventy works looks at the full range of artistic Bardolatry, and also examines theatrical production and scenography.
    • The 43-year-old Ferranti took his architecture degree from Paris in 1985, specialising in theatre and scenography in the Baroque era.
    1. 1.1 (in painting and drawing) the representation of objects in perspective.
      (绘画)透视画法
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Within what is essentially an office building, Schultes has created sculptural scenography out of interstitial space.
      • Another specialist in ephemera of this kind and scenography was Baccio del Bianco, whose extraordinary caricatures are an early form of the cartoon strip.

Derivatives

  • scenographic

  • adjective siːnə(ʊ)ˈɡrafɪkˌsinəˈɡræfɪk
    • Pushing the boundaries of etching techniques to extremes and exploiting scenographic perspective, he combined remarkable flights of imagination with a strongly practical understanding of ancient technology.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The fragments attest to a pleasing scenographic composition that makes an effective use of the arcades it initially inhabited.
      • Since he has chosen, for his scenographic debut, to take a stab at Francesca Zambello's worst production, no one will criticize him, except perhaps for having been too timid.
      • Perhaps Peale had in mind the scenographic views of American landscapes and urban buildings that circulated as single prints and journal illustrations.
      • Keiley most often does it with elaborate choreography and striking acoustic and scenographic effects.
  • scenographer

  • noun

Origin

Mid 17th century: from French scénographie, or via Latin from Greek skēnographia 'scene-painting', from skēnē (see scene).

Definition of scenography in US English:

scenography

nounsiˈnɑɡrəfisēˈnäɡrəfē
  • 1The design and painting of theatrical scenery.

    舞台布景设计,舞台布景绘制

    Example sentencesExamples
    • As well as offering courses in acting, the academy teaches scenography, stage management, and specialist technical matters.
    • This exhibition of some seventy works looks at the full range of artistic Bardolatry, and also examines theatrical production and scenography.
    • The 43-year-old Ferranti took his architecture degree from Paris in 1985, specialising in theatre and scenography in the Baroque era.
    • Every scene in a David Cronenberg film - particularly his set pieces - has a shape, and is meticulously based around a quite theatrical scenography.
    • The exhibition will also showcase the work of other designers highlighting the modern trends in international scenography for the theatre.
    1. 1.1 (in painting and drawing) the representation of objects in perspective.
      (绘画)透视画法
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Within what is essentially an office building, Schultes has created sculptural scenography out of interstitial space.
      • Another specialist in ephemera of this kind and scenography was Baccio del Bianco, whose extraordinary caricatures are an early form of the cartoon strip.

Origin

Mid 17th century: from French scénographie, or via Latin from Greek skēnographia ‘scene-painting’, from skēnē (see scene).

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更新时间:2025/1/30 15:04:39