a painting, drawing, photograph, etc, representing or depicting the sky
skyscape in American English
(ˈskaiˌskeip)
noun
1.
a section or portion of the sky, usually extensive and often including part of the horizon, that may be seen from a single viewpoint
2.
a picture representing this
Word origin
[1810–20; sky + -scape]This word is first recorded in the period 1810–20. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: dynamic, liberalism, rationalize, triangulation, voodoo-scape is a combining form extracted from landscape, denoting “an extensive view, scenery,” or “a picture or representation” of sucha view, as specified by the initial element. Other words that use the affix -scape include: cityscape, moonscape, seascape
Examples of 'skyscape' in a sentence
skyscape
And so its skyscape has changed too.
Times, Sunday Times (2012)
The burnished gold skyscape suggests a hero watched by divinity and driven by fate.
Times, Sunday Times (2007)
But the skyscape that greets me is an indistinct silvery grey and looks almost like backlit cloud.
Times, Sunday Times (2014)
The cyclorama wall is a painted, cloudy skyscape that can be backlit for mood changes.
Globe and Mail (2003)
It is the pivot point around which the stars wheel, the one fixed point in the changing night-time skyscape.