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单词 colouristic
释义

Definition of colouristic in English:

colouristic

(US coloristic)
adjective kʌləˈrɪstɪkˌkələˈristik
  • 1Showing special use of colour.

    his great colouristic wallpapers
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In some of Leonardo's other paintings he experimented with atmospheric or aerial perspective, a coloristic device giving the impression of realistic depth in the portrayal of landscapes.
    • She had the colouristic sensibility of an English watercolourist, with the ability to evoke spatial extension, often with something mysterious and luminous going on in the water or the sky.
    • Yet there is no diminishing of the compositional or coloristic energy he applies to his round-the-house renderings of family, friends and domestic animals.
    • He was the main and practically only channel through whom this subtle colouristic tradition was sustained in America until a new interest was taken in it in the 1940s by younger artists such as Rothko and Gottlieb.
    • Goethe's scientific interest in color was inspired by the natural optical phenomena and the coloristic traditions of Renaissance painting that he encountered during his first journey to Italy.
    • The brushwork is exuberantly coloristic, the palette composed of delicately keyed harmonies of rose and coral, cool aquamarines, frothy whites, pale golds, and blues.
    • They were the first to use diluted glaze for colouristic effect, contrasting it with the sharper, denser relief glaze line.
    • The overall coloristic neutrality of the painting is anchored by the red table where the sewing machine rests.
    • Isn't his work repellent in its madness, whatever the colouristic skill of the paintings, whatever the occasional sublimity of the prose?
    • His skill at rendering the effects of light is exemplified in the coloristic use of shades of white, lavender, and gray.
    1. 1.1 Having or showing a variety of musical or vocal expression.
      the choir's colouristic resources
      Example sentencesExamples
      • They are just as observant of dynamic, expressive and colouristic detail, but the sound they make, enhanced by beautiful state-of-the-art recording, is much easier on the ear.
      • There are times when the voices come to the forefront, but Gubaidulina treats them mostly in a coloristic and fragmentary fashion.
      • In the late 1980s, to the ears of an angry young man, a lot of English music seemed to concentrate on colouristic dynamism, display of technique, and filling time with rapid successions of clever sonic gestures.
      • Serenade had the most beautiful coloristic touches.
      • His fragmentary scoring for choir and colouristic use of percussion elevates the solo cellist to high priest and turns the piece into a concerto.
      • Indeed the orchestral nature of Bax's lush, colouristic music was something which appealed to Wass.
      • Her soprano has winning qualities of freshness and purity, but the voice, at least as she uses it, has little coloristic or emotional variety.
      • Schiff draws on all the resources of a modern grand, making his points with a wide range of coloristic, rhythmic, and articulative gestures that always establish the equilibrium that makes Bach's world turn so flawlessly.

Derivatives

  • colouristically

  • adverb
    • They interact visually with a background composed of abstract patterns in grayed hues, which echo the scrolls graphically and coloristically.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • And Maazel achieves all this while conducting from memory, even when the score is an obscure, rhythmically tricky, and coloristically subtle one.
      • Larger but more coloristically restrained, a major work from 2000 also contains a patchwork of snapshots that may or may not have any personal meaning for the artist.
      • The painting is both visually accurate and coloristically interesting, rendered as it is in a subjective combination of blues, greens, gold and lavender.
 
 

Definition of coloristic in US English:

coloristic

(British colouristic)
adjectiveˌkələˈristik
  • 1Showing special use of color.

    his great coloristic wallpapers
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Yet there is no diminishing of the compositional or coloristic energy he applies to his round-the-house renderings of family, friends and domestic animals.
    • His skill at rendering the effects of light is exemplified in the coloristic use of shades of white, lavender, and gray.
    • Goethe's scientific interest in color was inspired by the natural optical phenomena and the coloristic traditions of Renaissance painting that he encountered during his first journey to Italy.
    • Isn't his work repellent in its madness, whatever the colouristic skill of the paintings, whatever the occasional sublimity of the prose?
    • She had the colouristic sensibility of an English watercolourist, with the ability to evoke spatial extension, often with something mysterious and luminous going on in the water or the sky.
    • In some of Leonardo's other paintings he experimented with atmospheric or aerial perspective, a coloristic device giving the impression of realistic depth in the portrayal of landscapes.
    • They were the first to use diluted glaze for colouristic effect, contrasting it with the sharper, denser relief glaze line.
    • He was the main and practically only channel through whom this subtle colouristic tradition was sustained in America until a new interest was taken in it in the 1940s by younger artists such as Rothko and Gottlieb.
    • The brushwork is exuberantly coloristic, the palette composed of delicately keyed harmonies of rose and coral, cool aquamarines, frothy whites, pale golds, and blues.
    • The overall coloristic neutrality of the painting is anchored by the red table where the sewing machine rests.
    1. 1.1 Having or showing a variety of musical or vocal expression.
      the choir's coloristic resources
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Schiff draws on all the resources of a modern grand, making his points with a wide range of coloristic, rhythmic, and articulative gestures that always establish the equilibrium that makes Bach's world turn so flawlessly.
      • They are just as observant of dynamic, expressive and colouristic detail, but the sound they make, enhanced by beautiful state-of-the-art recording, is much easier on the ear.
      • There are times when the voices come to the forefront, but Gubaidulina treats them mostly in a coloristic and fragmentary fashion.
      • Serenade had the most beautiful coloristic touches.
      • Indeed the orchestral nature of Bax's lush, colouristic music was something which appealed to Wass.
      • In the late 1980s, to the ears of an angry young man, a lot of English music seemed to concentrate on colouristic dynamism, display of technique, and filling time with rapid successions of clever sonic gestures.
      • His fragmentary scoring for choir and colouristic use of percussion elevates the solo cellist to high priest and turns the piece into a concerto.
      • Her soprano has winning qualities of freshness and purity, but the voice, at least as she uses it, has little coloristic or emotional variety.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 14:44:35