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Search Results for simulation
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Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2020) 70 (2): 199–224.
Published: 01 October 2020
...Jie Shi Abstract Dated to 524 ce , the lavishly carved stone sarcophagus of the Northern Wei Prince Yuan Mi exemplifies an early Chinese method using a diagonal gaze as a visual device to construct a three-dimensional space. On the exterior faces of the sarcophagus, the anonymous artist simulated...
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View articletitled, Image, Body, and <span class="search-highlight">Simulation</span> of the Afterlife in the Early Medieval Sarcophagus of Prince Yuan Mi
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for article titled, Image, Body, and <span class="search-highlight">Simulation</span> of the Afterlife in the Early Medieval Sarcophagus of Prince Yuan Mi
Image
in Image, Body, and Simulation of the Afterlife in the Early Medieval Sarcophagus of Prince Yuan Mi
> Archives of Asian Art
Published: 01 October 2020
Figure 19. Layer 3 (outer layer), the simulated “natural and supernatural world” (outermost layer), of Yuan Mi's stone sarcophagus, probably near Luoyang, Henan province, 524 ce . Made by Jie Shi, with rubbing from Okumura, “Mekki kōshiden sekkan no kokuga ni tsuite,” folded illustration
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Image
in Image, Body, and Simulation of the Afterlife in the Early Medieval Sarcophagus of Prince Yuan Mi
> Archives of Asian Art
Published: 01 October 2020
Figure 8. Layer 1 (inner layer), the simulated “coffin,” Yuan Mi's stone sarcophagus, probably near Luoyang, Henan province, 524 ce . Made by Jie Shi, with rubbing from Okumura, “Mekki kōshiden sekkan no kokuga ni tsuite,” folded illustration, unpaginated.
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Image
in Image, Body, and Simulation of the Afterlife in the Early Medieval Sarcophagus of Prince Yuan Mi
> Archives of Asian Art
Published: 01 October 2020
Figure 11. Layer 2 (middle layer), the simulated “burial chamber” (middle layer) of Yuan Mi's stone sarcophagus, probably near Luoyang, Henan province, 524 ce . Made by Jie Shi with rubbing from Okumura, “Mekki kōshiden sekkan no kokuga ni tsuite,” folded illustration, unpaginated.
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Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2011) 61 (1): 3–36.
Published: 01 April 2011
... of the tomb chamber than on the chamber chamber itself, with its visually cohesive simulation of
itself.1 An important exception to the tomb as treasure a built environment, has become the tour de force of
trove is a style of tomb built entirely in brick, with innovative creation (Fig. 1).3 Entering...
View articletitled, Underground Wooden Architecture in Brick: A Changed Perspective from Life to Death in 10th Through 13th-Century Northern China
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for article titled, Underground Wooden Architecture in Brick: A Changed Perspective from Life to Death in 10th Through 13th-Century Northern China
Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2005) 55 (1): 1–15.
Published: 01 April 2005
... simulation.
dance, clearly convey the Koryo Buddhists' wish for
rebirth in the Western Paradise. Especially when the figures II. PURE LAND BUDDHISM AND ITS IMAGERY
Unlike in Japan, Pure Land Buddhism of the Koryo dynasty...
Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2004) 54 (1): 35–61.
Published: 01 April 2004
... their
41
Fig. 7. Rani Vay. Patan, Gujarat. Entrance descent. Fig. 8. Fort. Chittor, Rajasthan. Vilffnalccr.
new Ghurid patrons associated local architectural elements The simulated arcuate construction and the ornamental
and ornamental motifs exclusively with the Indic "reli- programs of the Qutbi...
Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2020) 70 (1): 23–49.
Published: 01 April 2020
... in a process called tianmo 填墨 or kuotian 廓填. The final product thus simulated an original piece of calligraphy; characters appeared to be composed of intersecting brushstrokes in black against a plain ground, though in fact they were painstakingly traced and in-painted ( Figure 6 ). 4 Figure 6...
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Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2023) 73 (2): 145–199.
Published: 01 October 2023
... and governor, Zeng Guofan, in post-Taiping Nanjing. 109 The importance of identifying this scene with its on-site location is highlighted by the skillful simulation of the inscription “一人泉” ( Yirenquan [One-Person-Spring]). Appearing as if carved into the irregular surface of the front-facing rock...
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Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2021) 71 (2): 191–218.
Published: 01 October 2021
..., crisscrossing lines simulate the effect of cross-hatching in the rendering of the blanket covering the lower body of the rickshaw rider (see Figure 1 ). In the depiction of the bridal chair filler, Chen went over the outlines with additional dry brushstrokes, the viscous effect of which approximates...
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Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2007) 57 (1): 23–49.
Published: 01 April 2007
....
45
46 ARCHIVES OF ASIAN ART
of the passageway processions. Another motif from ear- but the procession and scale of human pageantry simul-
lier conventions, the oxcart and horse found on the taneously placed a stamp of the present and of Gao ini-
south wall of the Zhijiabao tomb (Fig. 8...
Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2004) 54 (1): 7–22.
Published: 01 April 2004
... the near-identity of pornography and shun- individual engaging in extramarital sex, in relations with
ga serves Screech's thoroughly presented contention that the same sex and with the opposite sex (sometimes simul-
the raison d'etre of shunga was the provision of masturba- taneously), as well...
Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2016) 66 (2): 213–238.
Published: 01 October 2016
....
tion of ironies of simulated surfaces reminiscent of the
early cubist collage work of Picasso and Braques, ironies
prints bring the viewer into a more direct confrontation that must have intrigued the artist as he carved exag-
with the physical...
Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2004) 54 (1): 63–93.
Published: 01 April 2004
... in the south, this dis-
tinctive body type appears not just in bronzes, but also in
stone and wood sculpture and even in painting, as I will
discuss. I believe this conceptualization expresses a sense of
the body as the visible manifestation of great power, simul-
taneously "physical," "mental...
Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2009) 59 (1): 105–133.
Published: 01 April 2009
... people.67 There-
undertaking toward merit accumulation occurred simul- fore it is likely that the steles were donated just after
taneously with forming voluntary organizations of unification by former Paekche subjects who lived in the
devotees. Similarly in China, Buddhist use of the stele Yon’gi...
Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2018) 68 (1): 1–32.
Published: 01 April 2018
... to understanding tsugigami as the vulgarity of letter type (simulated or real) is to understanding Cubist collage. 102 In contrast to print, however, text figures in the Anthology in an intriguing conflation of allograph and autograph: the text of the inscription is indeed canonical, but each inscription...
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Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2003) 53 (1): 71–104.
Published: 01 April 2003
... for integrity's triumph that the
traditional Chinese term) comprehends all the most popular Friends convey in the literati canon. The key here is simul-
graphic devices in Chinese visual culture.6 taneity of multiple meanings and affect.8
A convenient index of the range and ubiquity of auspi...