A composite object or collection (abstract or concrete) created by the assemblage of diverse things; especially for a work of art such as text, film, etc
A pictorial technique in which the artist creates the image, or a portion of it by adhering real materials that possess actual textures to the picture-plane surface, often combining them with painted or drawn images
a paste-up made by sticking together pieces of paper or photographs to form an artistic image; "he used his computer to make a collage of pictures superimposed on a map"
From the French coller, to glue A work made by gluing materials such as paper scraps, photographs, and cloth on to a flat surface
Collage from the French word coller (to stick), collage is a work created by gluing material to a surface By doing so, the artist incorporates actual fragments of the real world Close
A film style that assembles footage from widely disparate sources, often juxtaposing staged fictional scenes with newsreel, animation, or other sorts of material Explored by experimental filmmakers such as Joseph Cornell in the 1930s, it became a major resource for the avant-garde and political filmmaking of the 1960s
A technique that incorporates fragments of commercially printed paper into compositions Introduced into fine art by Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso circa 1909, collage was later developed by artists of the Dada and Surrealist movements to include found objects Today any material fixed to a surface may be termed collage
is a picture made by sticking together pieces of paper, photographs (montage), or other two dimensional objects
More or less two-dimensional objects glued or somehow mounted toa more or less flat surface as elements in a design or picture Collage also usually implies that space will remain between some of the objects as part of the design When the objects mostly overlap,the work will usually be called decoupage