(isim) barok

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Turkish - English
baroque
ornate, intricate, decorated, laden with detail
Baroque music is a style of European music that was written in the 18th century. relating to the very decorated style of art, music, buildings etc, that was common in Europe in the 17th and early 18th centuries (from barroco or barrueco ). the baroque used to describe baroque art, music, buildings etc. Baroque architecture Baroque period Second Empire Baroque Late Baroque
the European style in music and art of the 17th and early 18th centuries, featuring elaborate ornamentation, complex designs, and curvilinear forms
From Portuguese barroco, 'rough pearl', Period in art history, in the 17th and early 18th centuries The style seeks a theatrical effect, with lavish decorations intended to emotionally involve the viewer The most notable exponents in Rome were Bernini, Maderno and Borromini
chiseled from stone, or shaped from wood, in a garish, crooked, twisted, or slanted sort of way, grotesque
a dynamic and dramatic style of art and architecture in mostly Catholic countries during the 17th century that stressed emotion, variety and movement It was a style that used ornate forms as well as illusionism and realism to achieve its purpose
an extravagant and heavily ornate style of architecture, furniture, and decoration that originated in 17th century Italy See Style Guide
An elaborate, extravagantly complex, sometimes grotesque, style of artistic expression prevalent in the late sixteenth to early eighteenth centuries The baroque influence on poetry was expressed by Euphuism in England, Marinism in Italy, and Gongorism in Spain
frantically baroque"-William Dean Howells
A period in western architecture from ca. 1600 to the middle of the eighteenth century, known for its abundance of decoration
from the Baroque period in visual art and music
elaborate an extensive ornamentation in decorative art and architecture that flourished in Europe in the 17th century having elaborate symmetrical ornamentation; "the building
A period in western art from ca. 1600 to the middle of the eighteenth century, characterized by drama, rich color, and dramatic contrast between light and shadow
The period in art history from about 1600 to about 1750 In this sense the term covers a wide range of styles and artists In painting and sculpture there were three main forms of Baroque: (1) sumptuous display, a style associated with the Catholic Counter Reformation and the absolutist courts of Europe (Bernini, Rubens); (2) dramatic realism (Caravaggio); and (3) everyday realism, a development seen in particular in Holland (Rembrandt, Uermeer) In architecture, there was an emphasis on expressiveness and grandeur, achieved through scale, the dramatic use of light and shadow, and increasingly elaborate decoration In a more limited sense the term Baroque often refers to the first of these categories The development of the Baroque reflects the period's religious tensions (Catholic versus Protestant); a new and more expansive world view based on science and exploration; and the growth of absolutist monarchies
The seventeenth-century period in Europe characterized in the visual arts by dramatic light and shade, turbulent composition, and exaggerated emotional expression
term, originally meaning irregular, applied to the dramatic, emotional style of seventeenth and early eighteenth century art
In bad taste; grotesque; odd
a period and style of art developed in southern Europe during the seventeenth century that spread to the rest of Europe, reaching the New World Baroque art and architecture are characterized by theatrical effects, drama, intense lighting, capturing a moment in time, movement, and above all, appealing to the senses Baroque art and architecture were used by the Catholic Church to spread its teachings and dogma to counter the Protestant Reformation of Martin Luther
A fantastic style of the 16th- to the mid-18th Century, marked by exaggerated scale, curves, and movement
(isim) barok
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