incised

(adjective)

To mark or cut the surface of an object for decoration.

Related Terms

  • Cycladic

Examples of incised in the following topics:

  • Etruscan Ceramics

    • Artists incised the vessels with geometric designs, as well as stylized images of humans and animals.
    • Bucchero was often simply decorated with incised lines that formed geometric and abstract patterns.
    • Some patterns were incised with a stylus and others with a toothed wheel or comb-like instruments to create consistent rows of dots or patterns of dots in the shape of fans.
    • In pseudo-red-figure painting, internal details were marked by incision, similar to the usual practice in black-figure vase painting, rather than painted on, as in true red-figure.
  • Aquatint

    • Intaglio printmaking is a family of printing techniques in which an image is incised into the surface of a metal plate; the incised line holds the ink, while the original surface of the plate is wiped clean.
  • Drypoint

    • Drypoint is a printmaking technique in the intaglio family, a category in which an image is etched into a plate, and the incised line holds the ink that will be transferred to the final print.
    • The lines produced in the final print are formed not only by the carved lines, but also by the burrs, or raised edges of the incised lines.
    • This technique is different from engraving, in which the incisions are made by removing metal to form depressions in the plate surface which hold ink.
  • Paleolithic Artifacts

    • The object is a red tufic pebble, about 1.4 inches long, which has at least three grooves, possibly incised with a sharp-edged stone tool.
    • One bone fragment, an elephant tibia, has two groups of incised parallel lines which some have interpreted as an early example of art making.
    • The regular spacing of the incisions, their subequal lengths, and V-like cross-sections suggest that they were created at the same time, with a single stone, however no conclusive agreement has been made.
  • Bronze Age Rock Carvings

    • Petroglyphs, or rock engravings, are pictogram and logogram images created by removing part of a rock surface via incising, picking, carving and/or abrading.
  • Art in Western Europe

    • The majority of images have been painted onto the stone using mineral pigments, although some designs have also been incised into the stone.
    • The art at this location is either carved, incised, picked, or a combination of these various techniques, but it is rarely painted.
  • Paleolithic Cave Paintings

    • Sometimes the silhouette of the animal was incised in the rock first, and in some caves many of the images are only engraved in this fashion, taking them out of a strict definition of "cave painting. "
    • Similarly, a three-dimensional quality and the suggestion of movement are achieved by incising or etching around the outlines of certain figures.
  • Jade in Neolithic China

    • The jade from this culture is characterized by finely worked large ritual jades, commonly incised with the taotie motif.
  • Eskimo

    • The graphic decorations incised on them were purely ornamental, bearing no religious significance.
  • African Art

    • The stones are made from ochre and covered in abstracted patterns of intersecting, incised lines.
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