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Digital Marketplace for Animation, Games and CG - CGPen

CGpen best animation marketplace for the 3d game models they can showcase their work and earn. Your work will be alongside some of the best artists in the industry.

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Digital Marketplace for Animation, Games and CG - CGPen

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  1. Forced perspective artwork may be traced all the way back to Ancient Greece. Zeuxis (about 464 BC) is frequently mentioned in a story about two competitor artists deceiving one another with optical illusion paintings. When Italian painters of the late Quattrocento, such as Andrea Mantegna (1431–1506) and Melozzo da Forl (1438–1494), began painting illusionistic ceiling paintings, generally in fresco, that employed perspective and techniques such as foreshortening to create the impression of greater space for the viewer below, anamorphic art began to gain popularity. Trompe-l’oeil (fake-it-till-you-make-it) (trick of the eye) Trompe-l’oeil, often known as “forced perspective,” has long been utilised in theatre set design to give the impression of a much larger space than the stage. The Teatro Olimpico in Vicenza, with Vincenzo Scamozzi’s seven forced-perspective “streets” (1585) that appear to recede into the distance, is an often cited early example. The origins of modern street art painting can be traced back to the United Kingdom. Pavement chalk painters could be found all across the UK, and by 1890, it was estimated that over 500 artists were working as pavement chalk artists in London. “Screever” is the traditional English word for a street artist. The word stems from a writing style known as Copperplate that has been utilised by pavement painters since the 18th century. Screever has been identified as a Shakespearean slang term dating from the 16th century. A screevers painting or drawing was frequently done in conjunction with a poem, citation, or proverb, and was a reflection on morality or current events. Screever’s work was well received by all classes of society, appealing to both the working class who couldn’t read and the upper classes who could afford to throw a penny into the hat of the struggling artists. Street painters, known as Maddonari in Italy (because they frequently painted Madonna) and Strassenmaler in the United States, arose all over Europe and the United States (Street Painter in Germany). Cgpen - Sell 3D Models

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