The clarity of the metallic sculptures and the resulting illusion of three-dimensionality made me want to reach into the print and stroke them. |
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A dominant characteristic feature is the three-dimensionality of his compositions. |
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Their musculature, dimly delineated, nonetheless lacks three-dimensionality. |
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In all four plaques the enameler has made plentiful use of the devices we have already discussed for creating a sense of three-dimensionality. |
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These dramas assume that their characters, although often wrong-headed and representative of flawed systems, have dignity and three-dimensionality. |
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In order to create the illusion of three-dimensionality, the lenticular process uses the same principles as used in stereography. |
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Its flatness suggests two-dimensionality while the incurvations, slight protuberances and incisions suggest three-dimensionality. |
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What this postcard does first is bedazzle you with the illusion of three-dimensionality. |
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The pieces were displayed on shelves, propped against the wall, emphasizing their three-dimensionality. |
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And the animation, which combines impressionistic images with remarkable three-dimensionality will blow you away. |
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Thus three-dimensionality was extrinsic to painting, which was essentially flat, in Greenberg's view. |
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Holographic foil stamping on the front and top panels gives the illusion of depth and three-dimensionality. |
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The vessel's surface was carved, which enhanced its three-dimensionality and set up a palpable tension. |
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Each student glues the ring onto the finished project, which adds three-dimensionality to the composition. |
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In 1968, she costarred with Clint Eastwood in the feature film Coogan's Bluff, bringing three-dimensionality to the otherwise cliched role of a hippie. |
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The three-dimensionality applies to the physical environment, too. |
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Finally, our tissues are highly cellular, comprised of cells and the proteins those cells produce, without dependence on biomaterials or scaffold for three-dimensionality. |
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We are illusionist in our attempt to create the sensation of three-dimensionality on a flat, oftentimes white, picture plane. |
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Viewed in a stereopticon, the paired images provided the public with seeming three-dimensionality and the charming pleasure of traveling the world in one's armchair. |
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