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assemblageRelationships Related Term: collage n. ~ 1. Sculpture · A three-dimensional work of art made by combining different elements, especially found objects. - 2. Archaeology · Artifacts related as a group [..]
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assemblageFrench term for blending various lots of wine before bottling, especially in Champagne.
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assemblageThe collection of minerals that characterize a rock or a facies.
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assemblagec. 1704, from French assemblage "gathering, assemblage," from assembler (see assemble). Earlier English words in the same sense include assemblement, assemblance (both late 15c.).
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assemblageA three-dimensional composition made from a variety of traditionally non-artistic materials and objects. Related: Louise Nevelson. Sky Cathedral. 1958 Meret Oppenheim. Object. Paris, 1936 Abstract Exp [..]
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assemblageAssemblage is art that is made by assembling disparate elements which are often scavenged by the artist, or sometimes bought specially
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assemblageA group of artifacts found within the same archaeological context (locus, matrix, stratum).
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assemblageA collection of species inhabiting a given area, the interactions between the species, if any, being unspecified. Cooke 1984 1
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assemblageThe concept of assemblage has emerged as one of a series of new concepts, alongside those of complexity, chaos, indeterminacy, fractals, string, turbu-lence, flow, multiplicity, emergence, and so on, [..]
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assemblage(n) a group of persons together in one place(n) a system of components assembled together for a particular purpose(n) the social act of assembling(n) several things grouped together or considered as a [..]
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assemblageA group of species found in the same location.
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assemblageAn association of interacting populations of organisms in a given water body (e.g., a fish assemblage encompasses all of the fish species in a water body). Also see community.
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assemblagean artwork made from pieces of other things, sometimes found objects, sometimes natural. Although commonly used for sculpture, the term can be applied to many types of art including photomontage, coll [..]
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assemblageartifacts that are found together and that presumably were used at the same time or for similar or related tasks.
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assemblagea group of artifacts recurring together at a particular time and place, and representing the sum of human activities.
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assemblagea group of artifacts found together that were used at the same time or for similar tasks
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assemblageAll of the artifacts and features found at an archaeological site that are associated with one another and with a single occupation.
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assemblageAll the artifacts, fauna, and other debris found in a single layer or excavation unit at a side.
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assemblageFrench term for "assembling," or blending of wines. In actuality, it is the art of judging the various wines available, which can be considerable, to determine which, when blended appropriat [..]
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assemblageFrench term for the grape varieties used to blend a wine.
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assemblagean organism group of interacting species in a given ecosystem, for example, a fish assemblage or a benthic macroinvertebrate assemblage.
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assemblageA body in Illian, chosen by and from the merchants and shipowners, that is supposed to advise both the King and the Council of Nine, but historically has contended with them for power. Atha'an M [..]
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assemblageassemblage is the blending of several wines, generally from different grape varieties and independently vinified. These are often somewhat disappointing.
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assemblageThree-dimensional or sculptural work, it is the media counterpart of collage, which is two-dimensional. It composed of non-art materials, often found objects, that are seemingly unrelated but when [..]
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assemblageAn assemblage is a word used by archaeologists to describe a group of objects that have been found together. For example, a number of fragments of Roman pottery might be called a pottery assemblage.
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assemblagea group of artefacts
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assemblageA collection of artifacts from a single time or deposit.
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assemblageA general term used for an associated group of portable antiquities. This term is used in a narrow sense to describe a group of finds from a single restricted archaeological context, or in a wider sense to refer to all the finds from a particular archaeological site or (in some cases) from an entire fieldwork project.
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assemblagea group of artifacts which were found together and may have some relationship to one another (e.g., many heat-cracked rocks that made up an Indian hearth)
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assemblageThe technique of creating a sculpture by joining together individual pieces or segments, sometimes found objects that originally served another purpose.
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assemblage - (pronounced as-
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assemblageA 3-dimensional work of art made by joining materials and objects together.
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assemblageThis is also known as a collage. It is a movement where the artist would use pieces that were already assembled and put them in a collection of sorts as a new piece or art all together. Picasso used t [..]
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assemblageAn art object that uses three-dimensional found objects. An extension of collage, this technique became popular towards the end of the 1950s.
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assemblagea collection of objects grouped together.
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assemblageIn short Assemblage might best be described as a 3D collage. It is an artistic process in which three-dimensional or two-dimensional artistic compositions is being assembled from found objects. Be the [..]
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assemblageAn assemblage, collage, or bricolage is a three-dimensional artwork created from found objects. The term “assemblage” was first used in the 1950s by the French artist Jean Dubuffet to describe his but [..]
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assemblagetechnique of creating sculpture by combining various elements. Often constructed, it may include found objects (objets trouvées) and/or elements modelled or carved by the artist. See also Construction [..]
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assemblageA process that usually requires a three dimensional alteration of a picture surface. It could be build on top of the surface as in piano strings strung across or cut into the surface like a niche.
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assemblagea piece that combines the use of mixed media and found objects.
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assemblageCombining of 2 or more abutting parcels of land.
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