diorama

diorama
dioramic, adj.
/duy'euh ram"euh, -rah"meuh/, n.
1. a scene, often in miniature, reproduced in three dimensions by placing objects, figures, etc., in front of a painted background.
2. a life-size display representing a scene from nature, a historical event, or the like, using stuffed wildlife, wax figures, real objects, etc., in front of a painted or photographed background.
3. a spectacular picture, partly translucent, for exhibition through an aperture, made more realistic by various illuminating devices.
4. a building or room, often circular, for exhibiting such a scene or picture, esp. as a continuous unit along or against the walls.
[1815-25; < F, equiv. to di- DI-3 + Gk (h)órama view (hora-, var. s. of horân to see, look + -ma n. suffix denoting the result of action)]

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art
      three-dimensional exhibit, often miniature in scale, frequently housed in a cubicle and viewed through an aperture. It usually consists of a flat or curved back cloth on which a scenic painting or photograph is mounted. Flat or solid objects are placed in front of the back cloth, and coloured transparent gauze or plastic drop curtains are used to heighten the three-dimensional effect. A considerable improvement in perspective is achieved by the addition of stage borders or wings. The rigorous application of the laws of perspective is essential to the success of the exhibit. The skillful use of lighting also heightens the effect and was deployed memorably in shows such as the Eidophusikon of Philip James de Loutherbourg (Loutherbourg, Philip James de) during the 18th century.

      True dioramas, used for peep shows (peep show) and the like, probably originated before the 19th century; but credit for the development of the diorama is usually given to Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre (Daguerre, Louis-Jacques-Mandé), a French scenic painter, physicist, and inventor of the daguerreotype, who, with his coworker Charles-Marie Bouton, in 1822 opened an exhibition in Paris that he called the Diorama. Daguerre's techniques survive in contemporary dioramas, which are often employed in museums and may depict any subject on any scale.

      The word diorama may also refer to a length of painted canvas depicting a scene or landscape. Such a canvas, sometimes called a rolled panorama, is slowly rolled across a stage, either horizontally or vertically, to depict movement through space. In the 19th century these displays either accompanied lectures (usually about travel or current events) or created the illusion of motion as an accompaniment to dramas. The American artist John Banvard's depiction of a trip along the Mississippi River was 1,200 feet (370 metres) in length. (See also cyclorama.)

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Universalium. 2010.

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