English to Hindi Dictionary iconography

iconography

शास्त्र
definition
noun
My study of the iconography has revealed 37 images from the twelfth century, 65 from the thirteenth century, then a mighty leap to 201 from the fourteenth century.
the visual images and symbols used in a work of art or the study or interpretation of these.
The great festivals celebrating the saving events in the life of Christ and the life of his Mother are represented both in mural iconography in the upper parts of the church and on the icon screen.
a collection of illustrations or portraits.
translation of 'iconography'
मूर्ति विज्ञा,
प्रतिमा‍ विज्ञान,
शास्त्र,
प्रतिमा-विद्या
example
the conventional 'iconography' of Christian art
While this collection of styles is consonant with Ferry's interest in ironic pop art, it also reflects a significant departure, as noted, from the standard visual 'iconography' of rock.
the 'iconography' of pop culture
Sentimental photographs of high quality continue the maudlin 'iconography' of Indians as last representatives of a fine and more noble pristine past, oppressed by crude invaders.
The effectiveness of the statue was thus dependent in part on the visual suitability of its 'iconography' and the quality of its form.
My study of the 'iconography' has revealed 37 images from the twelfth century, 65 from the thirteenth century, then a mighty leap to 201 from the fourteenth century.
There's black and white pictures of presidential 'iconography' : the oval office, motorcades, and the Presidential helicopter Marine One.
In Texas, the first thing to hit me was the 'iconography' - of the cowboy, the Southwest, and the landscape, along with rich Tex-Mex culture represented by the Mariachi bands.
The poses of seated figure and rooster and the relation between them distinctly recall the 'iconography' of Peter's denial in early Christian and Carolingian images.
the 'iconography' of pop culture
The great festivals celebrating the saving events in the life of Christ and the life of his Mother are represented both in mural 'iconography' in the upper parts of the church and on the icon screen.
It has been demonstrated that the 'iconography' of the Del Sarto altarpiece reflects Franciscan doctrine and artistic conventions.
With her designs for The Indians' Book of 1907, DeCora moved past a generic interest in Native symbols to create a pan-Indian 'iconography' .
This is clearest in his valorization of the visual 'iconography' of the French Revolution.
It is not only the 'iconography' of Blake's work that conveys a dream of liberation.
This exhibit of 'iconographically' unrelated subjects aimed to highlight the formal similarities and differences between the individual figures and encouraged the aesthetic study and appreciation of the series as a whole.
With the exception of the pieces in the Kinshasa museum, the attribution of these masks to the Luntu is based on the combination of stylistic and 'iconographic' traits.
Few know that Edmonton is home to an 'iconographer' with the talent of an old master.
In this they are unlike 'iconographically' similar photographs by recognised photographers.
The subject matter of the easel paintings is either New York or Mexican scenes, a selection of which Anreus carefully analyzes formally and 'iconographically' , pointing out their unique compositional qualities and grim content.
Twelve sets of drawings enhance our understanding of 'iconographical' details and make the discussion easier to follow.
He talks to us in his own 'iconographic' language using hieroglyphs of expressionless cartoon figures, with male and female attributes, which he draws by hand before reproducing digitally.
Working in metals, resin, wood and paint, Bourgeois has developed a strict 'iconographic' language in which for example sewing and its tools are specifically to do with repair and motherly love.
The decorative, formal and 'iconographical' nature of the artworks veil the confused personal tensions always present in relationships.
Everything sensual and earthy - the exquisite wall-garden, the flowering rose, the beauty of a woman - tilts upwards 'iconographically' toward God.
She lives as a hermit in a cottage outside the village where she carries out her work as an 'iconographer' .
Paintings (or rather pictures - it's often hard to see the difference) usually have some significant internal, technical, symbolic, 'iconographical' detail which belongs to a tradition of other comparable things.
Attired in African garments and armed with carved walking sticks, LeRoy Clarke cuts an imposing figure; much like the price tag on one of his 'iconographic' paintings.
This meticulous preservation of historical prototypes from copy to copy articulates a distinctly 'iconographical' realism.
By the late mid-fifteenth century, the visual rhetoric of Western Catholicism could be said to reside firmly in the hands of private providers overseen by commissioning bishops and scholarly 'iconographers' .
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