Imaginary painting  

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[[Image:The Experts, 1837 by Alexandre-Gabriel Decamps.jpg |thumb|200px|''[[The Experts]]'' ([[1837]]) by [[Alexandre-Gabriel Decamps]]]] [[Image:The Experts, 1837 by Alexandre-Gabriel Decamps.jpg |thumb|200px|''[[The Experts]]'' ([[1837]]) by [[Alexandre-Gabriel Decamps]]]]
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-A '''fictional painting''' or an '''imaginary painting''' is a painting which exists in a [[fictitious world]]. [[Clinamen]] The most fascinating imaginary painting machine was thought up by Alfred Jarry (1861-1907), the creator of Ubu Roi and inventor of pataphysics — the science of imaginary solutions. It was embodied in the beast Cfinamen. . . . ".+A '''fictional painting''' or an '''imaginary painting''' is a painting which exists in a [[fictitious world]]. [[Clinamen]] The most fascinating [[imaginary painting machine]] was thought up by Alfred Jarry (1861-1907), the creator of Ubu Roi and inventor of pataphysics — the science of imaginary solutions. It was embodied in the beast Cfinamen. . . . ".
==Examples== ==Examples==
===In literature=== ===In literature===

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A fictional painting or an imaginary painting is a painting which exists in a fictitious world. Clinamen The most fascinating imaginary painting machine was thought up by Alfred Jarry (1861-1907), the creator of Ubu Roi and inventor of pataphysics — the science of imaginary solutions. It was embodied in the beast Cfinamen. . . . ".

Contents

Examples

In literature

Nicholas Meyer's 1993 novel The Canary Trainer describes a fictional painting by the famous Impressionist Degas, which happens to show Sherlock Holmes.

In Interpretazioni veneziane, Michelangelo Muraro and David Rosand state that:

Certainly the imagery that Aretino describes at the beginning of the Passion carries conviction. ... has stimulated commentators to suggest that Aretino is describing an imaginary painting by Titian or Tintoretto. ...

In painting

In film

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Imaginary painting" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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