Cityscape
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In the visual arts, a cityscape (urban landscape) is an artistic representation, such as a painting, drawing, print or photograph, of the physical aspects of a city or urban area. It is the urban equivalent of a landscape. Townscape is roughly synonymous with cityscape, though it implies the same difference in urban size and density (and even modernity) implicit in the difference between the words city and town. In urban design the terms refer to the configuration of built forms and interstitial space.
History of cityscapes in art
From the first century A.D. dates a
In Ancient China, scroll paintings such as Along the River During the Qingming Festival (Qingming Shanghe Tu) offer a panoramic view of the cities depicted.
Halfway through the 17th century the cityscape became an independent genre in the
At the end of the 19th century the
Selected cityscape painters
- Alexander Beggrov
- Bernardo Bellotto
- Johann Berthelsen
- George Hendrik Breitner
- Gustave Caillebotte
- Canaletto
- Edouard Leon Cortés
- John Atkinson Grimshaw
- Francesco Guardi
- Childe Hassam
- Jan van der Heyden
- Edward Hopper
- Isaac Israëls
- Matthäus Merian
- Georgia O'Keeffe
- Camille Pissarro
- Jacob Lawrence
- Paul Signac
- Alfred Sisley
- Pyotr Vereshchagin
- Jan Vermeer
- Brian Whelan
- James McNeill Whistler
- Guy C. Wiggins
- Stephen Wiltshire
Selected cityscape photographers
- Berenice Abbott
- Eugène Atget
- Richard Berenholtz
- Henri Cartier-Bresson
- André Kertész
- Andrew Prokos
- Edward Steichen
See also
- Gordon Cullen
- Landscape painting
- List of cities with most skyscrapers
- Skyline
- Skyscraper
- Veduta
References
- ^ Eugenio la Rocca: "The Newly Discovered City Fresco from Trajan's Baths, Rome." Imago Mundi Vol. 53 (2001), pp. 121–124.
External links
- Cityscape – ArtHistory.net