3D Art

A LOOK AT

Simply put, three-dimensional art generally occupies physical space and requires the viewer to engage with it spatially from different angles, or it is two-dimensional art that creates an unusually convincing illusion of space.

THE THIRD DIMENSION

In the case of creating 3D illusions, artists will use perspective, light and shadow, and a combination of methods to essentially model an object that occupies has height, weight, depth, and casts a shadow.

ILLUSTION ART

HOW DO YOU CREATE THREE-DIMENSIONAL ART?

Drawing is perhaps the first medium through which many artists first discover the potential for the development of 3D art.

DRAWING

2D figures and objects are also referred to as plane shapes and plane figures. 2D objects do not carry any volume since the shape is restricted.

2D vs 3D

Sculpture is one of the most easily recognizable forms of 3D art that encapsulates three-dimensionality through its physicality. All sculptures occupy space and therefore form part of the genre of 3D art.

SCULPTURE

The genre of Trompe l’oeil also known as illusionistic painting is also an interesting arena to explore since it employs various painting techniques that can deceive the viewer into believing that they are looking at actual objects in space.

TROMPE L'OEIL

Three-dimensional photography refers to the act of adding three dimensions to 2D images to add a sense of depth to otherwise flat images.

3D PHOTOGRAPHY

Artists who work with graphic software can also use a 2D environment to create 3D artwork. 3D art can also find itself in visual effects in movies that often begin as preliminary sketches and are then recreated as virtual reality.

COMPUTER GRAPHICS

FAMOUS THREE-DIMENSIONAL ARTWORKS

Statue of Liberty (1886)  Frédéric Bartholdi

Le Baiser (1882)  Auguste Rodin

Everydays Series (2007) Beeple

Accumulation No. 1 (c. 1963)  Yayoi Kusama

Dies Irae (2012)  Kurt Wenner