Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q4688012> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 63 of
63
with 100 triples per page.
- Q4688012 subject Q7028606.
- Q4688012 subject Q7583765.
- Q4688012 abstract "(This article concerns painting and other non-photographic media. Otherwise, see aerial photography)Aerial landscape art includes paintings and other visual arts which depict or evoke the appearance of a landscape from a perspective above it—usually from a considerable distance—as it might be viewed from an aircraft or spacecraft. Sometimes the art is based not on direct observation but on aerial photography, or on maps created using satellite imagery. This kind of landscape art hardly existed before the 20th century; its modern development coincided with the advent of human transport which allowed for actual overhead views of large landscapes.Aerial landscapes are landscapes as seen from the sky. The earliest depictions of aerial landscapes are maps, or somewhat map-like artworks, which show a landscape from an imagined bird's-eye viewpoint. For example, Australian Aborigines, beginning in very ancient times, created "country" landscapes—aerial landscapes depicting their country—showing ancestral paths to watering holes and sacred sites. Centuries before air travel, Europeans developed maps of whole continents and even of the globe itself, all from an imagined aerial perspective, aided with mathematical calculations derived from surveys and knowledge of astronomical relationships.There were other pre-20th century Western artworks sometimes depicting a single town or precinct in a manner that comes closer to real aerial landscape, showing a town or city more or less as it might look from directly overead. These map-like aerial townscapes often employed a kind of mixed perspective; while the overall view was quasi-aerial—showing the disposition of features arrayed as if seen from directly above—individual features of importance (such as churches or other major buildings) were pictured larger than scale, angled as they might look to someone standing on the ground. The map-like functional purpose of these pictures meant that such landmarks ought to be recognizable to a viewer, therefore, a realistic overhead view of the scene would defeat the purpose. The advent of balloon travel in the 19th century encouraged the development of more realistic aerial landscapes, as the first pioneering aviators begin to learn what landscapes and buildings really looked like when viewed from directly overhead.".
- Q4688012 thumbnail View.from.easyjet.onto.alps.arp.jpg?width=300.
- Q4688012 wikiPageExternalLink ~dreikaum.
- Q4688012 wikiPageExternalLink tabs.
- Q4688012 wikiPageExternalLink 2651512.
- Q4688012 wikiPageExternalLink 4adcc1ba81b58044a19afeb4da09e526.html.
- Q4688012 wikiPageExternalLink d729543b2ed70922.html.
- Q4688012 wikiPageExternalLink 6f47b62eaa281cc585256a4c007b5610?OpenDocument&Click=.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q107425.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q1089886.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q11436.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q1153655.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q11629.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q128115.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q1281597.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q130777.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q131221.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q1384.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q1484999.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q1672708.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q177725.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q190593.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q191163.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q191839.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q1935974.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q21.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q239303.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q261562.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q314223.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q3161863.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q3494596.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q36649.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q37571.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q38166.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q4006.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q40218.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q408.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q41506.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q420716.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q43261.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q46408.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q497712.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q50816.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q5135776.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q527.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q5293387.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q5417082.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q541831.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q595942.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q6093349.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q7028606.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q7036123.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q725252.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q7583765.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q7647713.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q7927914.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q8062463.
- Q4688012 wikiPageWikiLink Q84.
- Q4688012 comment "(This article concerns painting and other non-photographic media. Otherwise, see aerial photography)Aerial landscape art includes paintings and other visual arts which depict or evoke the appearance of a landscape from a perspective above it—usually from a considerable distance—as it might be viewed from an aircraft or spacecraft. Sometimes the art is based not on direct observation but on aerial photography, or on maps created using satellite imagery.".
- Q4688012 label "Aerial landscape art".
- Q4688012 depiction View.from.easyjet.onto.alps.arp.jpg.