51Թ

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repoussoir

[ ruh-poo-swahr ]

noun

Painting.
  1. a figure or object in the extreme foreground: used as a contrast and to increase the illusion of depth.


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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of repoussoir1

1870–75; < French, equivalent to repouss ( er ) to push back ( dzܲé ) + -oir -ory 2
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

The hitch: A repoussoir figure is a kind of stand-in for the audience, who is also peering into the scene.

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Repoussoir figures such as this one are commonly used in art to direct a viewer’s attention into a visually complicated scene.

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A so-called repoussoir figure, he turns to look over his shoulder directly at us.

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Some of his most delectable paintings, such as The Cornfield, 1826, rely on the Claudean use of dark repoussoir trees framing a view of bright space at the center, and this can make them too charming to a modern eye.

There was no rain; there was only, all the afternoon, a mild, moist wind and a sky magnificently black; which made a repoussoir for the paler cliffs of the fountain.

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