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grisaille
[gri-zahy, -zeyl, g
noun
plural
grisaillesmonochromatic painting in shades of gray.
a work of art, as a painting or stained-glass window, executed in grisaille.
grisaille
/ ɡrizɑj, ɡrɪˈzeɪl /
noun
a technique of monochrome painting in shades of grey, as in an oil painting or a wall decoration, imitating the effect of relief
a painting, stained glass window, etc, in this manner
Word History and Origins
Origin of grisaille1
Word History and Origins
Origin of grisaille1
Example Sentences
A planned exhibition of his grisaille paintings at the Whitney Museum of American Art had to be canceled.
Bellow, however, could still stop for a sauvignon blanc and a plate of charcuterie when the “Parisian grisaille” — that depthless monochrome that can envelop even the Eiffel Tower — gave him the January blues.
This much was evident in the largely grisaille efforts in her 2016 show at Marian Goodman, where a new softness of line prevailed.
She painted images clipped from magazines in slightly fogged-in grisaille, as if suffused with tragedy.
In 1938, she painted the intriguing grisaille oil “Stargazing in Texas.”
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