释义 |
Definition of frottage in English: frottagenoun ˈfrɒtɑːʒfrôˈtäZH mass noun1Art The technique or process of taking a rubbing from an uneven surface to form the basis of a work of art. 〔艺术〕摩拓法,擦印画法 Example sentencesExamples - His range of effects is unusually eloquent; there is something of the monoprint to them, as well as elements of the Surrealist techniques of decalcomania and frottage.
- His interest in Freudian psychoanalysis is apparent in such works as the oil painting Pietà, or Revolution by Night, while his interest in automatism led him to develop the techniques of frottage and grattage.
- Other imaginative techniques of which he was a leading exponent were frottage (which he invented in 1925) and decalcomania.
- The most complex of the large pieces incorporates frottage, seen as areas of a tiny dot-grid blotching the surface.
- Rather than using collage, frottage, silkscreen and airbrush, this uncontested master of image transfer turns to the technology of the moment and a considerable archive of images.
- 1.1count noun A work of art produced by taking a rubbing from an uneven surface.
Example sentencesExamples - Ernst adopted their techniques in developing his well-known frottages, which he produced throughout his career.
- The installation Don't Forget by Japanese artist Okabe Masao displayed frottages inside and outside a large circular panel suspended mid-gallery.
- Surrealist artists in the 1920s sought equivalents to automatic writing, e.g. André Masson's free ink drawings, Max Ernst's frottages, or Joan Miró's field painting.
- In August 2000 a retrospective of the artist's frottages and other drawings from 1978-1999 was held at the Salle du Couvemt in Seillans, France.
- I sat in my semi-secluded backyard and rubbed my first frottages with a graphite stick.
2The practice of touching or rubbing against the clothed body of another person in a crowd as a means of obtaining sexual gratification. 摩擦淫(指在人群中接触或摩擦别人穿着衣服的身体部位以取得性满足的变态行为)
Origin1930s: French, 'rubbing, friction', from frotter 'to rub', of unknown origin. Definition of frottage in US English: frottagenounfrôˈtäZH 1Art The technique or process of taking a rubbing from an uneven surface to form the basis of a work of art. 〔艺术〕摩拓法,擦印画法 Example sentencesExamples - His range of effects is unusually eloquent; there is something of the monoprint to them, as well as elements of the Surrealist techniques of decalcomania and frottage.
- The most complex of the large pieces incorporates frottage, seen as areas of a tiny dot-grid blotching the surface.
- His interest in Freudian psychoanalysis is apparent in such works as the oil painting Pietà, or Revolution by Night, while his interest in automatism led him to develop the techniques of frottage and grattage.
- Other imaginative techniques of which he was a leading exponent were frottage (which he invented in 1925) and decalcomania.
- Rather than using collage, frottage, silkscreen and airbrush, this uncontested master of image transfer turns to the technology of the moment and a considerable archive of images.
- 1.1 A work of art produced by taking a rubbing from an uneven surface.
Example sentencesExamples - Ernst adopted their techniques in developing his well-known frottages, which he produced throughout his career.
- The installation Don't Forget by Japanese artist Okabe Masao displayed frottages inside and outside a large circular panel suspended mid-gallery.
- I sat in my semi-secluded backyard and rubbed my first frottages with a graphite stick.
- Surrealist artists in the 1920s sought equivalents to automatic writing, e.g. André Masson's free ink drawings, Max Ernst's frottages, or Joan Miró's field painting.
- In August 2000 a retrospective of the artist's frottages and other drawings from 1978-1999 was held at the Salle du Couvemt in Seillans, France.
2The practice of touching or rubbing against the clothed body of another person in a crowd as a means of obtaining sexual gratification. 摩擦淫(指在人群中接触或摩擦别人穿着衣服的身体部位以取得性满足的变态行为)
Origin1930s: French, ‘rubbing, friction’, from frotter ‘to rub’, of unknown origin. |