Regardant Público Deposited

Definição
  • Regardant.  A portrait looking back over the subject's shoulder. The term comes from heraldry, where it most often describes animals viewed from the side with head twisted looking towards their tail. However, one of the most famous portraits of Columbus is a regardant pose looking back over his cape. Whether the full face is seen depends upon the angle of the viewers perspective.  See heraldry.

    Register.  The use of multiple ground lines and multiple figures and/or scenes of events

    in continuous strips. Register is a medallic form of narrative relief, sometimes

    called continuous relief. A register in medallic form extends from one scene into another

    and occasionally crossing over a ground line or two. The sequence in a register is often in

    chronological order; it presents a wealth of detail with a maximum of clarity. The

    technique of narrative relief is quite old, widely employed in both Egyptian and Roman

    art. The sequence of events and figures is usually in chronological order; as an art

    technique it presents a wealth of detail with a maximum of clarity.  Egyptian sunken

    relief is often in narrative form, however the most famous narrative relief in continuous

    form is the Trajan's Column with a 625 foot band (4-foot wide) winding up a 125-foot

    column.

    CLASS 03.2

    6010-(018)12.4

    excerpted with permission from

    An Encyclopedia of Coin and Medal Technology

    For Artists, Makers, Collectors and Curators

    COMPILED AND WRITTEN BY D. WAYNE JOHNSON

    Roger W. Burdette, Editor

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