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fine art
[fahyn ahrt]
noun
a visual art considered to have been created primarily for aesthetic purposes and judged for its beauty and meaningfulness, specifically, painting, sculpture, drawing, watercolor, graphics, and architecture.
fine art
noun
art produced chiefly for its aesthetic value, as opposed to applied art
Also called: beaux arts. (often plural) any of the fields in which such art is produced, such as painting, sculpture, and engraving
Word History and Origins
Origin of fine art1
Idioms and Phrases
Example Sentences
The Corp. for Public Broadcasting was also a vital revenue source for cultural and fine arts programming that often struggles to sustain itself in the commercial media marketplace.
Gutiérrez, who graduated with a master of fine arts degree from the University of Southern California in May, was determined to perform the piece before leaving for her hometown, Guadalajara.
She’s taught us how to kickstart a successful business, master the fine art of entertaining, whip up a delicious One-Pan Pasta, tend to our outdoor garden and fold a fitted sheet.
She committed to the craft partly as a means to stay in the country — she needed a visa, so she applied to UC Santa Barbara, where she got her master’s in fine arts in 1978.
Piscitelli both curated and designed the exhibition in San Francisco, whose reproduced images are not set in precious frames, like fine art, but printed on recyclable cardboard panels resting on Home Depot galvanized studs.
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