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系 ( 院 ):艺术学院 课题名称:人物造型设计“哥特玫瑰” 专 业:人物形象设计 年 级: 2015级 姓 名:楚晓赛 指导教师:金云霞 2018年5月摘要1)纵观现在的各个国家的时装周可以发现,现在的造型设计师的想法都比较前卫,新颖并且做出来的造型都十分夸张,因为这样才能给观看的人以深刻的印象。这也迎合了这个时代的特点,是追求夸张乖戾,张扬个性的时代!而哥特风格的出现自然而然的迎合了大众的心。这也是哥特式艺术经久不衰的主要原因。 关键词:玫瑰花、女性、裙子、暗黑 第一章哥特风格文化及发展 哥特(Goth),原指代哥特人,属西欧日耳曼部族,同时,哥特也是一种艺术风格,主要特征为高耸、阴森、诡异、神秘、恐怖等,被广泛地运用在建筑、雕塑、绘画、文学、音乐、服装、字体等各个艺术领域,哥特式艺术是夸张的、不对称的、奇特的、轻盈的、复杂的和多装饰的,以频繁使用纵向延伸的线条为其一大特征,主要代表元素包括黑色装扮、蝙蝠、玫瑰、孤堡、乌鸦、十字架、鲜血、黑猫等等。 哥特(Gothic)这个特定的词汇原先的意思是西欧的日耳曼部族。在18世纪到19世纪的建筑文化与书写层面,所谓“哥特复兴”(Gothic Revival)将中古世纪的阴暗情调从历史脉络的墓穴中挖掘出来。哥特(Gothic),又译为“歌德”,原指代哥特人,属西欧日耳曼部族,最早是文艺复兴时期被用来区分中世纪时期(5~15世纪)的艺术风格,它的源由是来自于曾于公元3~5世纪侵略意大利并瓦解罗马帝国的德国哥特族人,在15世纪时,意大利人有了振兴古罗马文化的念头因而掀起了灿烂的文艺复兴运动,由于意大利人对于哥特族摧毁罗马帝国的这段历史情仇始终难以释怀,因此为了与这段时期有所区分,他们便将中世纪时期的艺术风格称呼为“gothic”,即“哥特”,意为“野蛮”,尽管“哥特”这个词多少有些负面的意味,但事实上,为数众多的哥特风格作品其艺术价值是非常高的。第二章哥特玫瑰的灵感来源 灵感来源于法国巴黎圣母院的玫瑰窗,又称:凯瑟琳,是哥特式的标志性建筑之一,于是我就想到了我们日常生活中比较常见的玫瑰花,玫瑰花比较高冷,艳丽,比较适合我选的这个哥特风格,更让模特突出高冷,孤独,艳丽,暗黑的形象。“哥特玫瑰”设计理念 哥特式着装并没有统一的制式设计,主要元素包括黑色、深色的衣服、银饰、黑发、红发或浅色的金发、苍白的皮肤、黑色的唇膏和眼影等等。配物包括十字勋章、五芒星、十字架、斗篷、披肩等等 哥特式风格加上冷艳的玫瑰花,把哥特式效果展现的更加独特,服装主要是以深蓝色欧根纱作为主面料,单一的色彩对人的视觉赋予亲和力,深蓝色的美妙之处在于它是属于暗色系,展现了冷和暗黑。根据19世纪哥特建筑复兴热潮中的玫瑰窗,我在裙子上面点缀了玫瑰窗样子的图案和花纹,极力表现出哥特的风格。领口采用的是V领设计,露出锁骨,展现女性身材的骨感美。裙子背面的设计也能让人清楚地看见女性的肩胛骨,展现现女性身材优美的一面。 服装的结构设计是服装的整体体现。款式设计的构思与服装机构设计是相互补的。服装结构设计决定了服装的整体造型,服装的好与坏取决于服装的结构设计。“哥特玫瑰”礼服结构简单,上裙片我用了蓝色的纱罩着下裙片,叠加表现出服装忽隐忽现的层次感第三章整体造型 妆面哥特风格的妆面着重强调的是眼部,眼影选择的深咖色打底,黑色来晕染。眼线上挑,唇色与眼影相呼应。整个妆容看起来是比较夸张的,表现力很强烈。 发型主要想表现的是女性的孤独,忧郁。披肩直发效果最好,头饰我选用了黑色的玫瑰花发卡,为了与妆容和舞台效果搭配。 配饰(3)服装配饰有为黑色的洛丽塔项圈,中间带走两朵红色的玫瑰花,主要是为了搭配整体的造型,使整体造型看上去更有表现力。 总结 裙子为深蓝色的A字裙,加上面部夸张的妆容和用黑色的花朵作为点缀的披肩短直发,整体给人的感觉是比较独特,夸张和暗黑的。 结语 服装是人类在这个世界上的第一层外壳,服装已经不是传统意义上的服装穿着,它更是一种文化,通过相应的剪裁技术和缝纫工艺,将设计构思做成实物,让艺术的美达到最高点。追求生活、追求时尚是现代人对生活的一种体现,时尚永远不会过去,永远都在重现,文明的精华、视觉的经典,无论主张冷漠还是热情,奢华还是简约,都在生活中展现的淋漓尽致。 服饰文化是社会文化的重要组成部分,随着经济、科技和文化的发展,服饰的文化日益突出。一个人的服饰不仅展示着其外在形象,也反映着内在的文化修养,进而影响着别人对他的认知与评价,也彰显着国家与民族文化。 服饰文化经久不衰,从原始人类的衣不蔽体,到现在的百花齐放,服饰文化不断的开拓创新,才使我们的服饰文化越来越博大精深!致谢本论文是在金云霞老师的指导下写出来的,期间修改过很多次,金老师工作作风扎实务实,专业知识精湛,能够对每一名学生都比较有耐心,而且要求比较严格,手绘图修改了很多次,并且一次比一次好,我明白了一个道理:你不逼自己一把,你就永远不知道自己到底有多优秀!感谢金老师的耐心,以及对我的严格要求,这也使我的毕业设计作品的质量提升了很多,在这里特别感谢能够遇到金老师,我学到了很多!
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"The Black Cat" is a short story by Edgar Allan Poe. It was first published in the August 19, 1843, edition of The Saturday Evening Post. It is a study of the psychology of guilt, often paired in analysis with Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart".[1] In both, a murderer carefully conceals his crime and believes himself unassailable, but eventually breaks down and reveals himself, impelled by a nagging reminder of his guilt. The story is presented as a first-person narrative using an unreliable narrator. The narrator tells us that from an early age he has loved animals. He and his wife have many pets, including a large black cat named Pluto. This cat is especially fond of the narrator and vice versa. Their mutual friendship lasts for several years, until the narrator becomes an alcoholic. One night, after coming home intoxicated, he believes the cat is avoiding him. When he tries to seize it, the panicked cat bites the narrator, and in a fit of rage, he seizes the animal, pulls a pen-knife from his pocket, and deliberately gouges out the cat's that moment onward, the cat flees in terror at his master's approach. At first, the narrator is remorseful and regrets his cruelty. "But this feeling soon gave place to irritation. And then came, as if to my final and irrevocable overthrow, the spirit of PERVERSENESS." He takes the cat out in the garden one morning and hangs it from a tree, where it dies. That very night, his house mysteriously catches on fire forcing the narrator, his wife and their servant to next day, the narrator returns to the ruins of his home to find, imprinted on the single wall that survived the fire, the figure of a gigantic cat, hanging by its neck from a first, this image terrifies the narrator, but gradually he determines a logical explanation for it, that someone outside had thrown the dead cat into the bedroom to wake him up during the fire, and begins to miss Pluto. Some time later, he finds a similar cat in a tavern. It is the same size and color as the original and is even missing an eye. The only difference is a large white patch on the animal's chest. The narrator takes it home, but soon begins to loathe, even fear the creature. After a time, the white patch of fur begins to take shape and, to the narrator, forms the shape of the , one day when the narrator and his wife are visiting the cellar in their new home, the cat gets under its master's feet and nearly trips him down the stairs. In a fury, the man grabs an axe and tries to kill the cat but is stopped by his wife. Enraged, he kills her with the axe instead. To conceal her body he removes bricks from a protrusion in the wall, places her body there, and repairs the hole. When the police came to investigate, they find nothing and the narrator goes free. The cat, which he intended to kill as well, has gone the last day of the investigation, the narrator accompanies the police into the cellar. There, completely confident in his own safety, the narrator comments on the sturdiness of the building and raps upon the wall he had built around his wife's body. A wailing sound fills the room. The alarmed police tear down the wall and find the wife's corpse, and on her head, to the horror of the narrator, is the screeching black cat. As he words it: "I had walled the monster up within the tomb!" Like the narrator in Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart", the narrator of "The Black Cat" has questionable sanity. Near the beginning of the tale, the narrator says he would be "mad indeed" if he should expect a reader to believe the story, implying that he has already been accused of madness.[2]One of Poe's darkest tales, "The Black Cat" includes his strongest denouncement of alcohol. The narrator's perverse actions are brought on by his alcoholism, a "disease" and "fiend" which also destroys his personality.[3] The use of the black cat evokes various superstitions, including the idea voiced by the narrator's wife that they are all witches in disguise. The titular cat is named Pluto after the Roman god of the Underworld. Publication history"The Black Cat" was first published in the August 19, 1843 issue of The Saturday Evening Post. At the time, the publication was using the temporary title United States Saturday Post.[4] Readers immediately responded favorably to the story, spawning parodies including Thomas Dunn English's "The Ghost of the Grey Tadpole".[5][edit] Adaptations [edit] In film "The Black Cat" was adapted into a film starring Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff in 1934 and another with Lugosi and Basil Rathbone in 1941, although neither version bears much resemblance to the original story.[5] Many other adaptations exist but the most faithful to the original is the middle segment of Roger Corman's trilogy film Tales of Terror in 1962.[5] Although the overall film was cast with Vincent Price as the lead, in this segment, he was in a supporting role with Peter Lorre as the main character. The 1934 film Maniac also loosely adapts the story. This version follows a former vaudeville actor who kills a doctor and takes the doctor's place to hide his crime. "The Black Cat" was also adapted into a film of the same name by Italian horror director Lucio Fulci in 1981. Film director Dario Argento presented his own loose adaptation of the story in the 1990 anthology film Two Evil Eyes.[edit] In television "The Black Cat" is the eleventh episode of the second season of Masters of Horror. The plot essentially retells the short story in a semi-autobiographical manner, with Poe himself undergoing a series of events involving a black cat which he used to inspire the story of the same name.[edit] Recordings In 1997, a compilation of Poe's work was released on a double CD entitled Closed on Account of Rabies, with various celebrities lending their voices to the tales. The Black Cat was read by avant-garde performer Diamanda Galás.[edit] References in literary works In 1970, Czech writer Ludvík Vaculík made many references to "A Descent into the Maelstr�0�2m" as well as "The Black Cat" in his novel The Guinea Pigs.[edit] References in art In 1910-11 Futurist artist Gino Severini painted "The Black Cat" in direct reference to Poe's short story. An illustration and description can be found at this site
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哈克贝利费恩历险记》鲜明废奴主题开题报告书2011-06-07 13:38:12 来源: 评论:0 点击:89一、本论文题目的性质及研究目标马克·吐温是
据学术堂了解,毕业论文的开题报告由八个部分组成:(一)论文名称论文名称就是课题的名字。第一,名称要准确、规范。准确就是论文的名称要把论文研究的问题是什么,研究的
根据学术堂的了解,开题报告主要说明论文选题应该研究,自己有条件研究以及准备如何开展研究等问题,也可以说是选题确定之后、实施研究前,关于选题研究的重要性、必要性、
报告的文献综述主要包括摘要、引言、主体和参考文献四个部分,主要表现为撰写者对所收集文献的整理—归纳—总结,并围绕其中的观点进行深入阐述。