Horror Vacui

In art history, especially in the criticism of painting, horror vacui describes the filling of every empty space in a work of art with some sort of design or image. It is one of the general characteristics of mathematical tiling or the dense space-filling fields in Celtic interlace designs (other examples are needed). The term is Latin in origin and literally means "fear of space". Some examples of horror vacui can be seen on Barbaric objects such as the viking ship at Sutton Hoo or the Ruthwell Cross. The term is especially associated with the Italian critic and scholar Mario Praz, who used it to describe the suffocating atmosphere and clutter of interior design in the Victorian age.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
bavarian state opera
averse sefira
ponderosa pine
followership
zazpiak bat
felix hoffmann
jersey girl
max streibl
uss biddle
panel
semi major axis
aigle
jack vettriano
waugh (disambiguation)
uss cambridge
atari falcon
ballyfin
bex
rigor (medicine)
warmiak
la monnaie
uss belknap
bandon
teton river (montana)
stephen daldry
dove prism
pathfinder (star trek)
cardiac function curve
jim gibbons
bernhard van treeck
uss amphitrite
city and guilds college union
gurps cyberpunk
boulder river (southwestern montana)
samson (oratorio)
national science education standards
ability score
van cliburn
freesbie
operation restore hope
uss ariel
isagoras
emerald triangle
sequoyah