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silhouette is a view of some object or scene consisting of the outline and a featureless interior, with the silhouette usually being black. The word is an eponym named after Etienne de Silhouette, a finance minister of Louis XV who in 1759 imposed such harsh economic demands upon the French people that his name became synonymous with anything done or made cheaply.
In art
A silhouette is a form of artwork. It is most commonly a human portrait in profile, in black. They do not show any facial expression. Silhouettes are most often made by a skilled silhouette artist by looking at a subject's profile, whether in person or from a photograph, and simply cutting out their likeness freehand.
Two hundred years ago, long before the camera was invented, someone wishing to have an inexpensive portrait created of their loved ones would have visited a silhouette artist. Within minutes and using only a pair of scissors and a skillful eye, he would have produced a little image with a remarkable resemblance to his subject. Castle]]In America, Silhouettes were highly popular from about 1790 to 1840. The invention of the camera signaled the end of the Silhouette as a widespread form of portraiture. However, their popularity is being reborn in a new generation of people who appreciate the Silhouette as a nostalgic and unique way of capturing a loved one's image.
In popular culture
parodying iPod commercials]] Silhouettes have been used in many of the opening credit sequences of the James Bond films, where girls dancing in silhouette appear to be naked.
Silhouettes have also been used by recording artists in music videos. One example is the group The Pussycat Dolls - in one of their videos, "Buttons", Nicole Scherzinger is seen showing her body as a silhouette.
Early iPod commercials portrayed silhouetted dancers wearing an iPod and earbuds.
The very popular TV show Mystery Science Theater 3000 used the main characters in silhouettewhen they were shown watching the movie in the "movie theater."
The famous opening sequence of Alfred Hitchcock Presents features a silhouetted profile of Alfred Hitchcock stepping into a caricatured outline of himself.
Military usage
Silhouettes of ships, planes, tanks, and other vehicles used by the military are used by soldiers and sailors for recognition purposes. See Jane's Fighting Ships, aircraft recognition.
In graphic design
To silhouette is to separate (mask) a portion of an image so that it does not show. For instance, a background.
In journalism
For interviews, some individuals choose to be videotaped in silhouette to mask their facial features and protect their anonymity. This is done when the individual may be endangered if it is known they were interviewed.
Voice scrambling may also be employed for further protection.
See also
- Contre-jour
- Mudflap girl
- Kara Walker
External links
- Silhouette Artists List of silhouette artists, both living and historical.
- GAP Guild of American Papercutters
- Costume Silhouettes Fashion silhouettes from the 1920s and 1930s.
- Silhouette Gallery A collection of silhouette style photographs.
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- "Silhouette," poem by Jared Carter.
Paper art
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