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Picture plane, or the window to another world, so to speak, is essentially the frame around the picture.
IN CONTEXT
Take a look a the image of the Mona Lisa below. Notice the red line, which shows the picture plane of this painting.
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The foreground is the part of the picture closest to the viewer. The middle ground is the middle area between the foreground, and the background is the part of the composition most distant from the picture plane.
IN CONTEXT
Take a look at the image below. The foreground in this painting, is Mona Lisa herself. Notice that the middle ground (blue) is in between the foreground and background (green).
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The Mona Lisa is a great example depicting the foreground, middle ground, and background as ascending from the bottom of the painting. This is a very common way of suggesting depth in a 2D work of art. However, this isn’t the only way to render depth of field.
IN CONTEXT
Take a look at the image below. This fresco shows the foreground as the outermost section of the picture plane (purple), with the middle ring in blue depicting the middle ground. The center rectangle is the background.
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This arrangement works well because you’d be looking up. The artist is trying to depict a sense of height, rather than the sense of depth, like you saw with the Mona Lisa.
Source: THIS TUTORIAL WAS AUTHORED BY IAN MCCONNELL FOR SOPHIA LEARNING. Please see our Terms of Use.