Hello.
The last years, I have seen the term "seascape" - even "manscape" - on
titles of paintings or photographies. I guess these are quite new terms
and constructed from the word "landscape". English is not my mother
language and I wonder therefore what a "seascape" is. A picture from the
seaside with some rocks in the foreground and big ocean waves as the
main motiv - is that a seascape or a landscape? A manscape is a
landscape contructed by man, I guess.
Maybe these words are not in the English/American vocabulare at all? I
don't know. Can anyone clearify this?
Best regards
Norwall S. Rosvik.
> The last years, I have seen the term "seascape" - even "manscape" - on
> titles of paintings or photographies. I guess these are quite new terms
> and constructed from the word "landscape". English is not my mother
> language and I wonder therefore what a "seascape" is. A picture from the
> seaside with some rocks in the foreground and big ocean waves as the
> main motiv - is that a seascape or a landscape? A manscape is a
> landscape contructed by man, I guess.
> Maybe these words are not in the English/American vocabulare at all? I
Both landscape and seascape are traditional English words that have been
around a long time. My little pre-war Oxford dictionary has seascape, which
it defines as a "sea-piece", i.e. a picture with the sea as the main
subject. By contrast it defines landscape as either a piece of inland
scenery, or a picture of it.
Manscape on the other hand is an ugly neologism. I suppose it might be
being used to mean a picture of artificial terrain, but if it followed the
pattern of the old terms, it would be a picture of a man as scenery, akin
to those shots of naked women that look at first glance like a landscape of
desert sand dunes.
--
Due to the intolerable volume of spam these days, I no longer supply a
valid email address.
> December 1, 1998
>
> Hello.
>
> The last years, I have seen the term "seascape" - even "manscape" - on
> titles of paintings or photographies. I guess these are quite new terms
> and constructed from the word "landscape". English is not my mother
> language and I wonder therefore what a "seascape" is. A picture from the
> seaside with some rocks in the foreground and big ocean waves as the
> main motiv - is that a seascape or a landscape? A manscape is a
> landscape contructed by man, I guess.
> Maybe these words are not in the English/American vocabulare at all? I
> don't know. Can anyone clearify this?
>
> Best regards
> Norwall S. Rosvik.
The English language is not a precise language and is often abused. A
"landscape" is a picture of the land, a "seascape" is a picture in which the
sea is a prominent component (it is not clear what one would call a picture
in which the prominent component is a lake - a "lakescape" perhaps). A
"manscape" I would think is a picture in which the human body is
photographed, but the intention is to emphasize the topology of the body
rather than to create a recognizable likeness of any specific individual.
--
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Louie J. Powell, APSA
Glenville, NY USA
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Maison/7881/
"Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem"
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Philip Hiscock