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Sketch

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sketch

1. a rapid drawing or painting, often a study for subsequent elaboration
2. a brief usually descriptive and informal essay or other literary composition
3. a short play, often comic, forming part of a revue
4. a short evocative piece of instrumental music, esp for piano
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

sketch

A rough drawing that represents the main features of a plan or building; used as a preliminary study. See also: Design drawing
Illustrated Dictionary of Architecture Copyright © 2012, 2002, 1998 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Sketch

 

a quickly executed drawing, usually in pencil, which captures the major and most characteristic features of a landscape or which provides the general plan of an architectural structure, painting, sculpture, or graphic work.


Sketch

 

in the plastic arts, a small drawing, painting, or sculpture cursorily and rapidly executed by the artist. The main purpose of a sketch is to quickly record the observations and ideas that arise as the artist works. A sketch can be made without a model from memory or the imagination. A sketch working out a composition conceived by the artist is similar to a study.


Sketch

 

in the 19th and early 20th centuries, a short play with two and occasionally three characters. The sketch was most widely performed on the variety stage. Sketches were written by J. Barrie, B. Shaw, and J. B. Priestley (Great Britain), W. Saroyan and J. Thurber (USA), G. Courteline (France), and A. T. Averchenko and the young A. P. Chekhov (Russia). Writers of sketches during the Soviet period included V. E. Ardov, A. S. Bukhov, G. I. Gorin, A. M. Arkhanov, M. M. Zhvanetskii, la. A. Kostiukovskii, V. Z. Mass, and V. S. Poliakov.

REFERENCE

Ardov, V. E. Razgovornye zhanry estrady i tsirka. Moscow, 1968.

Sketch

 

a preliminary drawing that sets forth the main idea of an entire work of art or an individual part, including the composition, spatial planes, and color scheme of the future work. Sketches may be drawn for works of graphic art, paintings, or sculptures. They are usually distinguished by a free, fluent style but may be quite detailed.

Sketches by major artists possess artistic value and may be considered complete works in themselves.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Commentators have varied in their identification of the sex of these two figures, because, as Clark Hulse pointed out, they are "so sketchily drawn that it is difficult to tell who they are and what they are doing."(36) Hulse was convinced that the one with his back against the tree was male, but he thought that the other figure might be male or female because it was "more fully coiffed."(37) I agree that the figure against the tree is male, and I would add that the sketchiness of the man makes it impossible to determine his age, whether he is young, middle-aged, or old.
Metre is treated rather sketchily. The basic rules are explained on pp.
It may be the author or his publishers who are primarily at fault here, but some technical parts of the exposition are too sketchily presented.
Ellington's serene, aristocratic image was part bluff: like many creatures of show business, he was superstitious and sketchily educated.
Helms' scheme calls for USAID's 50 missions abroad to be closed, and its programs to be taken over by a sketchily defined International Development Foundation, which would hand out grants to nongovernmental organizations and volunteer groups.
Though of unequal merit, these sketchily plotted vignettes of village life sympathetically explore a simple, primitive world in language so natural as to seem artless.
An anthology of horror stories is available about men and women wrongly or sketchily represented by court-appointed lawyers who if they were car mechanics couldn't fix flats or change the oil:
What took place and why can only be sketchily reconstructed.
However, the impact of Paul's measures on society is rather sketchily treated, and since McGrew was unable to gain access to Russian archives, the definifive history of the reign remains to be written.
For years I have observed objects that standard deep-sky references for amateurs describe sketchily, incorrectly, or not at all.
The last chapter, "Entering the World," deals sketchily with the noble's first days at court, and not at all with the court's operation as experienced by a newcomer or with the tactics needed to succeed at court on which there is ample evidence, for example, the memoirs of Beauvais-Nangis.
If you notice that the brochure advertises program location and extracurricular activities but mentions program content only sketchily, at best, be suspicious.
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