Fine arts concept The plastic arts are those arts that depict the emotional state of man and embody it in a work that is characterized by beauty and achieves theoretical enjoyment for its viewers, by adapting colors, spaces, lines and other formal advantages of things, and includes within it a very large group of arts such as sculpture, drawing, and photography, in addition to the arts Rich in creativity and formal beauty. [1] A brief history of the fine arts Man knew plastic arts tens of thousands of years ago, where he portrayed the human body with drawings and statues that were characterized by primitiveness and simplicity, and were limited to the external form and some prominent members of the body. All of the palaces, temples, and tombs. Roman paintings were famous in Europe for their realism, as they dealt with the issues of their daily lives, and were characterized by the use of colors and the effects they create. His portrayal of it was descriptively accurate before, and this art became of high value among the arts at that time.
Fine art schools There are many schools of plastic art, the most famous of which are the following: [2] Realism: The pioneers of the realist school took the approach of depicting reality without changing or complimenting, so their work was limited to drawing abstract landscapes. Impressionism: Artists began to shift from an abstract descriptive approach to nature to the use of light and its effects, and Claude Monet was one of the most prominent artists who led this change. Symbolism: Symbolism aimed to preserve the aesthetics of the arts and what it contains of imagination and a dreamy spirit of extinction, after the spread of the values of material civilization after the industrial revolution. Expressionism: This school was based on distorting forms and demonstrating the duality of elements, such as body and soul, spirit and matter, and it appeared in Northern Europe and emerged with Van Gogh's approach to his paintings.