I consider digital art to be any image that has been processed through a digital editing program. I do not consider digital photography to be automatically digital art if the changes are nothing more than trimming, enlarging or shrinking - which are just appropriate activities for the media that extend what was done with film.
Digital art starts with some image - including a blank page - and extends the image with uniquely digital changes.
Although it is not well developed yet, computer generated 3D is definately digital art, showing us insides of solid things like skulls and now we can create 3D objects and "print" them in plastic and metal.
2007-12-17 14:31:31
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answer #1
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answered by Mike1942f 7
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Any image that can be broken down into pixels can be considered "digital" in the sense that a digit is a zero or a one in computer technology. Some patterns for cross stitch or for knitting or for filet crochet or for a very old embroidery technique on square net called "lacis" are digital too, even if they existed before the invention of computers. The squares are either black or white, either empty or filled, so the idea of making images from squares goes a long way back, to the 14th century I think, and technically they ARE digital.
2007-12-17 12:56:32
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answer #2
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answered by Kamo 3
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anything that's taken from a digital camera and printed
but according to wikipedia...........
Digital art
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lips, Sandro Bocola, a combination of digital video and Adobe Photoshop. Published by The xartcollection.
Computer-generated image created by Gilles Tran using POV-Ray 3.6. The glasses, ashtray, and pitcher were modeled with Rhino and the dice with Cinema 4D.
"Fallen". Combining photography, digital alteration and scanography, Jason Beam melds a variety of techniques that cannot be achieved in traditional darkroom settings and creates a piece that lies somewhere between a photo manipulation and digital illustration.
"Flower in the Sand" created by Johnathan J. Stegeman, using Adobe Photoshop on an original photograph. This image is an example of photo manipulation.
"The Woman of Rock" (section) created by Andrew West using Adobe Photoshop. This image is an example of digital painting.
"Participate in Evolution" created by artist group Keep Adding using Adobe Photoshop. Combining photography, digital alteration and painting techniques that are similar to real world painting, this body of work is created in a similar fashion to non-digital paintings.
"Arise Arise" (section) created by Jennifer Kathleen Phillips using the Adobe Photoshop tools and Terragen for the distant mountains and sky. Music generating software (Corel Draw, Noteworthy Composer, Band in a Box) has been used to create the music images, which have been warped in Photoshop. At least 58 layers and a custom brush was created for the hair
A computer-generated mountain
Computer-generated glowing fossilDigital art most commonly refers to art created on a computer in digital form. Digital art can be purely computer-generated, such as fractals, or taken from another source, such as a scanned photograph, or an image drawn using vector graphics software using a mouse or graphics tablet. Though technically the term may be applied to art done using other media or processes and merely scanned in, it is usually reserved for art that has been non-trivially modified by a computing process (such as a computer program, microcontroller or any electronic system capable of interpreting an input to create an output); digitized text data and raw audio and video recordings are not usually considered digital art in themselves, but can be part of a larger project. In an expanded sense, "digital art" is a term applied to contemporary art that uses the methods of mass production or media.
2007-12-17 12:17:33
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answer #3
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answered by artsy0606 3
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anything that has to do with abstract mixes?,
2007-12-17 17:58:47
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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