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"incised" Definitions
  1. cut into: the incised material.
  2. made by cutting: an incised pattern.
  3. Medicine/Medical
  4. made or cut cleanly, as if surgically; not ragged: an incised wound.
  5. (of a leaf) sharply, deeply, and somewhat irregularly notched.

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"incised" Antonyms

115 Sentences With "incised"

How to use incised in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "incised" and check conjugation/comparative form for "incised". Mastering all the usages of "incised" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In particular, she focused on the deeply incised contours of his work.
Also, oddly or fittingly, the Lehman Brothers logo had yet to be successfully incised.
The word "Osiris" has been incised in one plaque; the word "Osiers" in the other.
Elsewhere, Olga Moriyama presents her ceramic plates that appear incised with a language composed of squares.
The original roofline will be visible, however, a ghost incised in the pattern of the facade.
With incised, gilded backgrounds, the cards are small, romantic versions of the period's religious, gold-ground paintings.
Incised in the stone is Hawking's most famous equation describing the entropy of a black hole. pic.twitter.
On Thursday, medical examiner Richard Atkinson testified Bolanos had sustained 24 incised and sharp-force stab wounds.
He carved a pear-wood sarcophagus, incised with Degas-vintage ballerinas and laughing faces borrowed from Japanese netsuke.
But with a few lightly incised tweaks a resourceful artist has conjured an icon of procreative female power.
The second section – with its incised surface — is divided into irregular geometric shapes, each identified by a different color.
This is the effect of seeing the thousands of names, incised in bronze rows, five deep, encircling the fountains.
Their pale fluctuating grids are made from incised wallboard whose tiny squares have been stained different shades of gray.
In such work, Fontana was elaborating on the sculpture-painting hybrid he'd first proposed in "Incised Panel" in 1931.
They are incised in various sizes: the largest stretch nearly five feet in length and the smallest, about four inches.
For him, drawing and painting are ways of caressing the body, a sensuality embodied in waxy surfaces and incised lines.
In four etchings, all measuring 8 by 10 inches, Pousette-Dart incised an oval inside a welter of abstract marks.
The result, "Also Blooming," has never been published and exists only in the words incised into the pietra serena stone.
The stone in front of the entrance is a large oval that has been carefully incised with carved connecting spirals.
He showed me mural depictions of a bird, a plant, a herd of sheep, all incised in the plaster walls.
Ears flat, teeth bared and flanks incised with riblike arcs, the animal projects a tense ferocity far exceeding its size.
Although the forms are the same, the one on the left is embossed and the one on the right is incised.
These are incised with portraits, two of which are identified as "Rene (Ricard)" and "Susan Rothenberg," while the third is untitled.
The word ostracism comes from the ostrakon or potsherd (the equivalent of scrap paper) on which a candidate's name was incised.
Pretty, striking and, when read with the hot pink headline incised above it — "The Sun Sets on Britain" — a different picture altogether.
The living room fireplace is finished in Venetian plaster incised with an Art Deco-inspired pattern and gold lines by Callidus Guild.
They have been shaped so that a number of knobs protrude from the surface and some have beautiful, intricate patterns incised onto them.
On the ground, the knotweed and incised fumewort "are so prolific and can carpet an area," Helen Forgione, the conservancy's senior ecologist, said.
If the first clay tablet incised with a stylus recorded grain deliveries, the second tablet undoubtedly spun the numbers to the reigning king's advantage.
The sale's top lot, an important imperial cinnabar lacquer "Dragon" box and cover incised mark and period of Yongle, sold for 7,080,000 HKD (~$906,000).
Their recessed interiors, though, are lined with sheets of reflective aluminum that meet at sharp 2574-degree angles and are incised with horizontal lines.
On the sidelines, future participants wait their turn: a jack-o-lantern, a washed-up stingray, a tile incised with an off-kilter grid.
His salt dough sculptures sit a table in the center of the room — they look like irregularly shaped cuneiform tablets incised with various marks.
In his versions — rendered on board in oils and enamels — the labels have been faithfully reproduced and the well-worn grooves painstakingly incised by hand.
Another 1931 piece, "Incised Panel," is little more than a block of plaster painted with a dark soft-edged square and marked with scratched lines.
Ms. Charlop-Powers, the executive director of a Manhattan-based nonprofit called the Natural Areas Conservancy, knows their names: Japanese knotweed and incised fumewort, among others.
A long black dress from 1999 by Olivier Theyskens, its bodice incised with a cruciform gap, stands between painted limestone statues of Saints Margaret and Petronilla.
Of all the successes among heritage brands, few have exceeded that of the traditional boat shoe with white soles incised in a pattern of chevron grooves.
But graffiti also has a wider use among scholars that encompasses inscriptions in a variety of media — incised, painted, written in chalk or charcoal, and more.
Also, you see cross patterns incised into the soil with small stones arranged on them, they and the shallow pits perhaps referencing the games Morabaraba and Diketo.
Incised symbols became multivalent: In the large, scarlet-red "Cardinal Points," a cross served equally as a Native American directional sign, the Morning Star and a Christian emblem.
The board, which looks like a quadrilateral that has had a crescent shape incised on two sides, is all planar white surface behind which hides a human figure.
Each hole is surrounded by tiny, reflective copper nails that seem to glow as radial lines, incised in the copper, stretch outward across the surface with its variegated colors.
"Sharp force injuries" are those caused by pointed or sharp-edged objects, such as in stab wounds, incised wounds and chop wounds, according to the medical news site Medscape.
R." appear not only on the metal plaque atop the DNA strand, but also incised into the surface of the paint; there is no second occurrence, however, of "A.
Incised vertical lines are visible along the left edges of the minarets in the photograph — likely (as pointed out by the museum label) guidelines for the production of a print.
I incised the dura with a number 11, a scalpel that has a long handle with triangular tip, one side of which is the sharpest surgical steel on the market.
And six years later, Michael Heizer created one of his first earth works here, a zigzag trench incised like an abstract painting into the surface of a dry lake bed.
Some of Mr. Vo's works came to him already altered, like a 14th-century steel sword used in the Crusades, incised with Christian and Muslim symbols as its owners changed.
The sale's top lot, a rare and finely-cast gilt-bronze seated figure of Avalokiteshvara, Xuande six-character incised mark and of the period (1426–1435), sold for £1,928,33 (~$2,537,000).
The gallery's most covetable works are surely the lightweight pendants and brooches of Louise Nevelson, made from scraps of incised wood that she painted black and slathered unevenly with gold.
The incised lines in the sculptures have an unexpected source too: They're based on the written form of Ogham, an ancient Celtic language dating at least to the first century.
Five months ago, she became one of the first people in the world to have a piece of tissue incised from the cavity of her abdomen and turned into a vagina.
Unlike the sleek form of "Boy With Frog," her skin is marked with incised lines, and she has Smith's trademark awkward proportions, expressing a tender vulnerability that's lacking in Ray's work.
"The game was a jewel, a perfect world incised in a mere [4KB] of code," Nick Montfort wrote in 2001 in Supercade: A Visual History of the Videogame Age, 1971-1984.
A majestically uncanny scene of four smiling men is done on sandpaper: Dubuffet painted the figures in white, then incised their big eyes and buck teeth with an unknown sharp object.
At the stern, a seated figure, whose head is a globe delicately incised with images from an early Renaissance celestial map, impedes the boat's progress by dragging an anchor behind him.
The fine-grained river mud was rolled and patted into shape, sliced, lifted to the eye and, in dazzling sunlight of a scribal courtyard, under supervision, the cuneiform figures were incised.
The medical examiner's office determined the boy's delayed death resulted from "asphyxia due to obstruction of airway by laryngeal granuloma complicating incised wound of neck," and that it was a homicide.
Scary videos of pregnant women (the most vulnerable!) with needles poking into their bellies are intermingled with revolting images of fatty, pulsating bodily tissues pierced by scalpels or incised by surgical devices.
His efforts to forge a unique abstract language out of both European and African influences began in the early 1970s, with painted wood discs whose rims were incised with his own idiosyncratic glyphs.
The practice of carving a design into a hard material with a hand-held tool dates from the ancient Mesopotamians, who incised intricate motifs into cylindrical stone seals more than 5,000 years ago.
The first peaked in the mid-nineteen-sixties, when she was living in New York, with the public success of the grid pictures—typically, uniform rectangles pencilled or incised on painted square canvases.
Archaeologists rejected these ideas as fantasies for a long time, interpreting the orientation of the passages at Newgrange and Knowth as coincidental and the incised stones as a set of meaningless geometric designs.
The leg bone fragment is incised with nine parallel, nearly identical notches, which look far too regular to be the incidental result of butchery with stone tools or an early attempt at artful decoration.
In the orange-dominated, square landscape, "Somewhere" (2018) and the black-dominated, horizontal landscape, "Figure in a Night Landscape" (2017), the monochromatic brushstrokes against a contrasting ground are comparable to the incised surface of lacquerware.
Intaglio printing, in which a plate is incised with an image, covered in ink and pressed onto paper, soon consumed Mr. Reddy's energies and became the art form for which he is now best known.
With its spherical shape and surface of broad, undulant bands and incised patterns, a Caddoan clay bottle found in Texas (from around 1500) recalls some very early Chinese pottery on view elsewhere in the Met.
Painted surfaces, reminiscent of Guyana's exuberant festivals, are incised with intricate abstract geometric designs inspired by Peruvian Nazca earth drawings and ancient Native American Timehri carvings, indigenous to Guyana, that Mr. Lyght studied as a student.
All the young swans in the country were once upped each summer, the last joint of one wing cut away to render them flightless, and patterns incised in their bills or webbed feet to establish ownership.
In the three 19th-century crests, the brows are carefully incised with rolling waves, in the case of the Menil's example; interlocking diamonds in the Smithsonian's; and a modified checkerboard pattern in the privately owned specimen.
Read: Colossal statue of pharaoh brought to life in 3D images Human bone daggers often had elaborate designs and patterns incised on the daggers to project a feeling of "power and menace" and instill fear, added Roscoe.
The 120 drawings, incised on three walls to form a mural that stretches 82 feet in length, were likely created as part of a significant funerary boat burial — an ancient Egyptian ritual dating to the Early Dynastic Period.
It is also the only one that brought to mind another artist, namely Joan Miró, with its washes of sky blue interrupted by an off-center orb made from white sgraffito lines incised into a dark, nebulous circle.
In intaglio, the image to be printed is incised into a plate to which ink is added,with the plate then wiped clean so that only the ink that has fallen into the incisions will transfer to paper.
Much of the power of these works to evoke Buddha's devotion to his legendary cause stems from the artists' use of deeply incised lines — a characteristic of Gandharan art that resulted from a cultural dialogue between East and West.
Twenty-four years after her book was published, at the March on Washington of August 21968th 1963, Martin Luther King looked out from the Lincoln Memorial over a sea of oppressed people (the date is incised on the memorial's marble steps).
In France, for example, wine is taxed at 3.77 euros per HL, while rum is taxed at 1737.56 euros per HL. "This will be catastrophic to our sector," the incised president of the CSPBA said at a recent press conference.
That creative fertility is reflected in this absorbing and illuminating exhibition of about 250 objects ranging from intricately incised and silver-inlaid brass ewers and basins to scientific devices like an astrolabe and cantaloupe-size globe that shines like gold.
That creative fertility is reflected in this absorbing and illuminating exhibition of about 2123 objects ranging from intricately incised and silver-inlaid brass ewers and basins to scientific devices like an astrolabe and cantaloupe-size globe that shines like gold.
That creative fertility is reflected in this absorbing and illuminating exhibition of about 21 objects ranging from intricately incised and silver-inlaid brass ewers and basins to scientific devices like an astrolabe and cantaloupe-size globe that shines like gold.
That creative fertility is reflected in this absorbing and illuminating exhibition of about 22000 objects ranging from intricately incised and silver-inlaid brass ewers and basins to scientific devices like an astrolabe and cantaloupe-size globe that shines like gold.
He also incised a drawing of a ladder, and outlined other simple shapes, including a window, a cross and two human silhouettes; painted most of the surface maroon; and scraped away some of that surface again to reveal the dingy gray color underneath.
They include intricately incised and silver-inlaid brass ewers, basins and dishes; animal-shaped incense burners; ornate candlesticks and lamp stands; gold rings and coins; illuminated copies of the Quran; architectural fragments and grave markers carved in geometric patterns; and garments of finely woven cloth.
A gorgeous brass ewer with a tall spout rising from a fluted, round-bottomed gallon-size container made in Khurasan circa 1180–1210 is wonderfully decorated with signs of the zodiac and mythic creatures entangled with an elaborate tracery of incised and silver-inlaid bands.
They only consist of incised logos on almost worthless books — no narrative or explanation of what the towns people did when their bank collapsed, no sense of the loss incurred when the institution that held their mortgages, cashed their checks, held their savings, vanished.
Still, Ms. Holzer's way with language, morality and history — alternately poetic and withering, and expressed in incised stone benches or on silk-screen paintings of redacted government documents concerning the dark side of recent wars — has a renewed and tragic force in the current political climate.
Lewis, delicately and with a staggering degree of detail, makes cuts into the underlying image of a nude black male body in "Uninhibited Movements" to create a landscape that is tattooed with patterns like waves, a flock of birds wheeling in the night sky, or tribal beadwork incised into the skin.
Whether covering large pieces of Italian travertine with incised circles and tiny pyramids, fixing a small red sail to a flat chunk of limestone or titling a tabletop-size pillar of dark gray stone "Self-Portrait," Fonseca made his work live by putting it almost entirely in the power of the viewer's imagination.
Especially impressive are several objects from the artists of different Pacific Northwest groups, among them a magnificent Tsimshian wood war club (around 1800-30), dense with incised patterns and images; a Tlingit basket (around 1850), ringed in striking geometries; and a nearly life-size Kwakwaka'wakw Potlatch figure (around 1880-95) in carved and painted wood.
GALLERIES Several angular pots by Wada Morihiro (1944-2008), one of the three major 20th-century Japanese ceramic artists to which her current show is dedicated, are on compact but extraordinary display at Joan B. Mirviss, incised with complex patterns and painted in a striking combination of black, white and red slip accented with green glaze.
Rather, it seeps into our experience, from seeing where the man is located within the composition, to noticing how the photograph crops the one-story building's roof into a triangle wedged into the upper left corner, to noticing the different grays of the sidewalk's incised slabs, to realizing that the man has not jumped, but has seemingly fallen asleep.
The installation acts as a synopsis for what is to come; Giacometti appears not to have progressed from one style and medium to another in a conventionally linear fashion, but produced at any one time naturalistic (though lightly stylized) portraits in the round as well as deliberately primitivist pieces, their features incised crudely into flattened surfaces.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 223th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 18th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths, and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 18th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 27710th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths, and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 2215th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 599th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 2023th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 215555th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 57013th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 1283th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 24963th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 2027th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 219400th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 2129th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 2128th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 21212th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
These massive wooden crests — in the form of stylized human faces with vast vertical brows — served as markers of royal power among the Bamileke peoples of the Cameroonian grasslands, and the Met's recent acquisition of an 21202th-century specimen is joined here by three later examples, each featuring sharply protruding cheeks, broadly smiling mouths and brows incised with involute geometric patterns.
Daniel Knorr, for a project at last year's Documenta, embedded within pages of blank volumes all sorts of trash (a plastic doll leg, in this case); Tara O'Brien has made books whose pages are Plexiglas vases, filled with soil and buckram grass; Guy Laramée has incised three codices of an art history text to leave a topographic wasteland, as if culture itself had been eroded.
And that is saying a lot when you are talking about topcoats with lapels of multicolor mink in a sprightly tile pattern, sleeveless dusters worn over leopard-stenciled bombers, fur shower shoes incised with the Fendi logo, sable neck pillows to wear on the Gulfstream G650, and overcoats of fur and rubber bonded so they can be worn either right-side or inside-out.
The title is carefully incised into the paint in the upper left corner, while the red hole at the top of the crushed can refers to the poet's head wound, which he got in World War I. There are abstract paintings by the African-American artists Norman Lewis, Hale Woodruff, and Ed Clark, which tell us that the legacy of the 1960s is one of exclusion.
But the radically different architectural space of their condo has offered an invigorating opportunity to re-envision the mix in Brooklyn, which now includes paintings by Lynette Yiadom-Boakye and Nicole Eisenman, videos by William Kentridge and Marilyn Minter, a figurative sculpture by Sanford Biggers and a Takashi Murakami silver tondo (a circular work) incised with a skull motif — hung on the ceiling and reflecting the river outside.
Art Review The best place to start at the Noguchi Museum's modest but tightly packed retrospective of the whimsically literary Uruguayan-American sculptor Gonzalo Fonseca, is with his 1961 painting "Facade II." For that piece, Fonseca, who arrived in New York in 1958 after dropping out of an architecture program in Montevideo, made a small wooden frame filled with cement and divided the piece with incised lines into seven irregular vertical stripes.

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