Sentence examples for recognizable likeness from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

The bust was a clearly recognizable likeness, but every feature was subtly wrong, as though the iron fingers of posterity had corrected the clay.

When they swept the whiskers across a clay Chia Pet head and fed data from the gauges into their model, it recreated a recognizable likeness of the Chia's face.

Similar(58)

"The Renaissance Portrait From Donatello to Bellini," which starts Wednesday, explores how artists working in Florence, Venice and the Italian courts began to produce recognizable likenesses and expressions of personality in portraying the people around them.

The statesman, plutocrats and artists arrayed under the vast, shallow dome of the grand rotunda that follows are all immediately recognizable, although some of the likenesses are, for reasons impossible to define, a little off.

While not the best section of the exhibition, it includes an interesting portrait by Chuck Close of his mother-in-law, "Fanny," from 1984, done in his recognizable mug-shot photorealism — except that the likeness was made by the artist pressing his fingerprints onto the surface like analog pixels.

The next year, the Yankees chose a likeness of Lou Gehrig, the first time a recognizable player was included.

Aside from being a big birthday for Cook, it was also a landmark day for one of the world's most recognizable brand icons, the Gerber Baby, who was sketched off of her likeness.

Perhaps the description is a bit overstated: Artists aren't being hauled into court every time they include a recognizable face in their work, but the growing sense that one's likeness is a "property" that can be commercially exploited has led many artists to feel less secure in pursuing realistic figurative images.

Instead of the camouflage design recognizable from the backs of the Iraqi edition, the new cards feature a blue-on-white likeness of President Bush, set against a backdrop of small "W s, missiles, pretzels, and oil rigs.

In colloquial terms, "uncanny" usually means an extremely close likeness, but Sigmund Freud defined the uncanny as something weirdly and nearly familiar not wholly recognizable.

Reasons for verification include being a highly recognizable public figure (musicians, actors, athletes, artists, public officials, public or government agencies, etc)., or if your name and likeness is parodied or impersonated on multiple Twitter accounts, leading to identity confusion.[1].

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