Digital art
Digital art is an artistic piece or practise that incorporates digital technology as part of the creative or presenting process. Since the 1960s, a variety of terms have been used to characterise the technique, including computer art, multimedia art, and multidisciplinary art. As a subset of new media art, digital artwork is grouped together under the name "digital art."
Even though there was some initial backlash, the impact of digital has changed activities like painting, literature, drawing, sculpture, and music/sound art, while new forms such as net art, digital installation art, and virtual reality have emerged as legitimate artistic practises. In a broader sense, the phrase "digital artist" refers to an artist who creates art via the use of digital technology. Applied broadly, "digital art" refers to modern art that makes use of mass-production techniques or digital technology to achieve its results.
In advertising and filmmaking, the methods of digital art are widely used by the mainstream media, which employs them extensively in commercials and for special effects. It is true that desktop publishing has had an enormous influence on the publishing industry, but this is more connected to visual design than to printing. Both digital and conventional painters get inspiration for their work from a variety of technological sources and applications. As a result of the similarities that exist between visual and musical arts, it is feasible that widespread acceptance of the worth of digital visual art may evolve in a similar manner to the greater acceptance of electronically created music during the previous three decades.
Art created entirely by computer (such as fractals and algorithmic art) or derived from other sources (such as a scanned picture or an image made using vector graphics software with a mouse or a graphics tablet) is referred to as digital artwork. Though technically speaking, digital art can refer to art created using other media or processes and merely scanned in (as in scanography), the term is typically reserved for art that has been non-trivially modified by a computing process (such as a computer programme, microcontroller, or any electronic system capable of interpreting an input to produce an output); digitised text data and raw audio and video recordings are not usually considered digital art in themselves, but can be included as part of a larger work. digitised text If an artwork is made in a similar manner as non-digital paintings, but using software on a computer platform and digitally exporting the finished picture as if it were painted on canvas, the artwork is termed digital painting.