Sculpture

A sculpture was a three-dimensional work of art, as opposed to a painting or film, which were exhibited on two-dimensional surfaces.

Block transfer sculptures were a kind of sculpture based on Block Transfer Computation. Their creation required great concentration and awareness of quantum foam harmonics. (COMIC: The Arts in Space)

Irving Braxiatel planned to purchase a sculpture by Seraphina, but Romana II bought it first. (AUDIO: The Inquiry)

Julia Fetch admired octopuses, and collected glass sculptures of them. (PROSE: The Drosten's Curse)

In 1941, the Eighth Doctor encountered an artist named Susini who was making sculptures from the flesh and bones of the dead. (COMIC: The Way of All Flesh)

A member of LINDA, Bliss created sculptures representing the Doctor, at least one of which she presented to her fellow LINDA members some time following the Sycorax invasion of Earth. (TV: Love & Monsters) "What I'm trying to do is sum up the Doctor. What he means to us. Who he is, and what he's not. What he could represent and what he should represent, and what he never won't represent, sort of thing."

- Bliss.

The Ashley ab Hugh Museum housed a number of abstract sculptures, including some depicting human figures which appeared to be melting. (PROSE: The Beauty of Our Weapons)

The Tenth Doctor saw ancient sculptures and vases under the surface of Krop Tor. (TV: The Impossible Planet)

In 3110, the Eleventh Doctor gave the Arucha a sculpture by Venusian artist Radico Harstel, and called it The Physical Impossibility of Getting a Shanghorn into a Glass Tank. (PROSE: The War of Art)