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If that's the case, it's a language barrier thing. The equivalent to "plastic art" in my native language excludes paintings.
Fair enough!
English and french seems to include it.
What's the language? Maybe it's more literal and fr/en has some historical etymology...
In German, it's "plastische Kunst". The adjective "plastisch" basically means "three dimensional", as in "not flat".
Plastische Chirurgie is plastic surgery - it's not primarily putting "plastic" into bodies ;) but sculpting a three dimensional form.
Interesting, in french, latin, greek before that, it seems it's about plasticity, the possibility to modulate materials.
Stumbled onto wilipedia and Kant coining the modern expression, with, if I understood it correctly, painting in the definition. Guess it didn't stick in his homeland :-)