Art Appreciation 1309 - Chapter 1 Vocab

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High Relief

a carved panel where the figures project with a great deal of depth from the background

Style

a characteristic way in which an artist or group of artists uses visual language to give a work an identifiable form of visual expression

Shade

a color darker in value than its purest state

Actual Line

a continuous, uninterrupted line

Temperature

a description of color based on the associations with warmth and coolness

Contrast

a drastic difference between such elements as color or value (lightness/darkness)

Plane

a flat surface

In the Round

a freestanding sculpted work that can be viewed from all sides

Fauves

a group of early twentieth-century French artists whose paintings used vivid colors. From the French fauve, wild beast

Impressionism

a late nineteenth-century painting style conveying the impression of the effects of light

Implied Line

a line not actually drawn but suggested by elements in the work

Line

a mark, or implied mark, between two endpoint

Renaissance

a period of cultural and artistic change in Europe from the fourteenth to the seventeenth century

One-pointperspective

a perspective system with a single vanishing point on the horizon

Three-point perspective

a perspective system with two vanishing points on the horizon and one not on the horizon

Foreshortening

a perspective technique that depicts a form at a very oblique (often dramatic) angle to the viewer in order to show depth in space

Woodcut

a print created from an incised piece of wood

Etching

a printmaking process that relies on acid to bite (or etch) the engraved design into the printing surface

Relief

a raised form on a largely flat background. For example, the design on a coin is "in relief "

Bas-relief

a sculpture carved with very little depth

Positive shape

a shape defined by its surrounding empty space

Fresco

a technique where the artist paints onto freshly applied plaster. From the Italian fresco, fresh

Cubism

a twentieth-century art movement that favored a new perspective emphasizing geometric forms

Mass

a volume that has, or gives the illusion of having, weight, density, and bulk

Conceptual art

a work in which the ideas are often as important as how it is made

Collage

a work of art assembled by gluing materials, often paper, onto a surface. From the French coller, to glue

Highlight

an area of lightest value in a work

Pattern

an arrangement of predictably repeated elements

Surrealist

an artist belonging to the Surrealist movement in the 1920s and later, whose art was inspired by dreams and the subconscious

Negative shape

an empty space given shape by its surround, for example the right-pointing arrow between the E and x in FedEx

Axis

an imaginary line showing the center of a shape, volume, or composition

Form

an object that can be defined in three dimensions (height, width, and depth)

Facade

any side of a building, usually the front or entrance

Abstract

art imagery that departs from recognizable images from the natural world

Neutrals

colors (such as blacks, whites, grays, and dull gray- browns) made by mixing complementary hues

Analogous Colors

colors adjacent to each other on the color wheel

Complementary Colors

colors opposite one another on the color wheel

Two-dimensional

having height and width

Monochromatic

having one or more values of one color

Concentric

identical shapes stacked inside each other sharing the same center, for example the circles of a target

Orthogonals

in perspective systems, imaginary sightlines extending from forms to the vanishing point

Automatic

suppressing conscious control to access subconscious sources of creativity and truth

Elements

the basic vocabulary of art—line, form, shape, volume, mass, color, texture, space, time and motion, and value (lightness/darkness)

Focal Point

the center of interest or activity in a work of art, often drawing the viewer's attention to the most important element

Perspective

the creation of the illusion of depth in a two- dimensional image by using mathematical principles

Space

the distance between identifiable points or planes

Motion

the effect of changing placement in time

Value

the lightness or darkness of a plane or area

Medium (plural media)

the material on or from which an artist chooses to make a work of art, for example canvas and oil paint, marble, engraving, video, or architecture

Color

the optical effect caused when reflected white light of the spectrum is divided into a separate wavelength

Outline

the outermost line of an object or figure, by which it is defined or bounde

Composition

the overall design or organization of a work

Foreground

the part of a work depicted as nearest to the viewer

Background

the part of a work depicted furthest from the viewer's space, often behind the main subject matter

Vanishing Point

the point in a work of art at which imaginary sight lines appear to converge, suggesting depth

Emphasis

the principle of drawing attention to particular content in a work

Palette

the range of colors used by an artist

Rhythm

the regular or ordered repetition of elements in the work

Intensity

the relative clarity of color in its purest raw form, demonstrated through luminous or muted variations

Figure-groundreversal

the reversal of the relationship between one shape (the figure) and its background (the ground), so that the figure becomes background and the ground becomes the figure

Scale

the size of an object or artwork relative to another object or artwork, or to a system of measurement

Volume

the space filled or enclosed by a three-dimensional figure or object

Texture

the surface quality of a work, for example fine/coarse, detailed/lacking in detail

Shape

the two-dimensional area the boundaries of which are defined by lines or suggested by changes in color or value

Hatching

the use of non- overlapping parallel lines to convey darkness or lightness

Cross-hatching

the use of overlapping parallel lines to convey darkness or lightness

Pinciples

the"grammar" applied to the elements of art— contrast, balance, unity, variety, rhythm, emphasis, pattern, scale, proportion, and focal point

Stela (plural stele

upright stone slab decorated with inscriptions or pictorial relief carvings


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