Art Review.... the game!
Rhythm Which Principle of Design is best demonstrated by the following picture:
Guidelines Lines used to assist in perspective drawing (usually leading to a vanishing point)
Cool colours What are the following:
Light What is this area called?
Warm colours Colours containing mostly Red or Yellow
Gesture lines Free-flowing lines that help layout the drawing
Demonstrate Contrapposto A body stance that deals with how weight is distributed while standing. The shifting of weight to one leg while the other bends slightly, the hips are angled opposite to the shoulders.
Pattern The repetition of an Element of Design
Contour lines
Yellow-Green If you add the following colours together what do you get?
Kiln Oven used to heat clay to temperatures as high as 2500º
Forms Cube, Sphere, Prism, Cone
Neutralize To lessen the intensity of a colour by adding small amounts of its complementary colour.
Yellow, Red and Blue Primary Colours
Radial Balance When the weight appears to be circling or moving towards a central point
Colour Definition is... Reflected light
LINE
Blue-Green If you add the following colours together what do you get?
Square, triangle, circle, rectangle Shapes
Coil To roll clay into a tube-like form
Symmetrical Balance When the weight is evenly distributed on both sides of the artwork
yellow-green, yellow-orange, red-orange, red-purple, blue-purple, blue-green Tertiary Colours
Transparent Light can penatrate and you can sometime see throught it
Cast shadow What is this area called?
Achromatic To paint using different tints and tones of a neutral
To Fire To bake in a kiln/ drying by heating
white, gray, black, and brown Neutrals
Orange If you add the following colours together what do you get?
Horizon Line The line where the sky and land appeared to meet.
Frontalism Egyptian body position ( Heads-profile, Eye- frontal, Shoulders- frontal, Arms- both arms and legs shown- usually stretched out- profile with two left feet)
Core shadow What is this area called?
Painterly Lines Line is created by putting two colour beside each other
Score To rough up clay surface in order to join two piece of clay
Red-Purple If you add the following colours together what do you get?
Asymetrical balance When the weight is unevenly distributed on both side of the artwork.
Tertiary Colours These colours are made by mixing a primary with a neighboring secondary on the colour wheel.
Negative space Is the following image created with positive or negative space?
Analogous Colours Colours beside each other on the colour wheel
Cool colours Colours containing mostly blue
Shape
Contrast Differences in an artwork
Purple If you add the following colours together what do you get?
Warm colours What are the following:
Opaque When no light can penatrate
Slab A piece cut out of flattened clay (like a cookie cutter)
Light source What is this area called?
Value This term refers to the lightness or darkness of a colour
Green If you add the following colours together what do you get?
Rhythm The repetition of an Element of Design to create movement
Space The area around, between and through objects in an artwork
Positive space Is the following image created with positive or negative space?
Texture The feel of a surface
Green, Purple, and Orange Secondary Colours
Tint To lighten a colour using white or water
Balance The weighting of objects in an artwork
Linear Lines
Shadow What is this area called?
Movement The direction your eye travels through an artwork
Secondary Colours These colours are made by mixing two primary colours together
Monochromatic To paint using different tints and tones of one colour
Emphasis The area your eye is draw to in a work of art (AKA the focal point)
Primary Colours These colours can not be made by mixing any colour combination together
Yellow-orange If you add the following colours together what do you get?
Clay A natural material used in pottery
Pattern Which Principle of Design is best demonstrated by the following picture:
Pinch pot In clay, a Cup-shape, created by pushing thumb in ball of clay and pulling up on side with fingers while rotating the clay in your hands
Complementary colours Colours opposite each other on the colour wheel
Slip Clay/ water mixture of mud consistency used to join two pieces of clay and to smooth over clay surface
Unity Similarities in an artwork
Perspective the method of creating the illusion of depth on a two- dimensional surface.
Neutrals These are not colours because they do not appear on the colour wheel
Reflected light What is this area called?
Vanishing Point The point on the horizon line where parallel horizontal lines appear to meet as the go further into the distance.
Sculpture A 3-dimensional work of art.
Fresco Painting on a wall with or onto wet plaster
Form 3D Shape
Highlight What is this area called?
Tone To darken a colour by adding black