Friday, March 5, 2010

Monochromatic


A color scheme using only one hue with varying degrees of value or intensity.

Pointillism


A system of color mixing (used in painting and drawing) based on the juxtaposition of small bits of pure color. Also called divisionism.

Cool color


A color closer to blue on the color wheel.

Visual color mixing


The optical mixture of small units of color so that the eye perceives the mixture rather than the individual component colors.

Chiaroscuro


The use of light and dark values to imply depth and volume in a two-dimensional work of art.

Wash Drawing


Where dark ink or watercolor are mixed with water to produce shades of gray.

Chromatic


Relating to the hue or saturation of color.

Multiple image


A visual device used to suggest the movement that occurs when a figure is shown in a sequence of slightly overlapping poses in which each successive position suggests movement from the prior position.

Op Art


A static painting that gives the optical illusion of movement.

Blurred outline


A visual device in which most details and the edges of a form are lost in the rapidity of the implied movement.

Amplified perspective


A dynamic and dramatic illusionistic effect created when an object is pointed directly at the viewer.

Horizon line


The farthest point we can see where the delineation between the sky and ground becomes distinct. The line on the picture plane that indicates the extent of illusionistic space and on which are located the vanishing points.

Juxtaposition


When one image or shape is placed next to or in comparison to another image or shape.

Equivocal space


An ambiguous space in which it is hard to distinguish the foreground from the background. Your perception seems to alternate from one to the other.

Medium


The tools or materials used to create an artwork.

Impasto


A painting technique in which pigments are applied in thick layers or strokes to create a rough three-dimensional paint surface on the two-dimensional surface.

Visual texture


A two-dimensional illusion suggestive of a tactile quality.

Pattern


The repetition of a visual element or module in a regular and anticipated sequence.

Rectilinear


Composed of straight lines.

Cubism


An art style that takes natural forms and turns them into geometric planes.

Installation


A mixed-media artwork that generally takes into account the environment in which it is arranged.

Idealism


An artistic theory in which the world is not reproduced as it is, but as it should be. All flaws, accidents, and incongruities of the visual world are corrected.

Impressionism


An artistic style that sought to recreate the artist uses perception of the changing quality of light and color in nature.


Lost-and-found contour


A description of a form in which an object is revealed by distinct contours in some areas while other edges simply vanish or dissolve into the ground.

Cross-hatching


A drawing technique in which a series of lines are layered over each other to build up value and to suggest form and volume.

Staccato


Abrupt changes and dynamic contrast within the visual rhythm.

Progressive rhythm


Repetition of shape that changes in a regular pattern.

Suprematism


An early 1900s experimental form of art in Russia that reflected the interest in the industrial era.

Radial balance


A composition in which all visual elements are balanced around and radiate from a central point.

Bilateral Symmetry


Balance with respect to a vertical axis.

Value


A measure of relative lightness or darkness.

Classical


Suggestive of Greek and Roman ideals of beauty and purity of form, style, or technique.