Arts & Humanities – Flashcards

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
_____________ is a skill and imagination used to create or produce aesthetic objects
answer
Art
question
Which of the following purposes of art is met by a Baroque composer writing a requiem mass?
answer
Illuminating the spiritual
question
Which of the following functions of art is best reflected in an anti-war protest song?
answer
Political and social commentary
question
Artists often employ _______________to achieve the effect of three-dimensions on flat surfaces.
answer
shading and perspective
question
The use of the same visual element several times in a work of art is called:
answer
repetition.
question
The strength, or purity of a color is its:
answer
intensity
question
_______________ is the meaning of the work of art.
answer
Content
question
A natural and comforting arrangement of visual elements is called:
answer
harmony
question
Which of the following purposes of art is most clearly reflected in a documentary on the NASA space shuttle program?
answer
Representing the world
question
The uneven distribution of elements throughout an artwork is:
answer
asymmetry
question
______________ is a work of art from a specific historical time or place.
answer
Artifact
question
A sense or feeling of depth, either actual or implied, is called _____________.
answer
space
question
_________________ is when artwork creates a sense of motion through line, form, and juxtaposition
answer
Dynamics
question
______________has the properties of direction, width and length. The path of a moving point through space
answer
Line
question
The surface quality of materials, either actual or implied, is called:
answer
texture
question
An artist's use of color is sometimes called _____________.
answer
palette
question
In two-dimensional art, texture is ______________.
answer
Figurative
question
_______________ makes a work of art feel cohesive and finished, with all the elements looking as though they belong together
answer
Unity
question
Which of the following functions of art is reflected in a museum collection of 19th century Wedgewood china?
answer
Historical artifact
question
____________ is the process of making works of art by transferring an inked image to another surface (usually paper).
answer
Printmaking
question
In ________________, an image is printed by forcing ink through a stencil (image) on a screen stretched with a fine silk or similar fabric; also called silk-screening or screen-printing. This method of printmaking allows printers to make large areas of uniform color in their printed designs.
answer
serigraphy
question
In __________________, an image is printed by leaving the image surface raised, with remaining areas cut away, as with woodcut or linoleum cut printing.
answer
Relief printing
question
In _____________ , an image is printed using the antipathy of oil and water; a flat surface with a design area (image) that is ink-receptive is printed and the non-printed area is ink-repellent.
answer
lithography
question
In ____________, an image is printed from a recessed design. An incising or etching technique may be used to create the design on the surface of the plate to be pressed against paper.
answer
intaglio
question
__________ is the thick application of paint creating a textured surface on the canvas
answer
Impasto
question
______________ involves burning an image onto metal with acid, which allows for creating intaglio with precise lines.
answer
Etching
question
_____________ is a method of etching (intaglio) that imitates the broad tints of a water color.
answer
Aquatint
question
_______________ is any method of producing an image by using the action of light on a light-sensitive medium such as a film or a sensor.
answer
Photography
question
named after its French inventor Louis Daguerre, an early (1839) photographic process where an image is made directly onto a light-sensitive silver-coated metallic plate, without using a negative
answer
Daguerreotype photography
question
This American photographer was a leading advocate of Pictorialism.
answer
Alfred Stieglitz
question
Is this true or false? Drawing is confined to the use of dry media.
answer
False
question
Serigraphy is also known as ____________.
answer
screenprinting
question
Photography as a visual art requires the photographer to:
answer
design an image compose an image execute an image
question
A water-based paint that uses egg, glue, or casein as a binder is called:
answer
tempera
question
the ordered recurrence or repetition of elements
answer
Rhythm
question
One advantage of this media for painting is that it does not yellow with age.
answer
acrylic paint
question
This technique creates the illusion of depth through gradations of light and shade.
answer
Chiaroscuro
question
Straight or pure photography was advocated by these photographers.
answer
Group f/64
question
In drawing, using dots for tone, texture, and shading is called __________.
answer
Stippling
question
Two-dimensional art that is so naturalistic that it appears to have depth and distance has been dubbed by the French ________________.
answer
Trompe l'oeil
question
The printmaking technique of ___________ prints an image from a recessed design incised or etched into the surface of a plate.
answer
Intaglio
question
____________ is the size, shape, and volume of forms, occupies a more prominent place in three-dimensional art. T
answer
Mass
question
Is the least likely factor for a three-dimensional artwork having greater impact on the viewer than that of a two-dimensional work of art.
answer
The use of perspective
question
The three-dimensional _____________ is typically the most prominent line.
answer
artwork's silhouette
question
______________ can be defined as a three-dimensional work of art.
answer
Sculpture
question
_____________ A sculpture employing three-dimensions and meant to be viewed from any and all angles.
answer
Full round sculpture
question
_____________ A sculpture employing three dimensions, raised from or attached to a background and meant to be seen from one side. Mount Rushmore is an example.
answer
Relief sculpture
question
_____________ A sculpture, such as a mobile, in which the artist employs flat and elongated (almost two-dimensional) materials. Example: Vertical foliage, Alexander Calder, 1941
answer
Linear sculpture
question
_________ is a representation of a person, animal, or event, often for celebratory or monumental purposes. Example: Felix de Welden's U.S. Marine Corps War Memorial (Iwo Jima Memorial) at Arlington National Cemetery
answer
Statue
question
__________ is a significant person on horseback. Example: Rudolf Siemering's The Washington Monument in Philadelphia
answer
Equestrian sculpture
question
A _______________ is a representation of a man or woman from the chest up. Example: Bust of Emperor Tiberius
answer
Bust
question
A __________________ is a sculpture that features moving water. Example: Carl Milles Triton in Stockholm, Sweden
answer
Fountain
question
A _______________ is a type of kinetic sculpture in which parts move, often by air currents. Example: Vertical foliage, Alexander Calder, 1941
answer
Mobile
question
A ______________ is a type of sculpture which emphasizes the substances or materials from which it is made. Example: Maria Magdalena carved from precious gemstones.
answer
Glyptic
question
An ______________ is a sculpture designed to make a statement and then cease to exist. Example: Christo and Jeanne-Claude's Wrapped Coast, One Million Square Feet, Little Bay, Australia (1968-69).
answer
Ephemeral sculpture
question
______________ is when the sculptor molds or casts an artwork.
answer
Substitution
question
In _______________ sculpture, the image is carved into the stone or material.
answer
sunken relief
question
This type of sculpture is transitory, designed to make a statement.
answer
Ephemeral
question
________________ is the science and art of designing buildings, environments, and other structures.
answer
Architecture
question
Architects consider a variety of ______________ in creating successful structures.
answer
elements
question
First and foremost, buildings need to withstand the external environment (wind, snow, rain, etc.) and they must be structurally sound (which is where engineering is required)
answer
Technical element
question
Function represents the practical uses of the building and how that is reflected in its form.
answer
Functional element
question
Architecture works with space.
answer
Use of space element
question
What kind of artistic statement is the architect making?
answer
Artistic element
question
An architectural style that emerged in the 1930s which stressed function and, with the use of new materials, designed buildings to have outside walls of materials such as glass, instead of large heavy walls.
answer
International Style
question
The belief that architects should design a building based on the purpose of that building.
answer
Functionalism
question
The inclusion or combination of several different styles in one composition or work of art.
answer
Eclecticism
question
The size or apparent size of an object seen in relation to other objects, people, or its environment.
answer
Scale
question
The relative relationship of shapes or forms to one another.
answer
Proportion
question
A curved masonry structure capable of spanning a space while supporting significant weight.
answer
Arch
question
A common structural element of architecture resembling the hollow upper half of a sphere.
answer
Dome
question
A projecting beam or bracket stabilized by the weight of the wall from which it extends (such as a balcony). Example: Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater house (1935)
answer
Cantilever
question
An architectural design where horizontal pieces or beams (lintels) are held up by vertical columns (posts).
answer
Post-and-lintel
question
A decorative device generally placed at the top of a column as a transition for the eye as it moves from post (column) to lintel beam.
answer
Capital
question
An architectural design where a wall supports itself, roof and floor.
answer
Bearing wall
question
Construction where a skeletal framework (often steel cages) supports the structure.
answer
Skeleton frame
question
Ability of a material to withstand bending.
answer
Tensile strength
question
Ability of a material to withstand crushing.
answer
Compressive strength
question
_____________________ is the design and construction of three-dimensional outdoor space for beauty and use.
answer
Landscape architecture
question
A sculpture employing three-dimensions attached to a background and meant to be seen from one side is called:
answer
Relief sculpture
question
Frederick Law Olmstead is known for his design of:
answer
Central Park (NYC)
question
A projecting beam or bracket stabilized by the weight of the wall from which it extends is called a:
answer
cantilever
question
______________ is when a sculptor shapes the material by hand.
answer
Manipulation
question
Marcel Duchamp's Bicycle Wheel is an example of a:
answer
found object sculpture
question
When a sculptor casts an artwork, he or she is using the process of _______________.
answer
Substitution
question
A kinetic sculpture in which parts move, often by air currents, is called:
answer
Mobile
question
All of the following are considered a key factor in landscape design.
answer
the function of the design those for whom the spaces are created the influence of the particular site and surroundings
question
Architects who design buildings based on the purpose of the structure are following ___________________.
answer
Functionalism
question
Variation
answer
how often an element is used and the relationship of one element to another.
question
__________________ is the representation of objects receding into the distance in two-dimensional art.
answer
Perspective
question
_____________ is a vivid water-based paint, usually applied to paper, with outstanding brilliance and translucence; also, term for resulting artwork.
answer
Watercolor
question
_______________ is the relative relationship of shapes or forms to one another in regards to size, height, width, length, or depth.
answer
Proportion
question
_________________ is the exact duplication of elements (shapes, forms, etc) on either side of a (usually imaginary) straight-lined central axis.
answer
Symmetry
question
________________ is the shape or mass of an object within an artwork or composition.
answer
Form
question
_______________ in printing, a technique in which the intended printing surface is left raised, with remaining areas cut away.
answer
Relief
question
________________________ is a mold from which a sculpture is cast.
answer
Negative
question
_______________________ is when a viewer considers foreground and background independently and recognizes the separation between them.
answer
Shifting perspective
question
_______________________ is the use of foreshortening and a vanishing point to create the illusion of depth.
answer
Linear perspective
question
_________________________________ is the use of light, atmosphere, and haziness to indicate depth or distance.
answer
Aerial or atmospheric perspective
question
________________ is a way of connecting the parts of a work of art.
answer
Articulation
question
____________________ is a sculptural relief in which forms extend from the background to at least half their depth.
answer
High relief
question
___________________ is a painting technique which originated in ancient times, using pigments mixed with melted beeswax as a binder.
answer
Encaustic
question
______________ is the perception of reflected or emitted light in terms of hue, value, and intensity.
answer
Color
question
_________________ is the recurrence of the same visual element in a work of art.
answer
Repetition
question
____________________ is when art is assembled from common every day items. Example: using a bike wheel or other object as art.
answer
Found object
question
Serigraphy
answer
a printing technique that forces ink through a stencil (image) on a screen stretched with a fine silk or similar fabric; also called silk-screening or screen-printing.
question
Linear sculpture
answer
a sculpture employing two-dimensional materials.
question
Scale
answer
the size or apparent size of an object seen in relation to other objects, people, or its environment.
question
____________________ is the place to which a viewer's eye is drawn in a work of art.
answer
Focal area
question
Unity
answer
when all elements in a work of art give a sense of oneness or self-contained completeness.
question
Drypoint
answer
a printmaking technique (intaglio) involving drawing directly onto the surface of a metal plate with a sharp, pointed tool, often with a diamond point.
question
Artistic Form
answer
elements (lines, shapes, colors) of a work of art organized to effect participants.
question
Weathering
answer
the effect of the weather/environment on the surface of an artwork.
question
Hue
answer
the common name of a color (red, blue, green, yellow) and its position in the spectrum or on the color wheel.
question
Collage
answer
a composition made of various materials (as paper, cloth, or wood) glued on a surface.
question
Graphite
answer
a soft form of carbon used in pencils.
question
Oil paint
answer
a paint made of color pigments mixed in slowly drying oil; its main binding agent for pigment is linseed oil.
question
Subtraction
answer
when the sculptor carves or cuts away unwanted material to create the work.
question
Fresco
answer
a painting technique that applies water-based paint to a wet-plaster surface; also, resulting artwork.
question
Value
answer
the relative lightness or darkness of color.
question
Balance
answer
a sense of equilibrium in an artwork, achieved through weight, attention, or attraction of visual elements.
question
Juxtaposition
answer
the side-by-side placement of objects in an artwork or composition.
question
Addition
answer
when a sculptor adds or combines material (sometimes called built sculpture).
question
Pastel
answer
a soft, colored chalk stick or crayon made of pigments and a gum binder, usually applied to paper; also, resulting artwork.
question
Gouache
answer
watercolor to which an opaque white has been added; also, resulting artwork.
question
Low Relief
answer
sculptural relief that projects very little from the background; also called bas-relief.
question
_______________ can be defined as an innate or learned ability to appreciate a work of art.
answer
Aesthetic perception
question
Artistic media
answer
are the materials (and techniques) employed to create works of art.
question
Media
answer
is the plural of medium.
question
Visual elements
answer
(line, form, color, space, and texture) are the basic visual material with which artists create works of art.
question
Visual principles
answer
(repetition, balance, unity, focal area) are ways artists arrange the elements to greatest effect.
question
Composition
answer
describes an artist's technique, or specific use of the general visual elements and principles.
question
Rule of Thirds
answer
holds that in a more interesting composition the focal point is not in the center but rather in an outlying area.
question
Pictorialism
answer
used soft focus, special filters and lens coatings, darkroom manipulation, and innovative printing processes to try to match the aesthetic effects of painting and printmaking. Alfred Stieglitz was a leading advocate of pictorialism.
question
Group f/64
answer
which included Ansel Adams, best known for his black-and-white photographs of the American West, advocated straight (or pure) photography, eschewing any manipulation, and looking to depict scenes as realistically as possible.
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New