AP Art History Vocabulary Words – Flashcards with Answers

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
Abstraction
answer
Works of art that may have from but have little or no attempt at pictorial representation
question
Academy
answer
An institution whose main objects include training artists in an academic tradition, ennobling the profession, and holding exhibitions
question
Acropolis
answer
Literally, a "high city," a Greek temple complex built on a hill over a city
question
Action Painting
answer
An abstract painting in which the artist drips or splatters paint onto a surface like canvas in order to create his or her work
question
Aerial perspective (Atmospheric perspective )
answer
Landscapes that give the illusion of distance
question
Allegory
answer
Work of art that possess a symbolic meaning in addition to a literal interpretation
question
Altarpiece
answer
A painted or sculpted panel set atop an altar of a church
question
Ambulatory
answer
A passageway around the apse or an altar of a church
question
Amphora
answer
A two-handeld Greek storage jar
question
Anamorphic image
answer
An image that must be viewed by a special means, such as a mirror in order to be recognized
question
Animal style
answer
A medieval art form in which animals are depicted in a stylized and often complicated patter, usually seen fighting with one another
question
Apadana
answer
An audience hall in a Persian palace
question
Apotheosis
answer
A type of painting in which the figures are rising heavenward
question
Apse
answer
The end point of a church where the altar is
question
Aqueduct
answer
An aboveground water system
question
Arabesque
answer
A flowing, intricate, and symmetrical pattern deriving from floral motives
question
Arcade
answer
A series of arches supported by columns; when the arches face a wall and are not self-supporting, they are called a blind arcade
question
Acradian
answer
A simple rural and rustic setting used especially in Venetian paintings of the High Renaissance; it is named after Arcadia, a district in Greece to which poets and painters have attributed a rural simplicity and idyllically untroubled world
question
Archaeology
answer
The scientific study of an ancient people and cultures principally revealed through excavation
question
Architrave
answer
A plan and non-ornamental lintel on the entablature
question
Archivolt
answer
A series of concentric moldings around and arch
question
Ashlar masonry
answer
Carefully cut and grooved stones that support a building without the use of concrete or other kinds of masonry
question
Assemblage
answer
A three-dimensional work made of various materials such as wood, cloth, paper and miscellaneous
question
Atrium
answer
A courtyard in a Roman house or before a Christian church
question
Avant-garde
answer
An innovative group of artists who generally reject traditional approaches in favor of a more experimental technique
question
Axial plan (Basilican plan, Longitudinal plan)
answer
A church with a long nave whose focus is the apse, so-named because it is designed along the axis
question
Baldacchino
answer
A canopy placed over an altar or shrine
question
Baptistery
answer
In medieval architecture, a separate chapel or building in front of a church used for baptisms
question
Barrel vault
answer
An arch that is extended in space, forming a tunnel
question
Basilica
answer
In Roman architecture, a large axially planned building with a nave, side aisles, and apses. In Christian architecture, an axially planned church with long nave, side aisles, and an apse for the altar
question
Bay
answer
A vertical section of a church that is embraced by a set of columns and is usually composed of arches and aligned windows
question
Benday dots
answer
Named for inventor Benjamin Day; this printing process uses the pointillist technique of colored dots from a limited palette placed closely together to achieve more colors and subtle shadings
question
Bi
answer
A round ceremonial disk found in ancient Chinese tombs; they are characterized by having a circular hole in the center, which may have symbolized heaven
question
Biomorphism
answer
A movement that stresses organic shapes that hint at natural forms
question
Bodhisattva
answer
A deity who refrains from entering nirvana to help others
question
Book of Hours
answer
A book of prayers to be said at different times of day, days of the year
question
Bottega
answer
A studio of an Italian artist
question
Buddha
answer
A fully enlightened being; there are many Buddhas, the most famous of whom is Shakyamuni, also also known as Gautama or Siddhartha
question
Bust
answer
A sculpture depicting a head, neck, and upper chest of a figure
question
Calligraphy
answer
A decorative or beautiful handwriting
question
Calotype
answer
A type of early photograph, developed by William H. F. Talbot, that is characterized by its grainy quality; a calotype is considered the forefather of all photography because it produces both a positive and a negative image
question
Camera obscura
answer
A box with a lens which captures light and casts an image on the opposite side
question
Campanile
answer
A bell tower for an Italian building
question
Cantilever
answer
A projecting beam that is attached to a building at one end and suspended in the air at the other
question
Canvas
answer
A heavy woven material used as the surface of a painting; first widely used in Venice
question
Capital
answer
The top element of a column
question
Caryatid
answer
A column in a building that is shaped like a female figure
question
Catacomb
answer
An underground passageway used for burial
question
Cathedral
answer
The principal church of a diocese, where a bishop sits
question
Cella
answer
The main room of a Greek temple where the god is housed
question
Central Plan
answer
A church having a circular plan with the altar in the middle
question
Chacmool
answer
A Mayan figure that is half-sitting and half-lying on its back
question
Chaitya
answer
A rock-cut shrine in basilican form with a stupa at the endpoint
question
Chalice
answer
A cup used in a Christian ceremony
question
Chateau
answer
A large country estate or manor house
question
Chevet
answer
The east end of a Gothic church
question
Chiaroscuro
answer
A gradual transition from light to dark in a painting; forms are not determined by sharp outlines, but by the meeting of lighter and darker areas
question
Choir
answer
A space in a church between the transept and the apse for a choir or clergymen
question
Cinquecento
answer
In the 1500s, or sixteenth century, in Italian art
question
Cire perdue
answer
The lost-wax process. A bronze casting method in which a figure is modeled in clay and covered with wax and then recovered with clay. When fired in a kiln, the wax melts away leaving a channel between the two layers of clay that can be used as a mold for liquid metal
question
Clerestory
answer
The third, or window, story of a church
question
Cloissonne
answer
Enamelwork in which colored areas are separated by thin bands of metal, usually gold or bronze
question
Cloister
answer
a rectangular open-air monastery courtyard with a covered arcade surrounding it
question
Close
answer
An enclosed gardenlike area around a cathedral
question
Coatlicue
answer
An Aztec goddess who is characterized by a savagery only satisfied by human sacrifice
question
Codex (plural: codices)
answer
A manuscript book
question
Coffer
answer
In architecture, a sunken panel in a ceiling
question
Collage
answer
A composition made by pasting together different items onto a flat surface
question
Colophon
answer
A commentary on the end panel of a Chinese scroll; an inscription at the end of a manuscript containing relevant information on its publication
question
Color field
answer
A style of abstract painting characterized by simple shapes and monochromatic color
question
Compound pier
answer
A pier that appears to be a group or gathering of smaller piers put together
question
Confucianism
answer
A philosophical belief begun by Confucius that stresses education, devotion to family, mutual respect, and traditional culture
question
Contrapposto
answer
A graceful arrangement of the body based on tilted shoulders and hips and bent knees
question
Corbel arch
answer
A vault formed by layers of stone that gradually grow closer together as they rise until they eventually meet
question
Coyolxauhqui
answer
An Aztec goddess who dies when she tries to assassinate her mother, Coatlicue
question
Cornice
answer
A projecting ledge over a wall
question
Cromlech
answer
A circle of megaliths
question
Cubiculum (plural: cubicula)
answer
A Roamn bedroom flaking an atrium; in Early Christian art, a mortuary chapel in a catacomb
question
Cuneifrom
answer
A system of writing in which the strokes are formed in a wedge or arrowhead shape
question
Cupola
answer
A small dome rising over the roof of a building. In architecture, a cupola is rotating achieved by an arch on it axis
question
Cyclopean masonry
answer
A type of construction that uses rough massive blocks of stone piled one atop the other without mortar. Named for the mythical Cyclops.
question
Cylinder seal
answer
A round piece of carved stone that when rolled onto clay produces an image.
question
Daguerrotype
answer
A type of early photograph, developed by Daguerre, which is characterized by a shiny surface, meticulous finish, and clarity of detail.
question
Daoism
answer
A philosophical belief begun by Laozi that stresses individual expression and a striving to find balance in one's life.
question
Darshan
answer
In Hinduism, the ability of a worshipper to see a deity and the deity to see the worshipper.
question
Di sotto in su
answer
(see Quadro Riportato)
question
Documentary photography
answer
A type of photography that seeks social and political redress for current issues by using photographs as a way of exposing society's faults.
question
Donjon
answer
An inner stronghold of a castle complex.
question
Donor
answer
A patron of a work of art who is often seen in that work.
question
Earthwork
answer
A large outdoor work in which the earth itself its the medium.
question
Embroidery
answer
A woven product in which the design is stitched into a premade fabric.
question
Encaustic
answer
An ancient method of painting using colored waxes that are burned into a wooden surface.
question
Engaged columns
answer
A column that is not freestanding but attached to a wall.
question
Engraving
answer
A printmaking process in which a tool called a burin is used to carve into a metal plate, causing impressions to be made in the surface. Ink is passed into the crevices of the plate, and paper is applied. The result is a print with remarkable details and finely shaded contours.
question
Entablature
answer
The upper story of a Greek temple.
question
Etching
answer
A printmaking process in which a metal plate is covered with a ground made of wax. The artist uses a tool to cut into the wax to leave the plate exposed. The plate is then submerged into an acid bath, which eats away at the exposed portions of the plate. The plate is removed from the acid, cleaned, and ink is filled into the crevices caused by the acid. Paper is applied and an impression is made. Etching produces the finest detail of the three types of early prints.
question
Exemplum virtutis
answer
A painting that tells a moral tale for the viewer.
question
Facade
answer
The front of a building.
question
Fan vault
answer
A type of vault so-named because a fanlike shape is created when the vaults spring from the floor to the ceiling, nearly touching in the space directly over the center of the nave. They are usually highly decorated and filled with rib patterns.
question
Ferroconcrete
answer
Steel-reinforced concrete. The two materials act together to resist building stresses.
question
Fete galante
answer
An eighteenth-century French style of painting that depicts the aristocracy walking through a forested landscape.
question
Fetish
answer
An object believed to possess magical powers.
question
Flying buttress
answer
A stone arch and its pier that support a roof from a pillar outside the building. Flying buttresses also stabilize a building and protect it from wind sheer.
question
Foreshortening
answer
A visual effect in which an object is shortened and turned deeper into the picture plane to give the effect of receding in space.
question
Forum (plural: fora)
answer
A public square or marketplace in a Roman city.
question
Fresco
answer
A painting technique that involves applying water-based paint onto a freshly plastered wall. The paint forms a bond with the plaster that is durable and long-lasting.
question
Frieze
answer
A horizontal band of sculpture.
question
Frottage
answer
A composition made by rubbing a crayon or a pencil over paper placed over a surface with a raised design.
question
Genre painting
answer
Painting in which scenes of everyday life are depicted.
question
Glazes
answer
Thin transparent layers put over a painting to alter the color and build up a rich sonorous effect.
question
Gopura
answer
A monumental entrance or gateway to an Indian temple complex.
question
Gospels
answer
The first four books of the New Testament that chronicle the life of Jesus Christ.
question
Grand Manner
answer
A style of eighteenth century painting that features large painting which figures posed as ancient statuary or before classical elements such as columns or arches.
question
Grand Tour
answer
In order to complete their education young Englishmen and Americans in the eighteenth century undertook a journey to Italy to absorb ancient and Renaissance sites.
question
Grisaille
answer
A painting done in neutral shades of grey to simulate the look of a sculpture.
question
Groin vault
answer
(see Vault)
question
Ground plan
answer
The map of a floor of a building.
question
Haboku (splashed ink)
answer
A monochrome Japanese ink painting done in a free style in which ink seems to be splashed on a surface.
question
Haniwa (from the Japanese meaning "circle of clay")
answer
Japanese ceramic figures that were placed on top of burial mounds.
question
Harlem Renaissance
answer
A particularly rich artistic period in the 1920s and 1930s that is named after the African-American neighborhood in NYC where it emerged. It is marked by a cultural resurgence by African Americans in the fields of painting, writing, music, and photography.
question
Hierarchy of Scale
answer
A system of representation that expresses a person's importance by the size of his or her representation in a work of art
question
Hieroglyphics
answer
Egyptian writing using symbols or pictures as characters
question
Horror vacui
answer
(Latin meaning "fear of empty spaces") a type of artwork in which the entire surface is filled with objects, people, designs, and ornaments in a crowded, sometimes congested, way
question
Humanism
answer
An intellectual movement in the Renaissance that emphasized the secular alongside the religious. Humanists were greatly attracted to the achievements of the classical past and stressed the study of classical literature, history, philosophy, and art
question
Hypostyle
answer
A hall in an Egyptian temple that has a roof supported by a sense thicket of columns.
question
Icon
answer
A devotional panel depicting a sacred image
question
Iconostasis
answer
A screen decorated with icons, which separates the apse from the transept of a church
question
Ignudi
answer
Nude corner figures on the Sistine Chapel ceiling
question
Impasto
answer
A thick and very visible application of paint on a painting surface
question
Impluvium
answer
A rectangular basin in a Roman house that is placed in the open-air atrium in order to collect rainwater
question
In situ
answer
A Latin expression that means that something is in its original location
question
Installation
answer
A temporary work of art made up of assemblages created for a particular space, like an art gallery or a museum
question
International Gothic style
answer
A style of fourteenth- and fifteenth-century painting, begun by Simone Martini. The style is characterized by elegant and intricate interpretations of naturalistic subjects and minute detailing and patterning in drapery and color, catering to an aristocratic taste
question
Jali
answer
Perforated ornamental stone screens in Islamic art
question
Jamb
answer
The side posts of a medieval portal
question
Japonisme
answer
An attraction for Japanese art and artifacts that were imported into Europe in the late nineteenth century
question
Ka
answer
The soul, or spiritual essence, of a human being that either ascends to heaven or can live in an Egyptian statue of itself
question
Keystone
answer
The center of an arch that holds the other stones in place
question
Kiln
answer
An oven used for making pottery
question
Kiva
answer
A circular room wholly or partly underground used for religious sites
question
Kondo
answer
A hall used for Buddhist teachings
question
Koran
answer
The Islamic sacred test, dictated to the Prophet Muhammad by the Angel Gabriel
question
Kouros (female: kore)
answer
An archaic Greek sculpture of a standing youth
question
Krater
answer
A large Greek bowl used for mixing water and wine
question
Kufic
answer
A highly ornamental Islamic script
question
Kylix
answer
A Greek drinking cup
question
Lamassu
answer
A colossal winged human-headed bull in Assyrian art.
question
Lantern
answer
A small structure with openings for light that crowns a dome.
question
Linear perspective
answer
see Perspective
question
Literati
answer
A sophisticated and scholarly group of Chinese artists who painted themselves rather than for fame and mass acceptance. their work is highly individualized.
question
Lithography
answer
A print making technique that uses a flat stone surface as a base. The artist draws an image with a special crayon that attracts ink. Paper, which absorbs the ink, is applied to the surface and a print emerges.
question
Loculi
answer
Openings in the walls of catacombs to receive the dead.
question
Longhouse
answer
A long Native American communal dwelling made of wood. Characterized by having supporting interior poles that create long interior corridors.
question
Lunette
answer
A crescent shaped space, sometimes over a doorway, which contains sculptures or painting.
question
Maesta
answer
A painting of the Virgin Mary as enthroned Queen of Heaven surrounded by angels and saints.
question
Mandora (Italian, meaning "almond")
answer
A term that describes a large almond shaped orb around holy figures like Christ and Buddha.
question
Maniera greca (Italian, meaning "Greek manner")
answer
A style of painting based on Byzantine models that was popular in Italy in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.
question
Martyrium (plural: martyria)
answer
A shrine built over a place of martyrdom or a grave of a martyred Christian saint.
question
Mastaba (Arabic, meaning "bench")
answer
A low flat-roofed Egyptian tomb with sides sloping down to the ground.
question
Mecca, Medina
answer
Islamic holy cities; Mecca is the birthplace of Muhammed and the city all Muslims turn to in prayer; Medina is where Muhammad was first accepted as the Prophet, where his tomb is located.
question
Megalith
answer
A stone of great size used in the construction of a prehistoric structure.
question
Megaron
answer
A rectangular audience hall in Aegean art that has a two-column porch and four columns around a central air well.
question
Menhir
answer
A large uncut stone erected as a monument in the prehistoric era.
question
Metope
answer
A small relief sculpture on the facade of a Greek temple.
question
Mihrab
answer
A central niche in a mosque, which indicates the direction to Mecca.
question
Minaret
answer
A tall slender column used to call people to prayer.
question
Minbar
answer
A pulpit from which sermons are given.
question
Mithuna
answer
In India, the mating of males and females in a ritualistic, symbolic, or physical sense.
question
Moai
answer
Large stone sculptures found on Easter Island.
question
Mobile
answer
A sculpture made of several different items that dangle from a ceiling and can be set into motion by air currents.
question
Modernism
answer
A movement begun in the late nineteenth century in which artists embraced the current at the expense of the traditional in both subject matter and in media; modernist artists often seek to question the very nature of art itself.
question
Moralized Bible
answer
A Bible that pairs Old and New Testament scenes with paintings that explain their moral parallels.
question
Mortise and tenon
answer
A groove cut into stone or wood called mortise that is shaped to receive a tenon, or projection, of the same dimensions.
question
Mosaic
answer
A decoration using pieces of stone, marble, or colored glass, called tesserae, that are cemented to a wall or a floor.
question
Mosque
answer
A Muslim house of worship.
question
Mudra
answer
A symbolic hand gesture in Hindu and Buddhist art.
question
Muezzin
answer
An Islamic official who calls people to prayer traditionally from a minaret.
question
Muhammed
answer
The Prophet whose revelations and teachings form the foundation of Islam.
question
Muqarnas
answer
A honeycomb-like decoration often applied in Islamic buildings to domes, niches, capitals, or vaults; the surface resembles intricate stalactites.
question
Narthex
answer
The closest part of the atrium to the basilica; it serves as a vestibule or lobby of a church.
question
Nave
answer
The main aisle of a church.
question
Necropolis (plural: necropoli)
answer
Literally, a "city of the dead" -- a large burial area.
question
Negative space
answer
Empty space around an object of a person, such as the cut-out areas between a figure's legs or arms in a sculpture.
question
Nirvana
answer
An afterlife in which reincarnation ends and the soul becomes one with the supreme spirit.
question
Oculus
answer
A circular window in a church or a round opening at the top of a dome.
question
Ogee arch
answer
An arch formed by two S-shaped curves that meet at the top.
question
Orans figure
answer
A figure with its hands raised in prayer
question
Orthogonal
answer
Lines that appear to recede toward a vanishing point in a painting with linear perspective
question
Pagoda
answer
A tower built of many stories. Each succeeding story is identical in style to the one beneath it, only smaller. Pagodas typically have dramatically projecting eaves that curl up at the ends
question
Pantocrator
answer
Literally, "Ruler of the World," a term that alludes to figures of Christ placed above the altar or in the center of a dome in a Byzantine church
question
Papyrus
answer
A tall aquatic plant used as a writing surface in ancient Egypt
question
Pastel
answer
A colored chalk that when mixed with other ingredients produces a medium that has a soft and delicate hue.
question
Pediment
answer
The triangular top of a temple that contains sculpture.
question
Peristyle
answer
1) an atrium surrounded by columns in a Roman house, 2) a colonnade surrounding a Greek temple
question
Perspective
answer
Having to do with depth and recession in a painting or a relief sculpture. Objects shown in linear perspective achieve a three dimensionality in the two dimensional world of the picture plane. All lines, called orthogonals, draw the viewer, back in space to a common point called the vanishing paint. Paintings, however, may have more than one vanishing point, with orthogonals leading the eye to several parts of the work. Landscapes that give the illusion of distance are in atmospheric or aerial perspective.
question
Pharaoh
answer
A king of ancient Egypt.
question
Photogram
answer
An image made by placing objects on photo-sensitive paper and exposing them to light to produce a silhouette.
question
Pier
answer
A vertical support that holds up an arch or vault.
question
Pieta
answer
A painting or sculpture of a crucified Christ lying on the lap of a grieving Mary.
question
Pilaster
answer
A flattened column attached to a wall with a capital, a shaft, and a base.
question
Pinnacle
answer
A pointed sculpture on piers or flying buttresses.
question
Plein-air
answer
Painting in the outdoors to directly capture the effects of light and atmosphere on a given object.
question
Pointillism
answer
A painting technique that uses small dots of color that are combined by the eye at a given distance.
question
Polyptych
answer
A many-paneled atmosphere.
question
Porcelain
answer
A ceramic made from clay that when fired in a kiln produces a product that is hard, white, brittle, and shiny.
question
Portal
answer
A doorway. In medieval art, they can be significantly decorated.
question
Positivism
answer
A theory that expresses that all knowledge must come from proven ideas based on science or scientific theory philosophy, promoted by French philosopher Auguste Comte
question
Post-and-lintel
answer
A method of construction with two posts supporting a horizontal beam, called a lintel
question
Poussinistes and Rubénistes
answer
Admirers and imitators of Poussin and Rubens. The former felt that Poussin's mastery of drawing, composition, and emotional restraint were superior. The latter found greater value in Rubens's use of color, rich textures, and highly charged emotions
question
Predella
answer
The base of an altarpiece that is filled with small paintings, often narrative scenes
question
Propylaeum (plural: propylaea)
answer
A gateway leading to a Greek temple
question
Psalter
answer
A book containing the Psalms, or sacred sung poems, of the Bible
question
Pueblo
answer
A communal village of flat-roofed structures of many stories that are stacked in terraces. They are made of stone or adobe
question
Puja
answer
A Hindu prayer ritual
question
Pylon
answer
A monumental gateway to an Egyptian temple marked by two flat, sloping walls between which is a smaller entrance
question
Qiblah
answer
The direction toward Mecca which Muslims face in prayer
question
Quadro riportato and Di sotto in sù
answer
Both are types of ceiling paintings. Quadro riportato is a wall mural that is executed on a curved ceiling vault. To view a quadro riportato work, one must stand in a particular spot in order for it to appear right side up. The Sistine Chapel ceiling was done in quadro riportato. In contrast, di sotto in sù ("from the bottoms up") works are ceiling paintings in which the figures seem to be hovering above the viewers, often looking down at us. Mantegna's "Room of the Newlyweds" is painted in di sotto in sù
question
Quattrocento
answer
The 1400s, or fifteenth century, in Italian art
question
Quoins
answer
An exterior angle on the façade of a building that has a large dressed stone forming a decorative contrast with the wall
question
Ready-made
answer
A commonplace object selected and exhibited as a work of art
question
Regionalism
answer
An American art movement from the early twentieth century that emphasized Midwestern rural life in a direct style
question
Relief sculpture
answer
Sculpture which projects from a flat background. A very shallow relief sculpture is called a bas-relief.
question
Reliquary
answer
A vessel for holding a sacred relic. Often reliquaries took the shape of the object they hold. Precious metals and stones were the common material
question
Repoussé
answer
(French, meaning "to push back") A type of metal relief sculpture in which the back side of a plate is hammered to form a raised relief on the front
question
Reserve column
answer
A column that is cut away from rock but has no support function
question
Rib vault
answer
A vault in which diagonal arches form rib-like patterns. These arches partially support a roof, in some cases forming a weblike design
question
Rose window
answer
A circular window, filled with stain glass, placed at the end of a transept or on the façade of a church
question
Rückenfigur
answer
In Romantic painting, a figure seen from the back, often in the contemplation of nature
question
Rusticate
answer
To deeply and roughly incise stones to give a rough and rustic texture to its appearance
question
Sacra conversazione
answer
An altarpiece in which the Madonna and Child are accompanied by saints and engaged in a "holy conversation"
question
Salon
answer
A government-sponsored exhibition of artworks held in Paris
question
Sarcophagus (plural: sarcophagi)
answer
A stone coffin
question
Scarification
answer
Scarring of the skin in patterns by cutting with a knife. When the cut heals, a raised pattern is created, which is painted
question
School
answer
A group of artists sharing the same philosophy who work around the same time, but not necessarily together
question
Scriptorium (plural: scriptoria)
answer
A place in a monastery when monks wrote manuscripts
question
Sfumato
answer
A smoke-light or hazy effect that distances the viewer from the subject of a painting
question
Shaft
answer
The body of a column
question
Shiva
answer
The Hindu god of creation and destruction
question
Skeleton
answer
The supporting interior framework of a building
question
Spandrel
answer
A triangular space enclosed by the curves of arches
question
Spolia
answer
In art history, the reuse of architectural or sculptural pieces in buildings generally different from their original contexts
question
Squinch
answer
The polygonal base of a dome that makes a transition from the round dome to a flat wall
question
Stele (plural: stelai)
answer
A stone slab used to mark a grave or a site
question
Still life
answer
A painting of a grouping of inanimate objects, such as flowers or fruit
question
Stringcourse
answer
A horizontal molding
question
Stucco
answer
A fine plaster used for wall decorations or moldings
question
Stupa
answer
A dome-shaped Buddhist shrine
question
The Sublime
answer
Any catharic experience from the catastrophic to the intellectual that causes the viewer to marvel in awe, wonder, and passion
question
Synagogue
answer
A Jewish house of worship
question
Tapa
answer
A cloth made from bark that is soaked and beaten into a fabric
question
Tapestry
answer
A woven product in which the design and the backing are produced at the same time on a device called a loom
question
Tempera
answer
A type of paint employing egg yolk as the binding medium that is noted for quick drying rate and flat opaque colors
question
Tenebroso/Tenebrism
answer
A dramatic dark-and-light contrast in a painting
question
Terra-cotta
answer
A hard ceramic clay used for building or for making pottery
question
Tessellation
answer
A decoration using polygonal shapes with no gaps
question
Tholos tomb
answer
1) an ancient Mycenaean circular tomb in a beehive shape, 2) an ancient Greek circular shrine
question
Torah
answer
First five books of the Old Testament, traditionally ascribed to Moses
question
Torana
answer
A gateway near a stupa that has two upright posts and three horizontal lintels
question
Totem pole
answer
A pole carved with ancestral spirits or symbols erected by Pacific Coast Native Americans
question
Transept
answer
An aisle in a church perpendicular to the nave
question
Trecento
answer
The 1300s, or fourteenth century, in Italian art
question
Triforium
answer
A narrow passageway with arches opening onto a nave, usually directly below a clerestory
question
Triglyph
answer
A projecting grooved element alternating with a metope on a Greek temple
question
Triptych
answer
A three-paneled painting or sculpture
question
Trompe l'oeil
answer
(French, meaning "fools to the eye") a form of painting that attempts to represent an object as existing in three dimensions, and therefore resembles the real thing
question
Trumeau (plural: trumeaux)
answer
The central pillar of a medieval portal that stabilizes the structure. It is often elaborately decorated.
question
Tympanum (plural: tympana)
answer
A rounded sculpture placed over the portal of a medieval church
question
Ukiyo-e
answer
Translated as "pictures of the floating world", a Japanese genre painting popular from the seventeenth to the nineteenth century
question
Urna
answer
A circle of hair on the brows of a deity sometimes represented as the focal point
question
Ushnisha
answer
A protrusion at the top of the head, or the top knot of a Buddha
question
Vanitas
answer
A theme in still life painting that stresses the brevity of life and the folly of human vanity
question
Vault
answer
A roof constructed with arches. When an arch is extended in space, forming a tunnel, it is called a barrel vault. When two barrel vaults intersect at right angles it is called a groin vault.
question
Veristic
answer
Sculptures from the Roman Republic characterized by extreme realism of facial features
question
Villa (Italian) or Chateau (French) (plural: chateaux)
answer
A large country estate or manor house
question
Voussoir (pronounced: view-swar)
answer
A wedge-shaped stone that forms the curved part an arch. The central voussoiris called a keystone.
question
Wat
answer
A Buddhist monastery or temple in Cambodia
question
Westwork
answer
A monumental entrance to a Carolingian church in which two towers flank a lower central entrance
question
Woodcut
answer
A printmaking process by which a wooden tablet is carved into with a tool, leaving the design raised and the background cut away (very much as how a rubber stamp looks); ink is rolled onto the raised portions and an impression is made when paper is applied to the surface; woodcuts have strong angular surfaces with sharply delineated lines
question
Yakshi (masculine: yaksha)
answer
Female and male figures of fertility in Buddhist and Hindu art
question
Yin and yang
answer
Complementary polarities; the yin is a feminine symbol that has dark, soft, moist, and weak characteristics; the yang is the male symbol that has bright, hard, dry, and strong characteristics
question
Zen
answer
A metaphysical branch of Buddhism that teaches fulfillment through self-discipline and intution
question
Ziggurat
answer
A pyramidlike building made of several stories that indent as the building gets taller; ziggurats have terraces at each level
question
Zoopraxiscope
answer
A device that projects sequences of photographs to give the illusion of movement
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New