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GLOSSARY OF ART TERMS
ABC art – a 1960's art movement and style
that attempts to use a minimal number of textures, colors, shapes
and lines to create simple three-dimensional structures. Also
known as minimalism. Abstract art - A 20th century
style of painting in which nonrepresentational lines, colors,
shapes, and forms replace accurate visual depiction of objects,
landscape, and figures. The subject is often stylized, blurred,
repeated or broken down into basic forms so that it becomes unrecognizable.
Intangible subjects such as thoughts, emotions, and time are often
expressed in abstract art form. Early Abstract artists include
French artist Robert Delaunay (1885-1941) and Russian artist Wassily
Kandinsky (1866-1944).
Abstract Expressionism Art - Movement in American painting
that began in the 1940's and became a dominant trend in the 1950's.
It combines Action Painting, which emphasizes spontaneous paint
application, and Color Field Painting, which emphasizes large
unbroken fields of color. Prominent Abstract Expressionist artists
of the era include American artist Jackson Pollock (1912-1956)
and Dutch artist Willem de Kooning (1904-1997).
Acrylic colors - synthetic painting colors made
by distributing pigments in a vehicle made of a polymethyl methacrylate
solution in mineral spirits. Often called plastic paints to distinguish
them from polymer colors that also contain acrylic. First used
in the 1940's, they are valued for their versatility. Aquarelle
- a technique or work derived from the technique of using transparent
watercolors in painting.
Art Deco - popular in the U.S. and Europe in
the 1920's and 1930's, a style of design and decoration with designs
that are geometric and use highly intense colors, to reflect the
rise of commerce, industry and mass production.
Art Movements and Classification-
Classicism, Cubism, Impressionism, Surrealism, Expressionism,
Abstraction, Fauvism
Art nouveau - French for "new art".
A painting, printmaking, decorative design, and architectural
style developed in England in the 1880s. Art Nouveau, primarily
an ornamental style, was not only a protest against the sterile
Realism, but against the whole drift toward industrialization
and mechanization and the unnatural artifacts they produced. The
style is characterized by the usage of sinuous, graceful, cursive
lines, interlaced patterns, flowers, plants, insects and other
motifs inspired by nature. Henri Toulouse-Latrec and Gustav Klimt
were among those greatly influenced by the movement
Avant-garde - French term for "vanguard",
a term that describes artists and their art that stand at the
beginning of a movement that often does not conform to the traditional
or previously accepted ideas or standards
Brushwork - The characteristic
way each artist brushes paint onto a medium, such as canvas.
Canvas - the support used for an
acrylic or oil painting that is typically made of linen or cotton,
stretched very tightly and tacked onto a wooden frame. Linen is
considered far superior to the heavy cotton for a canvas.
Canvas Giclée Print - A reproduction in
which an image is printed directly onto canvas using the Giclée
Printmaking method.
Certificate of Authenticity - A
statement of authenticity of a limited edition print that states
the title of the work, the print's number within the edition,
the number of artist's proofs and the release date. It guarantees
that the edition is limited and that the image will not be published
again in the same form. Each Giclée Print that we offer
comes with this Certificate.
Classicism - typically referring to what are
considered characteristics of classical art that include simplicity,
harmony, proportional representation and emotional restraint
Constructivism - a modern art movement beginning
in Russia that aimed to create abstract sculpture for an industrialized
society. The movement utilized technology and building materials
such as glass, plastic, steel and chrome. Vladimir Tatlin was
the first artist to develop such art.
Contemporary Art - The term contemporary art
encompasses all art being done now. It tends to include any art
made from around the 1960s to the present, or after the end of
the modern art period. The use of the literal adjective "contemporary"
to define this period in art history is due to the lack of any
recognized or dominant form or genre of art as recognized by artists
or art historians and critics.
Cubism - An art style developed
in 1908 by Picasso and Braque whereby the artist breaks down the
natural forms of the subjects into geometric shapes and creates
a new kind of pictorial space. In contrast to traditional painting
styles where the perspective of subjects is fixed and complete,
cubist work can portray the subject from multiple perspectives.
Dadaism - An art style founded by Hans Arp in
Zurich after WW1, which challenged the established canons of art,
thoughts and morality etc. Disgusted with the war and society
in general, Dadaist expressed their feelings by creating "non-art."
The term Dada, nonsense or baby talk term, symbolizes the loss
of meaning in the European culture. Dada art is difficult to interpret
since there is no common foundation. Marcel Duchamp's photograph
of the Mona Lisa with a mustache is one example of the Dada movement's
creations.
Etching - Printing technique in
which a metal plate is first covered with an acid-resistant material
and then worked with an etching needle to create an intaglio image.
The exposed metal is eaten away in an acid bath, creating depressed
lines that are later inked for printing.
Eclecticism - an art method of
borrowing and combining styles from multiple art movements, schools,
styles or other artists into one work of art.
Expressionism - an art movement
of the early 20th century in which traditional adherence to realism
and proportion was replaced by the artist's emotional connection
to the subject. These paintings are often abstract, the subject
matter distorted in color and form to emphasize and express the
intense emotion of the artist.
Figurative - art that represents
a human, animal or object's form by means of a symbol or figure.
Fine art - art that is created
for its own aesthetic purpose rather than for a practical, utility
purpose. "Art for art's sake.
Formalism - strict observance of
the established rules, traditions and methods employed in the
arts. Formalism can also refer to the theory of art that relies
heavily on the organization of forms in a work rather than on
the content.
Genre painting - painting that
represents a phase or aspect of common everyday life and people.
Giclée - a printmaking process
usually on an IRIS inkjet printer to make reproductions of a photograph
of a painting; the printer can produce a very wide range of colors
resulting in prints that are of very high quality.
Grand manner - a type of painting
where figures of great importance are painted in a way that elevates
them above the everyday and common. Other elements in the painting
are reduced by means of simplifying or eliminating, shifting the
focus to the significance of the primary subject.
Grotesque - a style of painting
or other art that either greatly distorts or where fantastic animal
forms and human figures are combined with leaves, flowers and
other objects in an ornamental way.
Illusionism - in a work of art,
the creation of a deception image of reality by using certain
techniques including perspective.
Impressionism - Referred to as
the most important art movement of the 19th century, impressionism
is still widely practiced today, and influenced many successive
art movements. The term impressionism emerged in the 1860's and
came from a painting by Claude Monet (1840-1926) entitled Impression
Sunrise. The term became widely used to describe the painting
methods used by artists of this time period, including French
painters Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919) and Paul Cezanne (1839-1906).
Impressionists usually worked quickly in open air, and were very
concerned with capturing light, color and surface.
Kitsch - art that is considered
to be overly sentimental, pretentious design. Work that is kitschy
is usually mass-produced and met with critical disfavor. Interestingly,
what is kitsch in one time period becomes art in another, an example
being the work of Norman Rockwell.
Landscape - Painting or artwork
depicting an expanse of natural scenery that can be seen in a
single view. The movement toward a landscape being primary in
a painting, rather than the background, began in the 17th century.
Lithography - Printing technique
using a Plano graphic process in which prints are pulled on a
special press from a flat stone or metal surface that has been
chemically sensitized so that ink sticks only to the design areas
and is repelled by the non-image areas. Alois Senefelder invented
lithography in 1798 in Germany.
Luminism - the American art style
in the 1850's to 1870's which used light or lighting effects as
a major characteristic; also, the school of painting that focuses
on the expression of the effects of light whether as the above
American art style or the French Impressionists.
Magic Realism - An American art
movement that began in 1943 to the 1950's which blends precise
and detailed realistic images with the imaginary and fantastic.
The art style had its early influences from the Surrealism movement.
Magical Realism - Describes the
genre of Latin American literature during the 1960's, in which
magical themes were combined with realistic subject matter.
Modern Art – Modern Art is
a general term, used for most of the artistic production from
the late 19th century until approximately the 1970s. (Recent art
production is more often called contemporary art). Modern art
refers to a new approach to art where it was no longer important
to literally represent a subject (through painting or sculpture)
-- the invention of photography had made this function of art
obsolete.
Media – The materials to
be printed, such as watercolor papers, canvas, copper, wood veneer,
cotton, plastic.
Mixed media - The art technique
where the artist employs two or more media such as painting, charcoal,
collage, etc. and combines them in a single work.
Minimal art - Also known as minimalism,
a movement and style of art from the 20th century which attempts
to reduce art to the basic geometric shapes with the fewest colors,
lines, and textures. Minimal art does not seek to be representational
of any object. Also known as ABC art.
Naïve art - usually referring
to art by artists who have no formal art education or training,
a style of painting that is often simple with bright colors, unrepresentative
perspective and childlike subject matter.
Native American Art - artwork created
by the indigenous peoples of North America, including but not
limited to painting and drawings on paper as well as stone surfaces,
weaving, jewelry and pottery.
Neoclassical art - art that is
reflective of the Classical period of art, that is, the art of
ancient Rome or Greece.
Neo-impressionism - a movement
in painting as a reaction to Impressionism; originated by Georges-Pierre
Seurat in the late 19th century, the movement used the technique
of pointillism which uses dots or points of color which the brain
automatically blends upon viewing it.
Op art - from the early 1960's,
an abstract style of art. This style is unique in its attempt
to show movement on the surface by using optical illusion.
Painting - in art, the creation
by an artist of a piece with aesthetic value using the application
of paint to a surface.
Pastel - a crayon made from pigment
mixed with gum and water and pressed into a stick-shaped form.
A work of art created from these crayons is also called a pastel.
Pastel can also indicate a pale color.
Picturesque - common in 19th century
Europe and America, a style of representational landscape painting
which focuses on unusual designs and rustic or quaint features.
Pointillism - an area of French
impressionism where color is broken up into dots or points. These
points compose forms that are visible to the viewer only from
a distance where the eye blends the points to create such forms
or objects.
Pop art - developed in New York
in the 1960's, a style of art that derives from mass popular culture
including consumer products and cartoon characters. Some leading
artists of the style include Richard Hamilton, Roy Lichtenstein
and Andy Warhol.
Portrait - a representation of
a person or group or animal on a two-dimensional medium that typically
also shows some aspect symbolic of the subject.
Post-Impressionist Movement - In
reaction to the Impressionists, this style focused on the emotional
content, structure and form of artistic subjects rather than on
the importance of natural, fading light. The movement had its
beginnings in the 1880's to 1900 in France. Dutch artist Vincent
Van Gogh (1853-1890) and French artist Paul Gauguin (1848-1903)
were classic painters of this period
Prehistoric art - art created during
the first known period of human culture about two million years
ago. The period is broken into three major periods: Old, Middle
and New Stone Ages. The old is dominated by the use of stone tools,
carvings and paintings while the Middle is characterized by pottery
and the New by pottery, spinning and weaving. The three periods
illustrate the evolution of a previously nomadic group to urban
civilizations who domesticated animals and plants.
Realism - Art term referring to
the accurate depiction of natural objects, without the addition
of imaginative representation. In addition, it refers to a 19th
century art movement in France, which moved away from the Romanticism
movement by creating paintings that provided accurate representations
of everyday life. Early Realism artists include French artists
Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot (1796-1875) and Jean Francois Millet
(1814-1875).
Representational art - Artistic
piece, i.e. painting, in which it is the artist's intention to
present a realistic portrayal of a particular subject matter.
Reproduction - An Original work
of art that has been duplicated by photographic or other printmaking
methods. 18th and early 19th centuries that celebrated nature,
as opposed to civilization, and valued emotion and imagination
rather than rationality. Impressionism, as well as 20th century
art in general, was greatly influenced by the Romantic movement.
Seascape - A painting representing
an expansive view of the ocean or sea.
Serigraphy (Silk-screen) - A printing
technique that makes use of a squeegee to force ink directly onto
a piece of paper or canvas through a stencil creating an image
on a screen of silk or other fine fabric with an impermeable substance.
Serigraphy differs from most other printing in that its color
areas are paint films rather than printing ink stains.
Silk screen - the process of making
a print during which an image is imposed on a screen of silk and
blank areas have been blocked out. Ink is then forced through
the mesh onto the paper surface. Andy Warhol is known for his
use of the silkscreen method in his painting.
Still life - A 35mm transparency.
Not recommended for art Copy Work. High-quality 35mm slides can
be printed up to 30" or even larger depending on the nature
of the image, grain of the film, and the "look" desired
by the photographer.
Super realism - similar to photo-realism,
a style of painting in which the details of the subject are represented
in such realistic detail as to mimic photography.
Surrealism - A successor to Dadaism,
which began in the 1920's, dedicated to the expression of dreams
and the activities of the subconscious mind, through fantastic
imagery. The period was influenced greatly by Freud's focus on
dreams. Early artists of the period include Salvador Dali (1904-1989)
and Rene Magritte (1898-1967). Although the Surrealism movement
influenced the creation of the Magic Realism art movement, Surrealists
focus primarily on psychological themes, while Magic Realists
tend to focus on alterations of physical reality.
Symbolism - An art style developed
in the late 19th century characterized by the incorporation of
symbols and ideas, usually spiritual or mystical in nature, which
represent the inner life of people. Traditional modeled, pictorial
depictions are replaced or contrasted by flat mosaic-like surfaces
decoratively embellished with figures and design elements.
Technique - a method or way of
working with materials to create a work of art.
Tenebrism - meaning dark and gloomy,
a style of painting in which light is rendered in great contrast
to dark to create a dramatic effect. Often, a work appears to
have a single source of illumination to highlight the primary
subject.
Tonalism - a style of painting
in which the artist attempts to accurately capture the visual
effects of the sunlight on the subject.
Trompe l'oeil (Trick of the Eye)
- A style of painting in which architectural details are rendered
in extremely fine detail in order to create the illusion of tactile
(tangible) and spatial qualities. This form of painting was first
used by the Romans thousands of years ago in frescoes and murals.
Verism - the 20th century concept
that not only items or subjects of great beauty are worthy of
art but that everyday subjects also have aesthetic value for art.
Vignette - a picture or painting
where the borders are undefined and seem to fade or blur away.
Visual Arts- All those that you
enjoy with your eyes. Painting is one of them.
Watercolors - A painting in which
the artist uses water-based paint containing water-soluble pigments.
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