Art Terms
INDEX
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Abstraction
The process of leaving out of consideration one or more properties of
a complex object so as to attend to others
Adumbration
A sketchy, imperfect or faint representation
Altarpiece
A painted or carved screen placed above and behind an altar or communion
table
Aquatint
A method of etching that imitates the broad washes of a watercolor
Baroque
An elaborate ornamentation in decorative art & architecture that flourished
in Europe in the 17th century
Carver
An artist who creates sculpture
Charcoal
Impure carbon prepared from vegetable or animal substances. Finely prepared
charcoal in small sticks used as a drawing implement.
Chiaroscuro
The arrangement and relationship of light against dark parts in a work
of art
Classical Style
The artistic style of ancient Greek art with its emphasis on proportion
and harmony
Commission
To order an original work of art from the artist
Conservation Framing
Using materials and techniques in the framing process to ensure framing
do not damage artwork. Hinging the artwork instead of mounting it, using
high-quality acid-free boards and mats, using no staining paste, and glazing
with conservation glass or acrylic are generally accepted procedures used
to help preserve artwork. The same procedures are sometimes referred to
as "preservation framing."
Copperplate
An engraving consisting of a smooth plate of copper that has been etched
or engraved
Crosshatching
Shading consisting of multiple crossing lines
Diptych
A painting or carving on two panels
Display
Something shown to the public; a visual representation of something
Distort
To twist and press out of shape
Dry mount
The process of using dry adhesive substances to mount paper artwork or
photographs to a board, using high heat and a dry mount press.
Ecce Homo
A representation of Jesus wearing a crown of thorns
Edition
Number of prints made from an original. This number generally does not
include any artist proofs or any special editions.
Enamel
When painting, used upon a ground of metal, porcelain, the colors afterward
being fixed by fire
Engraving
Making engraved or etched plates and printing designs from them
Etching
Making engraved or etched plates and printing designs from them
Fauvism
An art movement launched in 1905 with work characteristic of bright, non-natural
colors and simple forms. This influenced Impressionists.
Fillet
A thin moulding used as an accent in framing inside another moulding,
liner or mat.
Fine Art
The products of human creativity; works of art collectively
Folk Art
Genre of art of unknown origin that reflects traditional values of a society
Fresco
The art of painting on freshly spread plaster before it dries, or in any
manner
Genre
A class of art having a characteristic form or technique
Giclée
A Giclée (pronounced
Zhee-Clay) is a French phrase coined in the 17th Century. It refers to
a technology brought forth by a machine called the Iris. The support material,
such as paper or canvas is carefully attached to a spinning drum while
infinitely small pixels of rich, vibrant archival inks are sprayed at
a very high speed. This renders an amazingly smooth and consistent image,
a Museum Quality Fine Art Reproduction...
Glaze
A glossy finish on a surface, to varnish
Gold leaf
Very thin leaves of real gold that are burnished onto a wood frame that
has been coated with several layers of other material in preparation.
The process is expensive because of the use of precious metal.
Gouache
A watercolor executed by using opaque watercolors mixed with gum
Grisaille
Chiaroscuro painting in shades of gray imitating the effect of relief
High Renaissance
The artist style of early 16th century painting in Florence and Rome ;
characterized by technical mastery, heroic composition and humanistic
content
Hue
Color or shade of a color
Idiom
The style of a particular artist, school or movement
Illustration
A general term used for a drawing or an original work of art
Image
A visual representation of an object, scene or person produced on a surface.
Image Size
The size of the work reproduced on a print, not the overall paper size.
Impasto
Painting that applies the pigment thickly so that brush or palette knife
marks are visible
Impression
A print on paper from a wood block, metal plate, linoleum, etc.
Intaglio
A printing process that uses an etched or engraved plate, the plate is
smeared with ink and wiped clean, then the ink left in the recesses makes
the print
Landscape
A painting depicting an expanse of natural scenery
Laquer
A varnish consisting of a solution of shella in alcohol, often used for
varnishing metals
Lithography
The process of putting designs or writing, with a greasy material, on
a stone, and of producing printed impression there from. The original
painting is photographed and the image is burned into four plates for
a full color printing process. The ink comes from a roller on a printing
press. High quality lithographs use a very fine dot screen on acid free
paper with fade resistant inks.
Mannerism
A deliberate simulation or exaggerated display
Medium
A liquid with which pigment is mixed by a painter
Mezzotint
Print produced by an engraving that has been scraped to represent light
or shade
Model
The act of representing something
Modernism
Genre of art and literature that makes a self-conscious break with previous
genres
Monochrome
Painting done in a range of tints and tones of a single color
Montage
A collage made by sticking together pieces of paper or photographs
Mural
A painting that is applied to a wall surface
Numbered
A numbered print is designed to show the limit or size of a print edition.
The number is generally placed over the size of the edition. For example
12/500 indicates that the print is number twelve out of an edition of
500. Lower numbers used to mean a sharper image, but with modern printing,
the last print should be as sharp as the first "off the press".
Oil paint
A paint made by grinding a coloring substance in oil
Open Edition
The print produced has an unlimited size. The print may or may not be
signed by the artist. An unsigned, unnumbered print is basically just
a poster.
Original
Buying an original means you have the only one. It is the actual painting
or work of art done by the artist. Most times, no reproductions are made
of a painting. When a print has been made, the original painting is what
was photographed for the reproduction. This makes the original to a limited
edition print more valuable in that the piece becomes well known and more
appreciated. Usually the original is larger than the print.
Painting
The work of a painter; a painted representation of any object or scene;
a picture.
Palette
The range of color characteristic of a particular artist, painting, or
school of art
Pastel
A crayon made of paste composed of a color ground with gum water
Pencil
A slender cylinder or strip of black lead, colored chalk, slate, graphite
used for drawing
Pigment
Dry coloring matter; especially an insoluble powder to be mixed with a
liquid to produce paint
Pointillism
A genre of painting characterized by the application of paint in dots
and small strokes; developed by Georges Seurat and his followers in late
19th France
Polychrome
Having or exhibiting many colors
Pop Art
An American school of the 1950's that imitated the techniques of commercial
art and the styles of popular culture and mass media
Portrait
Any likeness of a person; a painting of a person's face and sometimes
their body
Post Modernism
Genre of art, literature and architecture in reaction against principles
and practices of established modernism
Print
A printed picture produced from a photographic negative
Quattrocentro
The Italian Renaissance art & literature in the 15th century
Rabbet
The groove under the lip of the moulding that allows space for the mat,
glass, art and mounting board.
Remarque
A small original sketch done by the artist, often outside the actual image
of the print. It may be in pencil, watercolor or pen and ink. A remarqued
print is more desirable to many serious art collectors. A remarque adds
value to a print in that it then becomes one of a kind with the addition
of the original artwork by the artist.
Renaissance
The period of European history at the close of the Middle Ages and the
rise of the modern world; a cultural rebirth from the 14th century through
the 17th century
Representation
Creation that is a visual or tangible rendering of someone or something
Rococo
A fanciful asymmetric ornamentation in art and architecture that originated
in France in the 18th century
Romanticism
A movement of literature and art during the late 18th and early 19th centuries
that celebrated nature rather than civilization
Scratch
A depression scratched or carved into a surface
Semblance
Picture consisting of a graphic image of a person or thing
Sketch
A preliminary drawing for a later elaboration
Signature
Sometimes refers to the signature on the plate itself but is generally
the artist's actual signature on the print after printing.
Signed Only
The artist signs the print only. It is not numbered and is sometimes referred
to as an "open edition".
Signed and Numbered
Refers to an artist's signature (generally in pencil) and the numbering
of the edition.
Sold Out
A limited edition print is no longer available at issue price and is being
sold at secondary market prices.
Still life
A work of art depicting inanimate objects such as fruit, flowers, bottles
Synthetism
A genre of French painting characterized by bright flat shapes and symbolic
treatments of abstract ideas
Triptych
A painting or carving consisting of three panels
Trompe L'oiel (Pronounced 'Tromp-Loy')
A painting rendered in such great detail as to deceive the viewer concerning
its reality
Vignette
A small illustrative sketch or painting that appears to float suspended
on a surface
Virtue
Artistic quality
Wash
A thin coat of water-based paint
Watercolor
A painting produced by using water-soluble pigments
Work
The total output of an artist
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