1b.painting Vocabulary
1b.painting Vocabulary
1b.painting Vocabulary
What is art?
This is a big, big question. Here are some basic distinctions you may want to consider.
The fine arts
The fine arts are what most people mean when they just say art. These include artistic
disciplines such as painting and sculpture. Typically, they are objects created to be beautiful.
Arts and crafts
A craft is a similar, related concept and we do use the term arts and crafts. In arts and crafts,
objects are created by hand. A good example would be tapestry.
The visual arts
These are the ones we look at and include paintings, drawings and photographs. Does cinema
count? For some people, yes. Television?
The plastic arts
These are the ones we can touch. A sculpture and a piece of pottery are examples.
Performance art
This is when you see someone performing and what they do/produce is a piece of art. Theatre
can be called a form of performance art. There is also a relatively new phenomenon of the street
artist.
Pictures
There are many types of pictures. If it is a picture of somebody, it is generally a portrait. if it is
a picture of a place, it is generally a landscape. While a picture of an object by itself is a still
life.
Three genres of picture possibly worth knowing are a watercolour which is painted onto paper,
an oil painting which is normally painted onto canvas (a tent like material) and a sketch which
is normally a preparatory drawing.
Philosophies of art
Art has changed greatly over the ages. There are specific differences between Renaissance art,
Mannerism, the Baroque, the Pre-Raphaelites, Impressionism and Cubism. Generally speaking,
we talk about:
figurative/representational art: this is where the painting/object looks like something from life
abstract art: this is where you see squares, circles and other shapes and you cannot
(immediately) tell what the painting is about
contemporary art: this is the art of now. Its dangerous to use the word modern because
modernism in art actually happened quite a long time ago (the 1930s was probably its heyday).
Asymmetrical balance is a form of balance attained when unequal units create a sense of
equilibrium in the pictorial field.
A focal point is a radial type of balance. It occurs when two or more identical elements
are distributed around a center point to create a repetitive equilibrium.
Color
The character of a surface that is the result of the response of vision to the wavelength of light
reflected from that surface. Color can have emotional, psychological and physiological effects.
Color/Hue
[The word color is the general term which applies to the whole subject - red, orange,
yellow, green, blue, violet, black and white and all possible combinations thereof. Hue is
the correct word to use to refer to just the pure spectrum colors.]
Primary
Secondary
Intermediate
Harmony
The related qualities of the visual elements of a composition. Harmony is achieved by
repetition of characteristics that are the same or similar.
Variety
The use of opposing, contrasting, changing, elaborating or diversifying elements in a
composition to add interest and individualism. The counterweight to harmony in a work of
art.
Unity
The appearance of oneness, all parts working together.
13.Glazing: Is the process of layering thin transparencies of paint. It creates luminous effects
because light can pass through them and reflect back from the surface of the painting.
14.Ground: The initial layer or surface of the painting which serves as a barrier between the
canvas and the paint.
15.Horizontal: Side to side, suggests calmness.
16.Impasto: A thick application of paint. Rembrandt used it for highlights in a painting. This
technique added both spatial and expressive qualities to his work.
17.Imprimatura: An initial stain of color painted on a ground. It provides a painter with a
transparent toned ground, which will allow light falling onto the painting to reflect through the
paint layers. The term itself stems from the Italian and literally means "first paint layer".
18.Linear: Having to do with a line.
19.Local color: The "actual" naturalistic color of an object -- as opposed to subjective color
which is exaggerated or invented.
20.Matte: A dull surface as opposed to a shiny surface
21.Negative Space: In two and three-dimensional art, the space between and around shapes and
forms
22.Opaque: An application of media that completely covers, for example, any underneath
drawing or color. The opposite of transparent, light cannot pass through it.
23.Picture Plane: The surface of a painting or drawing itself.
24.Point of view: The angle from which the object is seen.
25.Pulling: A painting technique whereby paint is removed by a rag or brush to expose areas
beneath the outermost layer of paint
26.Scumbling: A technique where paint is lightly dragged over a dry surface. It does not entirely
cover the surface and allows underneath areas to show through.
27.Varnish: A mixture of solvent and a resin, such as damar or alkyd. They are used to create an
even gloss or matte finish over a surface that restores the original appearance of wet paint.
28.Vertical: Straight up and down, suggest strength and stability.
29.Wash: A thinned paint made from a solvent (as in the case of oil paint) or water (as in the case
of acrylics).
30.Wet into Wet: A technique of painting when wet paint is applied onto a wet surface. This is
essential for blending colors. Painting is often done by applying paint directly onto wet surfaces
so blending and color mixing can be done directly on the canvas rather than on the palette.