Art History Vocabulary PDF

Summary

This document provides a list of art history vocabulary terms and definitions. It covers concepts like Renaissance art, classical art, and various artistic techniques. Ideal for art students and enthusiasts.

Full Transcript

Medium or media: the material you use to create art Renaissance: a rebirth of a classical ancient art Classical: the new interest in arts of the ancient Greeks and Romans Humanism: the celebration of human achievement Florence: wealthy people commission art; the birth place of the Italian renais...

Medium or media: the material you use to create art Renaissance: a rebirth of a classical ancient art Classical: the new interest in arts of the ancient Greeks and Romans Humanism: the celebration of human achievement Florence: wealthy people commission art; the birth place of the Italian renaissance Duomo: the Florence cathedral Dome: the tall structure that spans over an opening Linear perspective: what was created by Bumicei to accurately portray buildings and figures; the correct way to make more accuracy orthogonal lines: lines that come from the front and the back vanishing point: all the lines go contrapposto: a way that humans show their statues relief sculpture: a sculpture on a flat surface Sculpture in the round: when you can walk around the sculpture Fresco: when you have a wall and put plaster on it Cartoon: a large piece of paper that is the rough draft for the painting Iconography: symbolizes when one thing stands for something else; when ideas come together for a certain meaning Atmospheric perspective: when something is far away; you don\'t see it well tempera paint: powdered pigment and binder (egg yolk) trompe ioeil: fool of the eye foreshortening: when things that are in front of you look bigger putti: naked flying babies that aren\'t angels pediment: triangular component above columned parch pilaster: fire standing column stuck to something column: fire standing supports Attic story: a story that is located above the main cornice of a building and is either fully or partially within the roof framing lost wax technique: clay is wrapped around wax, fires in a kiln, then pour Melton metal inside altarpiece: sculpture or painting above alter table Michelangelo: from Florence and proud and got a lot of jobs from Rome Leonardo da Vinci: digital renaissance Pyramidal composition: a 3D triangle shape they could make with an ice bottom Chiaroscuro: means lights are dark; hard to see Sfumato: golden haze (used in the Mona Lisa) Vitruvian man: portioned perfect of a man Vatican: Latin name for saint peter\'s burial location catholic reformation: used sacred art and architecture to expand faith Polychrome: many colors Patronage: person or instituted who funds artwork Parchment: animal skin substance illuminated manuscript: man written book that isn\'t the final Flanders: modern day Belgium Altarpiece: painting or sculpture above or behind alter table Tapestry: design or picture woven into fabric Woodcut: painting process where image is carved in wood Engraving: carving out a material to create a design protestant reformation: a time where art was used to warn against sin Martin Luther: Protestant reformer who wrote 95 theses that led protest against western churches garden of earthly delights: shows act of the human appetite Albrecht Durer: used self portraits to capture human image and had confidence to make art about himself and excelled at realism still life: art of nature or objects secular art: non religious art Hans Holbein the younger: court painter for henry the 4^th^ Baroque: 17th century drama and still life Illusionism: using painting to create optical illusions Caravaggio: baroque painter who had a bit of criminal history and mastered tenebrism Artemisia Gentileschi: female painted who joined her father in painting used techniques of Caravaggio Velazquez: one of the most important Spanish painters in the 17th century of western art Rubens: fusion of the traditions of Flemish realism with the classicizing tendencies of the Italian renaissance genre scene: scenes of everyday life historically in art raking light: the illumination of objects from a light source at an oblique angle or almost parallel to the surface tenebrism: intense light and dark where the dark dominates in the image painterly: characterized by color and texture, rather than line Triptych: a three-part work of art often 3 panels attached together Impasto: the texture produced by paint applied very thickly still life: an artwork depicting an arrangement of objects, typically including fruit, flowers, bowls or glassware stucco: fine plaster that can be easily carved and used to cover walls to decorate a surface Versailles: 17th century French art camera obscura: a prescover of the modern camera light proof box with a small hole in one side through which an inverted image of the world outside is projected onto an opposite wall from the Latin for dark room vanitas: Latin for vanity, a sub-genre of painting containing symbols of death or change as a reminder of their individuality etching: a print making process that uses the action of acid to make a design scratched into a coating on a metal plate dry point: a printmaking technique that involves engraving an image into a metal plate using a sharp tool, such as a needle gliding: a decorative technique that involves applying a thin layer of metal to a surface to give it a luxurious finish

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