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Henri Matisse and Romare Bearden both utilize ____ & _____ ______ to create order and harmony in their versions of the Piano Lesson. | Color and shape repetition |
African-American artist Faith Ringgold records the story of her life and dreams on a Harlem rooftop. Her painted memories are depicted within the framework of a(n) _________. | Patchwork quilt |
In his family 1907 photograph, Alfred Stieglitz captures the juxtaposition of the upper and lower classes on board the Kaiser Wilhelm II ship. This photograph is titled _________. | The Steerage |
Images painted directly on a wall or intended to cover a wall completely, such as Jose Clemente Orozco’s Epic of American Civilization: Hispano-American, are known as _______. | murals |
Marc Chagall self-portrait I and Village can best be described as a depiction of _____________. | fantasy |
In Laurie Simmons’ photograph Red Library #2, the perfect room and robot-like woman are meant to symbolize ______. | The dangers of too much order |
The use of space and atmosphere in Max Beckmann’s The Dream could be best described as ______. | Claustrophobic and compressed |
Located in Istanbul, Turkey, the _____ was build as a Christian church in 532-537 CE but was converted to an Islamic mosque in 1453 and now serves as a museum. Its _____ is especially wondrous, appearing to float on light streaming through its row of windows. | Hagia Sophia; dome |
Marcel Duchamps Fountain is a readymade, produced from an upside-down ____. | trashcan |
Judy Chicago’s triangular installation called the Dinner Party was constructed to honor and immortalize _______. | History’s notable women |
The 19th-century painter Jean-Francois Millet wrote, “I try not to have things look as if chance had brought them together, but as if they had a necessary bond between them.” Here, the artist is expressing his quest for ________ in his art works. | harmony |
In Betye Saar’s The Liberation of Aunt Jemima, the artist is protesting the use of Aunt Jemima as a(n) _______. | stereotype |
Picasso protested the horror and brutality of the Spanish civil war in his 1937 masterpiece painting known as ________. | Guernica |
In Nighthawks, Edward Hopper’s desolate scene of late night diners in a city café, the scene seems to be set in the period of the _____. | 1940’s |
An Anti-commercial movement begun in the1960s in which works of art are conceived and executed in the mind of the artist is known as ____. | Conceptual art |
Light against dark or dark against light creates visual differences in _____. | Value |
_____ are formed when intersecting or connected lines enclose space. | shapes |
Using their signature combination of the body and braided hair, the Gerlovins created a modern revision of _____, one of the most popular themes of the Renaissance. | Madonna and Child |
In art, a _____ is usually defined as a moving dot and is both the simplest and most complex of the visual elements. | line |
_____ creates the illusion of roundness or three dimensionality through the use of light and shadow on a two-dimensional surface. | modeling |
Diagonal lines are often used to ____. | Imply movement and directionality |
The _____ shape of an artistic composition is considered the background. | negative |
In works with ______, the lines are completed by the viewer. | Implied line |
In Emily Mary Osborne’s Nameless and Friendless, _________ visually connect and lead the viewer’s eye around the composition. | Gestures and glances |
The process of organizing the visual elements to achieve a desired aesthetic in a work of art is known as _________. | Design |
Pictorial balance can be found in which of the following? | Leonardo da Vinci’s Proportion of Human Figure |
The device of _____ to create unity is reflected in the ages of the youth, their ethnicity, and their suggested bond of friendship in Delilah Montoya’s Los Jovenes (Youth). | Continuity |
The compositional unity in Thomas Hart Benton’s Palisades derives primarily from _________. | Curvilinear shapes and lines |
Unlike two-dimensional compositions, three-dimensional objects such as sculptures often have ______. | Actual balance |
Leonardo da Vinci’s Proportion of the Human Figure can best be considered an example of ____. | Bilateral symmetry |
_________ refers to the portrayal of people and things as they are, with no idealization or distortion. | realism |
Roy Lichtenstein’s Forget It! Is an example of Pop Art that has the visual appearance of a _____. | Comic strip |
In expressionistic art, the artist intentionally distorts colors and forms in the composition in order to achieve a(n) ____. | Sense of chaos |
______ refers to a distinctive handling of elements and media associated with the work of an individual artist, a school or movement, or a specific culture or period. | content |
The form of an artwork includes all of the elements that make up the composition except _____. | Subject matter |
Walter de Maria's the lightning field is considered a spectacular example of ________. | land art |
Peter Testa believes we "need to rethink how we assemble buildings" and has designed a high-rise tower out of ____. | woven carbon fiber |
the oldest form of printmaking is ________, and most likely the first people to use it where the ancient _______. | woodcut; Chinese |
the advent of the camera replaced the age-old need of art to imitate nature as closely as possible, and this change, in turn, led to the development of 20th century artistic _____. | abstraction |
william wegmans blue period is a canine spoof on ____. | picasso's old guitarist |
one of the best preserved ancient roman aqueduct systems is the ____ near nimes, france. the ____ of the limestone blacks allowed for the weight of three tiers of arches. | pont du gard; compressive strength |
the binding agent that powdered pigment is mixed with to form paint is known as the _____. | vehicle |
the primary purpose of ______ is to preserve memories of persons or events | monuments |
Andy goldsworthys ice piece was produced using | his breath |
intaglio prints are made from ______ into which lines have been incised | metal plates |
many of the artist chuck closes unidealized portraits such as self portrait/conte crayon, are based on a _____, which produces blurry photographic likenesses. | a grid transfer method |
the gothic, pointed arch church of notre dame is bathed in light due to its ample _____. | fenestration |
the faces in faith ringgolds soft sculpture mama jones, andrew, barbara, and faith are reminiscent of ________. | african masks |
rembrandt copied ______ but addedsome aditional features to his own sketched version | Leonardo da vinci last supper |
in the lost wax process, molten metal is poured into a fire-resistant mold known as a ______. | investiture |
lithgraphy, invented in the beginning of the 19th century by a german playwright, is a planographic, or ______, printing process in which a _____ is used. | surface; stone slab |
dorothea langes mirgant mother is a touching photograph take during the period of | the great depression |
in the ___ process, the artist creates clean-cut lines on a plate of copper, zinc, or steel by forcing a sharp burin across the surface with the hell of the hand | engraving |
broadly defined, _____ is the art of running an implement that leaves a mark over a surface. | drawing |
Louis Sullivans rigid horizontal and vertical processions of facade elements that suggest the regularity of the spaces within his wainwright building reinforce sulivans famous motto that ______. | form follows function |
in silverpoint drawings, the drawings surface must be coated with a ground of ____. | bone dust or chalk mixed with gum, water, and pigment |
higher quality photographs are said to have higher _________. | resolution |
the oldest known type of ink is india or china ink, made form a solution of _____. | carbon black and water |
true fresco, or _________, is executed on damp _____. | buon fresco; lime plaster |
the traditional composition of tempera, rarely used today, consisted of _________. | egg, pigment, and water |
the word photograph is derived from greek roots that mean ________. | to write with light |
the botanical whimsies of _______ are considered some of the finest examples of art nouveau glass. | Tiffany |
william henry fox talbots first "photogenic drawings" were eerie, delicate photographs of ______, produced from a ______ | plants; negative |
for the gatesm cristo and jeanne-claude installed _____ throughout central park in Feb of 2005 | saffron colored fabric panels |
which of the following is not an additive sculptural process | carving |
the fluidity and portability of watercolor has often lent itself to ___________ | rapid sketches and preparatory studies |
native american potter Lucy M. Lewis produces her finely made acoma pueblo pots through th elaborious process of _________. | coiling |
due to its ______,clay is frequently used to make three-dimensional preparatory sketches for other sculptures. | weakness |
in both the camera and the ________, light enters a narrow opening and is projected onto a photosensitive surface. | human eye |
miriam schapiros maid of honour is a paint-and-fabric construction hat she labeled ________ | femmage |
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