Man Ray Glass Tears
Across
- 3. Stark lighting technique used to emphasize emotional tension in Glass Tears
- 6. The deliberate arrangement of shapes and textures in a photo
- 9. what man ray did to leave USA
- 11. Man Ray’s dreamlike imagery links to this psychological concept
- 14. Glass Tears uses this format, framing only a part of the face
- 18. Feeling suggested by the cropped face and absence of other visual context
- 20. Man Ray was part of this avant-garde art movement
- 22. The political or artistic movement rejecting traditional forms
- 24. Postmodern art often uses this technique to question originality
- 26. The simulation of emotion that feels more “real” than reality itself
- 28. City where Man Ray was born
- 29. Man Ray’s given first name
- 31. The surreal, unconscious quality of Glass Tears can be described this way
- 32. Artistic representation shaped by historical context
Down
- 1. Subjective frame sees this inner world as a key source of artistic meaning
- 2. Man Ray was originally from this country
- 4. The rayograph technique shows this postmodern trait — using no camera
- 5. The emotional tone evoked by Glass Tears
- 7. Personal reflection or emotional reaction to an artwork
- 8. The artificial tears in Glass Tears evoke this human feeling
- 10. Art movement prior to postmodernism that valued innovation and purity
- 12. This frame looks at elements like medium, composition, and lighting
- 13. Glass Tears comments on how glamour and emotion are bought and sold — a question of ___
- 15. The direction from which light is cast in an image
- 16. Cropping technique Man Ray used to direct attention to the eyes and tears
- 17. Analyzes art through historical or social context
- 19. Term for cutting-edge, experimental art like Man Ray’s
- 21. A camera-less photo technique he pioneered
- 23. This frame focuses on personal or emotional response
- 25. A formal principle involving symmetrical or asymmetrical arrangement
- 27. Glass Tears mimics melodrama to expose its artificiality — a form of ___
- 30. Man Ray often manipulated this photographic element to create contrast and abstraction