Renaissance Art Vocabulary
Across
- 5. A late Renaissance style characterized by artificiality, elongated limbs, and exaggerated poses, signaling a shift away from the balance of the High Renaissance.
- 8. The system where wealthy families (like the Medici), Popes, or guilds commissioned and funded artists to create specific works.
- 9. A gallery or room with one or more open sides, especially one that forms part of a house and has a colonnade.
- 10. A cultural movement that shifted focus from divine religious matters to human potential, achievements, and the study of Classical Greek and Roman texts.
- 12. Creating the illusion of depth by painting distant objects paler, bluer, and less detailed to mimic the effect of the atmosphere.
- 13. A small, dome-like structure on top of a building.
- 15. is defined as the financial support, privilege, or protection provided by an individual or organization (the patron) to an artist or group.
- 16. A style of representation that portrays objects and figures as they appear in the natural world.
- 18. The art of painting on fresh, moist lime plaster with water-based pigments so the art becomes part of the wall (e.g., the Sistine Chapel).
- 19. An arrangement of figures in a triangular shape, providing a sense of stability and balance to the work.
Down
- 1. The "weight shift" pose rediscovered from Classical antiquity that gives figures a relaxed, lifelike appearance.
- 2. A circular painting or relief sculpture, popular for domestic artworks.
- 3. An individual who excels in a wide range of fields, including art, science, engineering, and philosophy (e.g., Leonardo da Vinci).
- 4. Perspective A mathematical system for creating the illusion of space and distance on a flat surface using a vanishing point and orthogonals (receding lines).
- 6. A technique used to depict an object or figure in a picture in depth, making it appear shorter than it actually is to create an illusion of projection.
- 7. Paint A slow-drying paint made with pigments and oil. Its introduction allowed for much finer detail and more vibrant colors than previous methods.
- 8. A public square or marketplace, often the focal point of Renaissance urban design.
- 11. A fast-drying painting medium consisting of colored pigments mixed with a water-soluble binder, usually egg yolk.
- 13. The use of strong contrasts between light and dark to create a sense of three-dimensional volume in figures.
- 14. A piece of art placed behind the altar in a church; these were often polyptychs (multi-paneled paintings).
- 17. A technique of blending colors so softly that there is no perceptible transition (the "smoky" effect seen in the Mona Lisa).