Across
- 2. a style of painting, music, or drama in which the artist or writer seeks to express emotional experience rather than impressions of the external world.
- 4. A style of art in which the subject matter is portrayed by geometric forms, especially cubes
- 6. An artistic movement that displayed vivid dream worlds and fantastic unreal images
- 11. A 19th century artistic movement in which writers and painters sought to show life as it is rather than life as it should be
- 14. artistic movement in which artists rejected tradition and produced works that often shocked their viewers with its stance of anti-war and anti-art.
- 15. an art movement, focused on basic geometric forms, such as circles, squares, lines, and rectangles, painted in a limited range of colors. It was founded by Kazimir Malevich in Russia, around 1913
- 17. Deriving from the orderly qualities of ancient Greek and Roman culture; implies formality, objectivity, simplicity, and restraint.
- 20. An artistic movement that expressed world that could not normally be seen, like dreams and fantasy.
- 22. "rebirth"; following the Middle Ages, a movement that centered on the revival of interest in the classical learning of Greece and Rome
- 24. Art a style of art that exploits the physiology of seeing in order to create illusory optical effects
- 26. Renaissance A period in the 1920s when African-American achievements in art and music and literature flourished
- 27. An early-20th-century Italian art movement that championed war as a cleansing agent and that celebrated the speed and dynamism of modern technology.
Down
- 1. an art movement in sculpture and painting that began in the 1950s and emphasized extreme simplification of form and color
- 3. a style of American painting of the 1920s and 1930s characterized by abstracted form, crisp contour, and static composition and usually depicting industrial or architectural subject matter.
- 5. A 19th-century movement in which art became infused with exaggerated sensitivity and a spooky mysticism. It was a continuation of the Romantic tradition.
- 7. Nouveau a style of decorative art, architecture, and design prominent in western Europe and the US from about 1890 until World War I and characterized by intricate linear designs and flowing curves based on natural forms.
- 8. visual art created in public locations, usually unsanctioned artwork executed outside of the context of traditional art venues
- 9. A German interdisciplinary school of fine and applied arts that brought together many leading modern architects, designers, and theatrical innovators.
- 10. Very elaborate and ornate (in decorating or metaphorically, as in speech and writing); relating to a highly ornate style of art and architecture in 18th-century France
- 12. Means "wild beast". Bold, shocking color. Joyous tone, usually.
- 13. a style of art where painters try to catch visual impressions made by color, light, and shadows of the moment
- 16. (Pointillism) small, distinct dots of color in order to create impression of mixing color and appearance of various images
- 18. Deco Descended from Art Nouveau, this movement of the 1920s and 1930s sought to upgrade industrial design in competition with "fine art" and to work new materials into decorative patterns that could be either machined or handcrafted. Characterized by streamlined, elongated, and symmetrical design.
- 19. Art art based on modern popular culture and the mass media, especially as a critical or ironic comment on traditional fine art values.
- 21. Art an art movement in which landscape and the work of art are inextricably linked
- 23. Art A kind of art in which subjects are religious, figures look flat and stiff, important figures are large, subjects are clothed with little emotion, and it is flat and two dimensional with a single color background.
- 25. European architecture, music, and art of the 17th and 18th centuries that followed mannerism and is characterized by ornate detail. Often considered a Catholic art style, it actually was produced by Protestants as well and was characterized by intensity, tension, great emotion, and bombast. Peter Paul Reubens is often acknowledged as the great representative of this style.