Across
- 2. A sense of equilibrium achieved through implied weight, attention, or attraction, by manipulating the visual elements within an artwork
- 3. The line that defines the outermost limits of an object or a drawn or painted shape.
- 5. A visually misleading or perceptually altered space or object.
- 7. The comparative size relationship between the parts of a whole. For example, the size of the Statue of Liberty's hand relates to the size of her head. (See scale.)
- 8. lines Lines that dim, fade, stop, and/or disappear. The missing portion of the line is completed in the viewer’s mind.
- 14. The principle of visual organization that certain elements are more important than others in a particular composition or design.
- 16. perspective The illusion of depth produced in graphic works by lightening values, softening details and textures, reducing value contrasts, and neutralizing colors in objects as they recede
- 17. The manifestation through artistic form of a thought, emotion, or quality of meaning; synonymous with the term content.
- 18. That which is based, as nearly as possible, on physical actuality or optical perception. Such art tends to look natural or real.
- 19. Aptitude, skill, or quality workmanship in the use of tools and materials.
- 20. The pleasing quality achieved by different elements of a composition interacting to form a whole. This is often accomplished through repetition of the same or similar characteristics.
Down
- 1. A description applied to flat, two dimensional images or primarily graphic media such as fonts, comic books, and cartoons.
- 4. Art Artwork encompassing non-recognizable imagery, ranging from pure abstraction
- 6. plane The actual flat surface on which the artist executes a pictorial image. In some cases, this acts merely as a transparent plane of reference to establish the illusion of forms existing in a three dimensional space.
- 9. The representation in art, by form and content, of an event or story. Whether a literal story, event, or subject matter, or a more abstract relationship between colors, forms and materials.
- 10. Used to describe something as visually based, beautiful, or pleasing in appearance and to the senses. It is a term developed by philosophers during the 18th and 19th centuries and is also the academic study of beauty and taste in art.
- 11. A recurrent or dominant theme in a work of visual or literary art.
- 12. A visual formula that creates the illusion of depth and volume on a two dimensional surface. It also infers a particular vantage point or view.
- 13. The dark area that occurs on a surface as a result of something being placed between that surface and a light source.
- 15. of art Line, shape, value, texture, color the basic ingredients the artist uses to produce imagery. Their use produces the visual language of art.