Across
- 4. Art that uses two-dimensional geometric shapes to depict three-dimensional organic forms.
- 8. Art where the idea, rather than the actual object is the most significant feature. Particularly popular in the 1960's.
- 9. A portrait an artist makes using themselves as the subject.
- 10. Introduced by the Cubist, the technique of creating a work of art by adhering flat articles to a flat surface creating a three-dimensional result.
- 11. Colors opposite each other on the color wheel. When to complimentary colors are mixed together you will get a neutral tone
- 12. The art technique where an artist employs different types of physical materials, such as ink and pastel or painting and collage, etc., and combines them in a single work.
- 13. Art made on a grand scale, involving the creation of a man-made environment such as architecture, sculpture, light or landscape.
- 15. Painting, usually an altarpiece, made up of hinged panels.
- 16. A style of painting which depicts subject matter as it appears in actuality or ordinary visual experience, without distortion or stylization.
- 17. A principle in art where important elements and ideas are emphasized via composition.
- 18. From the Italian word meaning "drawing" which also implied planning and composing.
Down
- 1. An art form in which the artist's body is the medium.
- 2. Art that rejects true visual representation.
- 3. A process, used by printmakers, of incising or scratching lines into a wood block or metal plate from which a print was made.
- 5. A consistent or recurrent conceptual element, usually a figure or design.
- 6. Art made with the use of a computer program.
- 7. In reference to perspective, eye-level is the artists' view of where the perceived line or perspective came from.
- 9. One color plus the two colors that are on either side of its complement on the color wheel.
- 11. The arrangement of the parts of a work of art.
- 14. The depiction of subjects and scenes from everyday life, ordinary folk and common activities.