Across
- 3. A rejection of perspective and the creation of depth, emphasizing the two-dimensional or literal three-dimensional nature of the artwork.
- 6. A structured, orderly arrangement of lines or shapes.
- 9. The use of repeated, similar elements to create a sequence.
- 10. Materials that are mass-produced or commercially available (e.g., steel, neon tubes, plywood), often factory-made rather than handcrafted.
- 12. Using a single color or shades of a single color.
- 13. Art that does not depict or imitate the real world.
Down
- 1. A term coined by Donald Judd to describe works that are neither painting nor sculpture, but simply objects.
- 2. A theory applied to minimalism where the viewer perceives the entire, overall structure as a single "whole" rather than just its individual parts.
- 4. Refers to artwork with constituent parts that can be rearranged, separated, or recombined.
- 5. The idea that the artwork is simply a physical object, not a representation of something else.
- 7. The use of identical forms repeated in a balanced manner
- 8. Precise, clean, and sharp edges between areas of color.
- 11. Stripping away emotional or narrative content to reach the essential, basic form.
