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ABSTRACT ART This general term
refers to works executed in accordance with the principle that lines,
forms and colors possess aesthetic values which may be arranged into
pleasing COMPOSITIONS devoid of normal subject matter.
The principle is very old and can be traced back to Plato.
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM.
As
the name implies this refers to a combination of ABSTRACT and
EXPRESSIONIST
styles whereby an artist allows his subconscious to create involuntary
shapes with splatters and dribbles of paint. It is best typified by the
paintings of Jackson Pollock.
ABSTRACT IMPRESSIONISM
Principally
the same thing as ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM applied with uniform,
IMPRESSIONIST
like brush strokes. De Kooning said of it, "...the Impressionist
manner of looking at a scene but leaving out the scene."
ACRYLIC
Acrylic
vinyl polymer paint. This uniquely versatile plastic emulsion was
frowned upon when it emerged in the late 50's but it is now generally
estimated to be the most resilient MEDIUM and is
widely accepted in museum circles.
ACID FREE
-
pH neutral. The discoloration of paper derived from wood is caused by
the interaction of lignin, (the gummy substance that binds the cellulose
fibers together), acidity and sunlight. By buffing the paper with
calcium carbonate a pH neutral balance can be achieved, thereby
preventing discoloration. Such papers, (and rag paper which has no
lignin), are termed ACID FREE. Prints made on ACID FREE paper will last
for centuries provided that they are (i) treated with care, (ii) matted
with archival mats, (iii) are protected from acid migration from the
backboard by an acid free barrier sheet.
AESTHETIC
Belonging
to the appreciation of the beautiful and in accordance with the accepted
principles of good taste.
AIRBRUSH
Mechanical
device similar in appearance to a pen and similar in application to a
miniature spray gun which allows the artist to propel paint or ink onto
to the SUPPORT in minute quantities. Good airbrushes are "double
action" and allow the artist to control both the quantity of paint
being applied and the quantity of air propelling it using the
"x" and "y" axis of a single lever.
ALLA PRIMA.
See OIL PAINTING.
A/P
See ARTIST'S PROOF
APPLIQUÉ
A
work composed of pieces of material sewn together.
AQUATINT
An
18th century ETCHING technique used to imitate
WATERCOLOR
washes. See INTAGLIO.
ART DECO
1930's
style of decoration reminiscent of ART NOUVEAU.
ARTIST'S PROOF.
An IMPRESSION taken from the
PRESS
prior to the main PRINT run to satisfy the artist in
regard to color and quality .
ART NOUVEAU.
The
words mean "new art" but this 1890's movement was mainly a
style of decor and architecture. Most popular in Belgium and England, it
was known in Germany and Austria as "Jugendstil" and in Italy
as "Stile Liberty". It featured stylish figures and flat
patterns of writhing vegetable forms often with heart shaped holes in
furniture. It's had no immediate art counterpart but much of it's lavish
stylization. was incorporated into the works of Klimt and Beardsley.
B.
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BAROQUE A 17th Century union of
painting, sculpture and architecture associated with Catholicism
designed to emotionally overwhelm the spectator. Subjects were generally
religious (such as the agonies and ecstasies of the saints) richly
executed in an unidealized, naturalistic style.
BLOCK
(aka
PLATE) The surface which contains the image that is to be printed. It
may have been worked directly by the artist, it may have been
mechanically produced by photographic methods, either way it is
contained within the PRESS, receives the
INK
and carries the image onto the PAPER.
BODYCOLOUR
Originally
a type of opaque water soluble paint used during the 15th - 19th Century
which was made opaque by the inclusion of lead white. This term is
currently used as a general description for any opaque water color.
BRUSH STROKES
These
are the marks left in the paint by the passage of the brush. Stiff
bristle brushes charged with thick paint leaves a special texture and
quality of handling which is generally considered to be aesthetically
pleasing in itself, independent of the form it represents. A painter's
brush work is as personal as his handwriting, but harder to imitate.
C.
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CANVAS Strong cloth made from flax
or hemp used as a SUPPORT for paintings.
CANVAS BOARD
Canvas
mounted on board used as a SUPPORT for paintings.
CARICATURE
A
drawing, often comical, created on the principles of exaggerated
characteristic features with the intention of stressing traits of
personality .
CARTOON
This
has nothing to do with Disney or Loony Toons. It's a drawing of the
principle forms of a COMPOSITION drawn to the same
scale as the final painting.
CAST PAPER
Hand
made paper applied to a mold to produce a picture in relief within the
main body of the paper.
CHALK
Originally
this term referred to chalks found in nature which were used for drawing
purposes. The chalk was broken into small lumps and inserted into metal
holders. This term has also come to refer to colored pigments made into
sticks with a binder. See PASTEL.
CHARCOAL
Wood
reduced to carbon in an oxygen starved heated chamber made into sticks
or pencils.
CLASSIC ART
(aka
ROMANTIC) This term is used to refer to forms of art derived from the
study of antique and scholarly art.
COLLAGE
A
COMPOSITION of shaped pieces of paper or material, usually painted,
drawn or printed, glued to a supporting surface.
COLOR SEPARATIONS
Transparent
gels (usually 4 or 6) which isolate the information relating to each
color to be run on a printing PRESS. These are used in
photomechanical printing to produce the PLATE for each
color. Modern presses run all color plates simultaneously.
COLOR WHEEL
A means of visualizing the theory of how colors relate to one another.
To construct a color wheel draw a circle and place an equilateral
triangle within it so that the corners of the triangle touch the circle.
Each corner represents a PRIMARY COLOR. Write
"red" beside one, "blue" beside the second and
"yellow" beside the third. When these colors are mixed equally
they form gray, so write "gray" in the center of the wheel.
The outside of the wheel represents the most vivid form of any color
which progressively becomes grayer as you approach the center of the
wheel. The mixture of any two colors can be theoretically projected onto
a line which is drawn between those colors, the exact location on that
line will depend upon the proportions used. In the case of PRIMARY
COLORS this will fall somewhere on the triangle. A mixed color is always
less vivid than the colors it originated from since the line between
them always passes closer to gray. The color wheel can also be used to
determine COMPLEMENTARY COLORS which influenced POINTILLIST
and the NEO- IMPRESSIONIST theory of creating shades
through OPTICAL MIXTURES.
COMPLEMENTARY COLORS.
When
relating to any color this term refers to the corresponding color on the
opposite side of the COLOR WHEEL. E.g. for each PRIMARY
COLOR, red, yellow and blue, the complimentary color is formed by an
equal mixture of the other two. It was considered part of the
IMPRESSIONIST
theory that figures painted in PRIMARY COLORS had the complimentary
color contained within the shadow that figure cast, thus a red object
contained green in its shadow.
COMPLEMENTARY PALLET.
Collection
of colors chosen based upon their ability to complement one another
based upon the theory of COMPLEMENTARY COLORS .
COMMERCIAL ART
Not FINE ART. Artwork produced in the course of, or in
respect to, commercial endeavor.
COMPOSITION.
This
is loosely used to refer to the arrangement of the parts of a picture,
but is more properly applied to the art of arranging elements of a work
of art into a visually satisfying whole. A well composed picture is made
up of elements which may be figures or objects or simply shapes, which
form a harmony which is aesthetically pleasing when regarded simply as a
two dimensional pattern on a flat ground. The word is also used loosely
to mean a work of art.
CONTOUR.
The
outline of any element of a COMPOSITION which defines it in relation to
the rest of the work and represents an expression of the degree of
fullness of forms, variety of texture and density of matter.
CRAQUELURE.
The
network of cracks on the surface of an old painting, caused by shrinkage
and movement of the GROUND.
CROSS HATCHING.
See HATCHING.
CUBISM
This
apparently abstract art form first emerged amidst a flood of controversy
in 1907. Started by Picasso and Braque and derived from the work of Cézanne
the art form is concerned with analyzing the interaction of stylized
forms with regard to their position in space (and to some extent time.)
Self proclaimed as a realist movement , it materialized in the form of
superimposed multiple views that influenced all abstract work
thereafter.
D.
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DECORATIVE ART. A general term
used to describe paintings or prints which have been produced for the
specific purpose of being used for decoration (often in association with
an Interior Decorator). They usually incorporate a popular interior
decor color scheme. Passive, inoffensive subjects. This kind of art is
considered to be KITSCH by purists.
DIPTYCH.
A
work in the form of two related paintings or panels placed side by side.
DIVISIONISM.
See POINTILLISM.
DRY MEDIUM.
This
term is used to describe all forms of drawing materials,
CHALK, CHARCOAL,
GRAPHITE, PASTEL,
etc.
DRYPOINT.
A
form of INTAGLIO printing using a similar process to
ENGRAVING.
The principle difference being that the graver is pulled across the
PLATE
and not pushed.
E.
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EDITION The entire number of
IMPRESSIONS
of a particular PRINT. An OPEN EDITION is one without
restrictions. The artist is free to produce millions of impressions if
he so wishes and may reprint at any time. LIMITED EDITION refers to the
practice of limiting the number of impressions made of a particular
print and creates a rarity value for the benefit of collectors. The
impressions are signed by the artist and numbered. A number such as
50/300 would indicate that the impression is number fifty of a total of
three hundred produced. This should not be confused with what are known
as SIGNED AND NUMBERED PRINTS. See INSCRIPTIONS.
ENGRAVING
A
form of INTAGLIO printing whereby an image is created
by scoring a metal PLATE with a sharpened rod, [a
graver]. The inked PLATE transfers the image in reverse onto the
PAPER.
However this term should only be applied when the graver is pushed
across the plate and not pulled. See DRYPOINT.
ETCHING
A
general term referring to a number or INTAGLIO print
making techniques where lines marked on a prepared metal PLATE
are eaten away [etched] by acid.
EXPRESSIONISM
Characterized by exaggerated line and color this art movement abandoned
realism in search of expressiveness and emotional impact. It's roots are
in the simplified outlines and vivid colors of Van Gogh but it also has
clear affinities with FAUVISM. Renowned exponent -
Toulouse-Lautrec.
F.
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FAUVIST This term relates to a
group of artists whose works were hung in one room of the Paris Salon in
1905. The works were, for that time, very loose, violently colored and
full of exaggerated lines. These artists were dubbed "Les
Fauves", (the wild beasts). The group included Matisse, Marquet,
Roualt and Vlaminck. Later Braque and Metzinger exhibited with them, but
the group, which was never very coherent, had disbanded by 1908.
Although ridiculed at the time this disorganized group influenced the
development of EXPRESSIONISM.
FINE ART(S)
Those
referred to by scholars as being chiefly concerned with the mind and
imagination. In short, art for art's sake. Not created for decorative,
illustrative or commercial purposes.
FIXATIVE.
A
lacquer used to fix drawings made in DRY MEDIUM.
G.
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GEL MEDIUM A thick, clear
ACRYLIC
MEDIUM used to produce IMPASTO paintings. See
MEDIUM.
GESSO
A
primer, usually containing gypsum or pumice, used to prepare a the
SUPPORT to receive paint
GICLEE Pronounced 'jee-clay'
is a French term used to describe a specialized process in which
pigmented inks are applied to canvas or paper to reproduce a fine art
reproduction.
Highly trained technicians spend countless hours in spectrophotometry,
matching color hues and textural effects of original pieces of art.
Using high-resolution digital photography and scanning equipment
exceeding tens of thousands of dollars, a fine art reproduction is then
created picking up every nuance of the original painting.
GLAZING.
Originally
applied to OIL PAINTING. This term refers to the
application of a transparent layer of color over a solid one so that the
color of the first is profoundly modified, e.g. a transparent layer of
red over yellow will produce the effect of orange whilst providing the
benefit of additional depth to the color. This technique was used by
most of the OLD MASTERS.
GOUACHE.
Water
soluble paint made opaque by the addition of chalks or whites plus a gum
or resin binder which is popular amongst designers.
GRAPHIC ARTS.
Those
such as drawings and engravings which depend upon line and not color to
achieve their effect.
GRAPHITE.
A
crystalline allotropic form of carbon used in "lead" pencils.
GROUND.
This
is the surface which is applied to the SUPPORT as a
foundation for the paint, usually Gesso, occasionally white paint. Some
artists do not bother with a GROUND, painting directly on to the
SUPPORT. According to the DICTIONARY OF ART AND ARTISTS (Penguin Books)
"...on canvas this practice is always, eventually, fatal".
Prepared canvasses come with the GROUND already applied.
H.
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HANDLING. This is the name given
to the most personal aspect of a painting - the execution. Certain
features of a work, such as color, subject or COMPOSITION
can be used to identify a painting within a given School or period. The
way in which an artist handles his tools and medium is highly personal
and the hardest thing to plagiarize.
HATCHING.
This
is a form of shading using parallel lines; CROSS HATCHING
is shading with two layers of parallel lines, one laid across the other
at opposing angles.
H.C.P.
stands
for HAND COLORED PRINT and refers to a print, usually made in one color,
that then has extra colors added by hand. See INSCRIPTION
H.T.P.
-
HAND TINTED PRINT. Same as H.C.P. See INSCRIPTION
HYPER-REALISM.
Extream NATURALISM. See
SUPER_REALISM
I.
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ICON. Originally a 6th or 7th
century picture of Christ on a religious panel conforming to shapes and
images prescribed by the orthodox church this term has been widely
accepted into modern dialogue to refer to an esteemed person or image
which represents a specific time or place. Marilyn Munroe is an icon of
glamour and femininity... Jimi Hendrix is an icon of the drug culture of
the 60's. In this context modern artists will often refer to
"personal icons" to describe images or symbols that have
special meaning for them and which are common to their work.
ICONOGRAPHY. Classically the
knowledge of the meanings attached to pictorial representation . In
modern terms it is often used as a broad term to refer to an artist's
symbolic use of personal icons
IDEAL ART. This has been the
subject of many philosophical debates over the centuries. The concept is
based upon the premise that IDEAL ART does not represent a particular
thing, rather the thought of all such things. For example, if an artist
paints a chair rather than being preoccupied with the details of the
particular chair in front of him, he should paint a chair which
represents the idea and spirit of such chairs. This issue has been
clouded by the art school training exercise of making detailed paintings
and drawings of particular objects. Such studies in form and color are
exercises in gaining representational skills and are not generally
considered to be works of art.
The theory of IDEAL ART is based upon the
writings of the great nineteenth century critic John Ruskin who defined
IDEAL ART as follows: "Any work of art which represents not a
material object, but the mental conception of a material object, is in
the primary sense of the word ideal; that is to say, it represents an
idea and not a thing. Any work of art which represents or realizes a
material object is, in the primary sense of the term, un-ideal."
Ruskin was undoubtedly influenced by Plato who expounded the theory that
the only true realities are ideas and everything perceptible to the
senses is merely an imperfect realization of the primary idea.
ILLUSTRATIVE ART.
A
general term used to describe paintings or prints which have been
produced as illustrations of popular subjects (such as cars or animals)
or activities or advertising. It is almost always
NATURALIST
and considered by purists to be non intellectual.
IMPASTO.
A
technique whereby thick, expressive, layers of paint are applied to the
SUPPORT.
When the paint stands up in lumps leaving clearly evident
BRUSH
STROKES. It is said to be "heavily impasted."
IMPRESSIONISM.
Described
as "wretched", and "insulting", when it first
emerged in 1874, this movement was ridiculed, and critics compared the
paintings to the scribbles a child might produce. The term, derived from
a picture by Monet "Impression, Sunrise" (1872), was intended
to be derogatory. Nevertheless, this small band of artists were uniquely
important and emerged as the first movement of MODERN ART.
Impressionism was a reaction against
classical and academic values. For many hundreds of years paintings had
depicted scenes of historical, intellectual, or classical subjects. The
elements of these works were clearly outlined and the compositions
strictly adhered to academic principles. Public thought regarding art
and good taste was dictated by the academies. Impressionism started out
as a search for less contrived works, a more naturalistic approach,
where contours are blurred by light and atmospheric conditions,
depicting ordinary, every day subjects, rather than the heroic or
romantic. Compositions did not immediately reflect art theory, although
they were usually well balanced and pleasing to the eye. The
Impressionist's main interest was in the reflection of light and their
vivid colors were influenced by contemporary scientific theory as to the
nature of light. However, the very nature of the impressionists excited,
patterned, brush strokes and their vivid colors made the viewer
instantly aware of the surface of the paintings and opened the door for
the many theories of modern art which followed.
There were only eight Impressionist
exhibitions. The first in 1874 and the last in 1886. The principle
exponents were Monet, Renoir, Sisley, Pissarro, Cézanne, Degas,
Guillaumin, Boudin and B. Morisot.
IMPRESSIONS.
The
proper term used to refer to one of many copies of a particular image,
usually printed on a sheet of paper (often inaccurately refered to as a
PRINT).
The term PRINT is correctly applied to the whole EDITION
in so much as an artist may be credited as making 10 PRINTS when he has
in fact made 500 IMPRESSIONS of 10 images.
INK
Dense
transparent fluid used for writing, drawing and printing.
INSCRIPTIONS.
Once the IMPRESSIONS of a
PRINT have
left the PRESS they may still be subject to variation.
The artist may decide to sign them or mark them with one of a number of
INSCRIPTIONS. This term refers to any writing on a print or its margin
that is not a signature. The following are the most commonly used: A.P.
stands for ARTIST'S PROOF. H.C.P. stands for HAND COLORED PRINT. H.T.P.
- HAND TINTED PRINT. S/N - SIGNED AND NUMBERED PRINTS. REMARQUE.
INTAGLIO PRINTS.
All
manner of printing where the PAPER receives the INK
from incised lines on a metal PLATE and not from the
surface of the PLATE. The PRESS often uses rollers to
push dampened PAPER into the scored lines on the PLATE and thereby pick
up the INK. This type of printing is typified by a
PLATEMARK
depression in the PAPER. The principle INTAGLIO printing techniques are:
AQUATINT. DRYPOINT.
ENGRAVING. ETCHING.
MEZZOTINT.
INTUITIVE ART.
See NAIVE ART.
J
K.
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KITSCH. This is a derogatory term
used to describe works created specifically in order to pander to public
demand; works executed entirely for commercial purposes and not as an
instrument of self expression. This term highlights a dilemma that faces
many artists since the majority want their works to sell. The onus is
upon the intent. If an artist executes a work in consideration of those
qualities generally held, in art circles, to be necessary in a work of
art but the subject, or style, or manner of execution, is incidentally
popular with the general public, it is not considered to be Kitsch.
L.
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LACQUERS. See
VARNISHES
LIMITED EDITIONS
See EDITIONS
LINOCUTS.
See WOODCUTS
LINSEED OIL
Oil
extracted from the seed of flax, commonly used as the base for
OIL
PAINT
LITHOGRAPHY.
A printing process based upon the repulsion of water by grease. Areas
not to be printed are treated with a greasy medium. Water based
INK
applied to the plate does not stick to the treated area and is therefore
not carried onto the paper. The IMPRESSION produced is
a mirror image of the original. This process originally used a stone
PLATE
and was executed by hand however in a modern context this term is often
used to refer to OFFSET LITHOGRAPHY.
M.
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MAISONITE Compressed board
commonly used as a SUPPORT for painting.
MEDIUM.
Originally this term referred to the substance used to bind pigments to
make paint. However it has consequently come to refer to the various
types of painting techniques and materials, thus "........... works
in this medium are typified by ......"
MEZZOTINT.
A form of INTAGLIO printing whereby the whole
PLATE
is roughened to produce a burr which will carry INK.
The artist then scrapes down the burr in proportion to the degree of
lightness required. Very few IMPRESSIONS can be taken
from this type of delicate PLATE before it becomes damaged.
MODELING PASTE
An
additive used to make ACRYLIC paints sculptable.
MODELLO.
A
drawing of a principle form of a composition made on a reduced scale in
preparation for a larger work.
MONOTYPE PRINTING.
This
refers to a means of producing original works by painting directly onto
a PLATE (sometimes a sheet of glass) with
INK
and applying it to the PAPER before the INK dries.
N.
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NAIVE ART (aka INTUITIVE) Art
produced in a childlike manner by untrained artists living in relatively
modern societies, (commonly confused with PRIMITIVE ART). It is admired
for its genuineness and the purity of artistic impulse. Renowned
exponents include Rousseau and "Grandma" Moses.
NATURALISM
the non-stylized representation of objects derived from making an
accurate likeness of reality.
NEO CLASSICISM
A mid 18th Century art movement started in Rome and aimed at recreating
the art of ancient Greece and Rome. It was a reaction to the excesses of
Baroque and Rococo and part of a Classical revival that prevailed into
the 19th Century.
NEO IMPRESSIONISM
This
term refers to a group of artists, most prominently Seurat but also
Signac and Pissarro, who moved from Impressionism to optical mixtures in
the form of POINTILLISM. They were first seen in 1884.
This movement had a strong but passing effect on Van Gogh, Gauguin, and
Toulouse-Lautrec to name but a few.
NEUTRAL TONES
The tones created by mixing a PRIMARY,
SECONDARY
or TERTIARY color with it's COMPLEMENTARY
color, (in such proportions that neither color is predominant).
NON OBJECTIVE ART
The
purist form of abstract art containing no reference to real objects and
consisting only of shapes textures and colors.
O.
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OIL PAINT. Powdered pigment mixed
to a thick consistency with linseed, poppy or nut oil which remains wet
for long periods and therefore encourages wet on wet techniques. Gradual
oxidization of the linseed oil causes the paint to harden. Full cure can
take many months. Introduced in the 15th Century, this slowly supplanted
TEMPERA as the most popular painting technique. There are two
principle oil painting methods. The first comprises of direct
application to the canvas and is known as ALLA PRIMA.
This manner suits ABSTRACT works but does not utilize
the full potential of the MEDIUM. The second method is
that preferred by the old masters. involving a tonal monochromatic
underpainting to which color is applied in transparent
GLAZES.
Final tonal adjustments are made with the addition of opaque paint or
SCUMBLING.
OFFSET LITHOGRAPHY
A printing process based on the same principle of the repulsion of water
by grease as LITHOGRAPHY. However, the inked image is
transferred to a drum before being printed on the
PAPER
which allows the final image to be printed in the same direction as the
original.
OLD MASTERS.
This
term refers to the great painters of past centuries. Artists who, with
the benefit of hindsight, scholars hold to be exemplars of
FINE
ART.
OP ART
An art movement based upon the creation of optical effects which
encourage the viewer to see visual illusions.
OPAQUE.
Solid. As applied to paint it refers to color which cannot be looked
through and completely covers other colors over which it may be placed.
OPEN EDITIONS
See EDITIONS
OPTICAL MIXTURES.
Intermingled
dots or flecks of colors, placed side by side, which are combined in the
viewer's brain to apparently produce a color that is not there, (See
POINTILLISM).
ORIGINAL.
One
of a kind. The first, (having served as a pattern), novel in character
or style, inventive, creative, not derivative, not imitative, not a copy
of another. In art the term "an original" is gernerally used
to refer to a work of art that is executed by hand and is not derivative
of another work. However it can also refer to artwork in any medium
(including photography, original printing or electronic mediums) that
are one of a kind and not derivative.
ORININAL PRINT.
A
printed image that was created by working the PLATE to create a piece of
art that is not imitative of, or generated from, another work. Examples
of such PRINTS would be AQUATINTS. DRYPOINTS.
ENGRAVINGS. ETCHINGS,
MEZZOTINTS, MONOPRINTS,
LINOCUTS & WOODCUTS.
P.
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PAINTERLY. A description referring
to the HANDLING of a painting whereby the presence of
the artist is clearly visible in the work by means of brush strokes and
interpretation. Such works are usually a free representation of form in
patches of colored light and shade.
PALETTE.
Principally
a flat or shallow receptacle for holding and blending paint, this term
has also come to refer to the specific selection of colors used by a
particular artist. Hence: "...... using a blue/green palette"
meaning a selection of blues and greens.
PALETTE KNIFE.
Originally
used by artists for scraping up and mixing the paint from the palette,
this implement has been adopted for the application of heavily impasted
paint which is spread thickly like butter.
PAPER.
Substance
used as a SUPPORT for writing, drawing, painting and
printing made from interlaced fibbers. It is believed to have been
invented in China at the beginning of the second century AD.
The essential ingredient of most papers
is a cellulose fiber (although many modern papers also contain synthetic
fibers). Cellulose occurs in nature and, together with a substance
called lignin provides the structural support for all plants. Until the
19th century the only source of fiber for paper was cotton and linen
rag. At the beginning of the 19th century, wood began to replace rags as
the source of fiber for paper. This resulted in papers which are often
brittle and which quickly discolored. This is largely because the
lignin, which is left in the unrefined wood pulp paper, tends to oxidize
as a result of the interaction of acidity and sunlight. Chemical
treatments involving bleach and calcium carbonate minimize this problem.
Rag paper, being
ACID FREE
(pH neutral) does not discolor and is therefore widely used for
conservation quality prints and artworks.
PASTEL.
DRY
MEDIUM comprising of compressed pigment combined with just
enough gum to bind it together. Most notable exponent - Degas
PASTICHE.
An
imitation of a renowned artist's work consists of a number of motifs
copied from authentic works combined into a new work in such a way as to
give the impression of being a newly discovered original by that artist.
PASTICCIO.
(See
PASTICHE.)
PLASTICITY.
Quality of a painting, sometimes referred to as plastic values, when the
figures depicted appear to be exceptionally three dimensional.
PLATE.
See
BLOCK
POINTILLISM.
A
NEO-IMPRESSIONIST technique akin to OPTICAL MIXTURES, whereby closely
intermingled dots or flecks of vivid colors, placed side by side, are
combined in the viewer's brain to apparently produce a new color which
is more vivid than if that color had been produced by blending. This
term was disliked by the NEO IMPRESSIONISTS who
preferred the term DIVISIONISM.
POP ART
Art
movement based upon the premise of accepting artifacts of popular
culture as valid art forms in themselves. First popular in England in
the mid 50's with artists such as David Hockney, the movement reached
its height in the 60's with American artists such as Warhol,
Lichtenstein, Wesselmann, Jasper Johns and Rauschenberg. It is sometimes
claimed to have developed as a reaction to ABSTRACT
EXPRESSIONISM.
POST IMPRESSIONISM
The
movement that followed NEO-IMPRESSIONISM deriving from
an exhibition in London England in 1910. The movement is best typified
by a renewed desire to stress the importance of the subject. Principle
figures were van Gogh, Gauguin and Cézanne.
PRESS. See PRINTING PRESS
PRINTING PRESS.
The press is the machine on which the IMPRESSIONS are
produced. It mechanically transfers the original image onto the
SUPPORT
which is, in modern times, usually PAPER. The PRINTING
PRESS is purported to have been invented in the 17th Century but
undoubtedly methods of transferring images from one surface to another
existed long before that.
PRINTS .
See IMPRESSIONS
PRIMARY COLORS.
Red,
yellow and blue.
PRIMITIVE ART
Commonly
misused to refer to NAIVE (aka INTUITIVE) ART, this term is more
accurately applied to artifacts of primitive cultures.
Q
R.
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RAG PAPER Paper derived from rags
which is widely used for CONSERVATION QUALITY prints and artworks
because of it's ACID FREE qualities.
REALISM
Considered
by purists to be the repudiation of IDEAL ART and the
search for the squalid and depressing as a means of life enhancement it
is also regularly used to refer to the non-stylized representation of
objects derived from making an accurate likeness of reality, which many
purists refer to as NATURALISM.
REMARQUE.
An original sketch made by the artist on the margin of a print which by
virtue of its originality is intended to greatly increases the value of
the print.
RENAISSANCE
Vague term referring to the revival of art influenced by classical
models during the 14th, 15th and 16th Centuries. The term is generally
considered inadequate to describe a period covering the works of Giotto,
Donatello, Michealangelo, Raphael, Leonardo Da Vinci and Titian.
RELIEF SCULPTURE.
A
sculpture which, intended to be viewed from one side, which is carved or
modeled from a flat tablet or plaque.
ROCOCO
A
style of European interior design (1715 - 1740) originating with the
death of Louis 14th. Typified by gaiety and comfort, C scrolls, counter
curves and asymmetrical arrangements. It produced some spectacularly
beautiful ornate churches, (especially in Germany and Austria), and
featured artists such as Hogarth, Guardi and Goya.
ROMANTIC ART.
See CLASSIC ART.
S.
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SCUMBLING. Is an opaque version of
GLAZING. It consists of working a layer of opaque
paint over another layer of a different color or tone creating an uneven
broken effect so as not to entirely obliterate the lower layer.
SECONDARY COLORS
Orange, green and violet, the colors created as a result of mixing
PRIMARY
COLORS.
SERIGRAPH
[SILK-SCREEN
PRINT]. In its finest form, this is generally considered to be the
highest quality of hand pulled reproduction. A series of screens are
produced, one for each color or shade being used. This can sometimes
involve as many as 100 screens each of which must be hand applied
individually to each sheet of paper. Sometimes an artist will finish the
work by hand painting some areas.
SILK-SCREEN
See SERIGRAPH
SKETCH.
Preliminary,
rough drawing often used to record details, likenesses or potential COMPOSITIONS
during the development of a work of art.
S/N. SIGNED AND NUMBERED PRINTS.
This
term refers to a limited number of IMPRESSIONS set aside from an
OPEN
EDITION to be signed by the artist. This is indicated by the prefix
S/N. An INSCRIPTION such as S/N 10/200 indicates that
out of an unlimited number of IMPRESSIONS only 200
were signed and this is the tenth. Not to be confused with a
LIMITED
EDITION.
STILL LIFE.
Although popular in the ancient world STILL LIFE did not emerge as a
primary subject until the seventeenth century. In general terms it
describes compositions entirely comprised of inanimate objects. Such
works can be broken into four groups:
1. The Vanitas type, religious works
where the objects chosen are arranged to remind the viewer of the
transience and uncertainty of mortal life. These might include skulls
dying flowers hourglasses, candles etc.
2. The Symbolic type, where objects
portrayed have a significance beyond their individual appearance. These
might include bread, wine, water, and other religious references.
3. Collections of objects, usually
luxurious, arranged to show off the painter's virtuosity.
4. Tutorial exercises designed to help
art students develop their representational skills and examine theories
of color and composition. These are not generally considered serious
works of art.
SUPER-REALISM Art movement of the
early 70's that emerged as a reaction to
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM
that produced non-emotional non-stylized representations akin to
NATURALISM
that appear at first glance to be photographs.
SUPPORT
The
material or surface that a work is drawn or painted on.
SURREALISM
Defined
by Breton as "the process of thought free from the exercise of
reason and every aesthetic and moral preoccupation", this 1924
hallucinatory art movement was a development of the irrational dictates
of the subconscious mind. Renowned exponents include Dali and Magritte.
SYMBOLISM
A late 19th Century art movement that would use a material object to
represent something sacred or immaterial. A good example would be a lamb
as a symbol of Christ. Principle exponents include Moreau, Redon,
Gauguin, and Rodin.
T.
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TEMPERA A type of paint
incorporating dry color, (usually chalk or powder), a glutinous
substance, (such as egg yoke or gum), and water. Tempera was the most
commonly used medium until the introduction of OIL PAINT.
TERTIARY COLORS
The colors created by mixing a PRIMARY COLOR with an
adjacent SECONDARY COLOR. For example, turquoise is a
TERTIARY
COLOR which is derived from mixing the PRIMARY COLOR,
blue, with the SECONDARY COLOR, green.
TEXTILE ART
A
general term used to describe works of art created using textiles.
TRIPTYCH.
A
set of three associated paintings displayed side by side.
U.
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UNDER PAINTING. A tonal painting,
(sometimes monochromatic), over which additional paint,
SCUMBLES
and GLAZES are applied to produce additional depth.
This is a common practice even with opaque paints which rarely cover in
one coat.
V.
(Please scroll down to the relevant word)
VARNISH AND LACQUERS Clear
protective coating usually applied to completed artworks.
W.
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WATERCOLOR. A vivid water based
paint, usually applied to paper, which provides outstanding brilliance
and translucence. Purist techniques demand the application of thin
glazes without recourse to BODYCOLOUR. However the
four most acclaimed exponents, Cozens, Girtin, Turner, and Cotman all
used unconventional methods including mixed MEDIUM.
WOODCUTS
AND
LINOCUTS. One of the oldest types of printing is the WOODCUT where an
image is drawn on the surface of a wooden BLOCK, the
areas to remain white are cut away. INK is applied to
the remaining surface and the image is transferred in reverse onto the
PAPER.
This can be done either by hand or by using a PRESS.
The modern equivalent uses linoleum instead of wood and is called a
LINOCUT.
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