Abstract Any art in
which the depiction of real objects in nature has been subordinated or entirely
discarded, and whose aesthetic content is expressed in a formal pattern or
structure of shapes, lines and colours. Sometimes, the subject is real but so
stylized, blurred, repeated or broken down into basic forms as to be
unrecognizable. Sculpture that is partly broken down in this way is called
semiabstract. When the representation of real objects is completely absent, as
opposed to realistic or figurative sculpture, such art may also be called
nonrepresentational or nonobjective, a term first used by Wassily Kandinsky
(1866-1944). An abstract element or intention appears in works of art and
decoration throughout the history of art, from Neolithic stone carvings onward.
But abstraction as an aesthetic principle began in the early 20th century with
Braque (1882-1963).
Achromatic Black, white and greys.
Artwork that is executed without colour.
Acrylic Thicker and
stronger than tempera or watercolour paint, Acrylic is a water-based "plastic"
paint.
Albumen Print This printing process is used in
photography printing processes. Egg whites are used in the emulsion.
Alternative Process This photography term covers approximately 35
different processes for the final unconventional effect.
Aquatint
A print produced by the same technique as an etching, except that the
areas between the etched lines are covered with a powdered resin that protects
the surface from the biting process of the acid bath. The granular appearance
that results in the print aims at approximating the effects and gray tonalities
of a watercolor drawing.
Architectural With relation to
sculpture, architectural means any component of a building or structure which
has been modelled, carved or welded by a sculptor and integrated into the whole
in some manner so as to embellish or enhance it, as distinguished from work
created for display independently. A caryatid is an example of this. And so is
an ornate fireplace surround or mantel. The two subjects or artforms of
sculpture and architecture have been closely related through the ages.
Armature(1) A structure used beneath something else for support. For
example, a sculptor might create a clay sculpture with a wood or wire armature
beneath it as support. Think about the frame of a house being constructed
before all of the brick or siding is built on top.
Armature(2) A construction made of wood, light or heavy
metal wire, bars or piping to support the wet clay, wet plaster or other soft
and pliable mixed media materials used by a sculptor to model a sculpture.
Art 1. The making or doing (hence the terms maker, creator,
and artist) by people of things that have form and beauty - see note
immediately following this entry. Sculpture, painting, architecture, music,
literature, poetry, drama, dance, and cinema are some of the forms of art. 2.
The actual sculptures, drawings, paintings, films made by artists. 3. Any of
certain areas of learning as philosophy, sculpture, music, etc. usually plural:
arts. 4. The ability to make or do things; skill (the art of cooking). 5. Any
craft or special knowledge (the art of healing). 6. A sly or cunning trick;
wile (the arts of a successful politician). Synonym study for the word Art: Art
is the ability to make or do something, especially something beautiful, in an
original way. Skill is the ability of an expert at doing something, especially
something that is useful or practical. Craft is the ability to do something
takes skill, but has been traditionally viewed as requiring less imagination
than art. (Sculpting a portrait is an art. Making a mould is a skill. Making a
body cast or moulage could be considered to be a craft).
Artists
Proof (1) A small group of outstanding prints for the artists use which
have been set aside from the edition prints.
Artists Proof
(2) An Artist's Proof is one outside the regular edition, but
printed at the same time or after the regular edition from the same plates
without changes. By custom, the artist retains the A/Ps for his personal use or
sale. Typically, 10% of the edition total is designated as A/P, or in the case
of a small edition, five graphics are usually so designated.
Artist's proof (3) One of the first proofs in a limited
edition of original sculptures. Must bear the artist's signature or mark, and,
since the early 20th century, is usually numbered.
Assembly
One of the 4 main methods a sculptor may use to achieve a desired overall form.
Basically constructing or adding existing shapes, objects or materials to one
another in a method other than welding to create a whole sculpture. See the
other 3 main ones:carving, modelling and welding. Note: say main with a tongue
in your cheek as artists are by definition always creating - not least the
methods by which to create with!!!
Atelier French term for
"printer's workshop."
Avant-Garde A group active in the
invention and application of new ideas and techniques in an original or
experimental way. A group of practitioners and/or advocates of a new art form
may also be called avant-garde. Some avant-garde works are intended to shock
those who are accustomed to traditional, established styles.
Bas relief French
for low relief. Basso-rilievo in Italian. In a bas relief, the figures project
only slightly and no part is entirely detached from the background (as in
medals and coins, in which the chief effect is produced by the play of light
and shadow). See Relief and Haut relief.
Base Also called
plinth. The base is what the sculpture is attached, fixed or mounted on. A
block (of any shape or dimension and material placed between a sculpture and
its pedestal). These terms can all be confused as a pedestal is also defined as
a base or foundation!
Basic colour principles All colour
theory is based on the principle that 'colour is light'. An object that we
see as red contains pigmentation which absorbs all of the coloured rays of
white light except the red colour, which it reflects. White pigment absorbs
none of the coloured rays, and black absorbs all of the colours of the
spectrum.
Balance An art and design principle concerned with
the arrangement of one or more elements in a work of art so that they appear
symmetrical (even) or asymmetrical (uneven) in design and proportion.
Batik Parrafin or beeswax is used to resist paint or dye on fabric
or paper. Designs and patterns are produced on the unwaxed areas.
Bisque When clay has its first firing in a kiln, it is called bisque
ware. At this point, the clay has changed composition and can no longer have
water added to it and turned back into a useable material.
Black The complete absence of light. Because of impurities, you can
not create black with pigments. In most black pigments, the is a slight blue
trace. A black surface absorbs all light.
Bon a Tirer When
the artist is satisfied with the graphic from the finished plate, he works with
his printer to pull one perfect graphic and it is marked "Bon a Tirer," meaning
"good to pull." The printer then compares each graphic in the edition with the
BAT before submitting the graphic to the artist for approval and signature.
There is standardly one BAT and usually it becomes the property of the printer
or workshop printing the edition.
Bronze (1) An alloy of
copper and tin, sometimes containing small proportions of other elements such
as zinc or phosphorus. It is stronger, harder, and more durable than brass, and
has been used most extensively since antiquity for cast sculpture. Bronze
alloys vary in color from a silvery hue to a rich, coppery red. U.S. standard
bronze is composed of 90% copper, 7% tin, and 3% zinc.
Bronze
(2) An alloy of copper and tin, sometimes containing small amounts of
other elements in varying proportions such as zinc and phosphorus. Harder and
more durable than brass and used extensively since antiquity for casting
sculpture. Bronze alloys vary in colour from silvery hues to rich, coppery red.
Different countries have different standards for the mix - and mixes also may
vary from one foundry to another. In its molten form, bronze is poured into the
main channel or sprue of an investment casing surrounding a sculpture to
produce the final cast piece of artwork.
Brayer In
printmaking, a Brayer is a roller which is used to apply ink to printing
surfaces.
Brushes Brush styles are designated by a letter
following a series number. Some basic brushes to meet your needs: F- Flats,
square edge, long bristle B- Brights, flat, square-edged, long sable R
- Rounds, pointed bristle L- Longs, flat, square-edge, long sable
Filberts- Flat, oval edge, long fibre
Bust In sculpture, a
portrait of a person that includes the head, neck, and part of the shoulders
and breast, usually (but not always) mounted on a base or column. It is by
definition figurative.It can be realistic or not. Compare with Portrait.
Callipers A device
with two moveable jaws used by sculptors to take measurements in the round
while working. Also used when making copies of original work. Come in different
sizes. Sculptor's callipers were originally only made of wood with brass
fittings - but can now also be found in metal.
Canvas
Fabrics that are prepared for painting. Available in panels, stretched on
frames, or obtained by the yard.
Carve The process (rather
"unforgiving") of taking away material from a given volume. Used on wood,
stone, marble, plaster, ice or other "hard" materials. In sculpture, it is the
act of cutting or incising the material into the desired form using knives,
chisels, gouges, points, saws, adzes and hammers. Usually a chisel is held in
one hand and driven into the material by a mallet held in the other. Modern
sculptors often "rough out" their sculptures using electricity powered tools.
Deemed "unforgiving" because you cannot afford to make the mistake of taking
too much material away!
Carving 1. See previous entry. 2.
The sculpture resulting from being carved (see above carving). A carved work
may be called a carving, but the word sculpture is often used in preference for
work of serious artistic and aesthetic value.
Caryatid In
architectural sculpture, the female figure that serves as a column supporting
an entablature. Usually a graceful figure dressed in long robes. From the
Greek. Male counterparts are Atlantes or Telamones.
Cast 1.
To reproduce an object, such as piece of clay sculpture, by means of a mould
(or mold). Also an artist may choose to cast from life real objects, or parts
of a body or the entire body. This is often referred to as moulage or life
casting. 2. A copy produced by this means. The original piece is usually of a
less durable material than the cast. See foundry and mould.
Casting 1. The process of making a mould (plaster, or
rubber, polymer and plaster, etc.) from an original. Also, loosely, the
activities that take place in the foundry. See Cast.
Cement
1. A building material made of lime, silica and alumina. Can be surface
coloured or loaded with pigments for an all-through colour. Used to create some
outdoor sculptures. The sculptor will either cast his sculpture by pouring the
cement into a mould cast from an original piece in a softer material, or work
the cement onto a metal armature using a variety of tools. 2. Any strong
adhesive used to join or repair materials such as rubber cement or cellulose
cement.
Ceramics (1) Used to describe the shaping,
finishing and firing of clay.
Ceramics (2) The art of making
objects of clay and firing them in a kiln. Wares of earthenware and porcelain,
as well as sculpture are made by ceramists. Enamel is also a ceramic technique.
Ceramic materials may be decorated with slip, engobe, or glaze, applied by a
number of techniques, including resist, mishima, and sanggam. Pots made be made
by the coil, slab, or some other manual technique, or on a potter's wheel.
Certificate of Authenticity Certifies the authenticity of
an individual piece in an edition.
Charcoal and Conte
Crayon In stick form, both give you a very strong, dark line. A
disadvantage to these crayons is that they break easily and tend to smudge. Can
be found is stick form as well.
Chiaroscuro In drawing,
painting, and the graphic arts, chiaroscuro (ke-ära-skooro) refers to the
rendering of forms through a balanced contrast between light and dark areas.
The technique which was introduced during the Renaissance, is effective in
creating an illusion of depth and space around the principal figures in a
composition. Leonardo Da Vinci and Rembrandt were painters who excelled in the
use of this technique.
Chop An impression made by the
artist, or by the printer seal.
Chroma This is the
intensity, or strength, or purity of a colour. Squeezing paint directly from
the tube to the palette is 'full chroma'.
Cibachrome A
process where a photographic print can be made directly from a colour
transparency.
Clay 1. A native earth consisting mainly of
decomposed feldspathic rock (feldspathic: grouping of crystalline minerals that
consist of aluminum silicates with either potassium, sodium, calcium or barium)
containing kaolin and other hydrous aluminous minerals. Becomes hard when baked
or fired. See Terra cotta. Used wet by the sculptor to build or model the form,
often over an armature of wood or metal: it is then called wet clay - as
compared with what is often called modelling clay 2. Sold under various names
such as Plasticine and Plastilina, originally made in Italy with tallow,
sulphur and high-quality clay. Also made less expensively with clay, an inert
filler and various petroleum oils and greases heated and thoroughly mixed - can
be variously coloured, i.e. made with graphite oil it is blackish and
yellow/green if made with normal car oil.
Coil method in
clay As one of the oldest methods used in the formation of pottery,
long strands of clay are laid on top of one another, joined by blending the
coils together.
Collage Collage is from the French meaning
"paste up". The combination of pieces of cloth, magazines and other found
objects to create artwork.
Collograph This name is derived
from the word 'collage'. It is an image built up with glue and other
materials.
Colour When light is reflected off an object,
colour is what the eye sees. The primary colours are red, yellow and blue. The
secondary colours are orange, purple and green.
Complementary
colours Complementary colours are those which appear opposite to one
another on a colour wheel. The complimentary colours are red and green, blue
and orange, and yellow and purple.
Composition The
arrangement of lines, colours and form.
Conte The modern
pencil lead invented by Nicolas Conte. It is a black, red or brown
chalk.
Contour Drawing Contour drawing shows the outline of
the subject, and not the volume or mass of an object. Blind contour drawings
are those created by looking only at the subject, and not the paper while
drawing.
Contrast Contrast is created by using opposites
near or beside one another, such as a light object next to a dark object or a
rough texture next to a smooth texture.
Core In sculpture,
the core is the solid internal portion of an investment mould for casting a
hollow piece of sculpture (such as a portrait). The amount of space left
between the core and the mould (occupied by wax before it is "lost), determines
the thickness of the cast metal. The core is made of foundry sand (can also be
same as investment material) in sand casting and in the lost-wax process.
Crackle glaze Tiny cracks in the glaze to decorate. Often
rubbed in with colouring material.
Crazing Crazing is the
fine cracks that occur on the glaze.
Distemper This
painting technique involves the use of powdered colours that are mixed with
glue size, or such things as egg yolk.
Dominance Dominance
is an object or colour that stands out in relation to the rest of the
painting.
Dry Brushing Technique used in paintings using
more pigment then water.
Dye Transfer This is one of the
most permanent colour processes. This method gives maximum control of colour,
balance and contrast for colour prints or transparencies.
Earthenware This
type of clay needs to be glazed, it is porous and not waterproof. Earthenware
is a low-fire clay.
Easel An easel is used to support your
canvas while painting. Can be a collapsible tripod, studio types and as a
combination sketch box unit. Some sketch boxes contain lids that serve as
easels.
Edition (1) A group of identical prints that can be
numbered and signed by the artist. Open Edition: An unlimited number of
prints Limited Edition: Prints that have a known number of impressions, and
are usually signed and numbered by the artist.
Edition (2)
The making of replicas or copies of a sculptor's work. See Limited edition.
Egg Tempra A water-base paint made with an egg yoke
binder.
Elements of Art Elements of art are the basic visual
symbols found in the work such as lines, shape, form, space, point, light,
motion, direction, scale, dimension, texture and colour.
Encaustic This ancient art uses coloured wax for painting. This
technique involves painting images onto walls with pigments that are blended
with wax. When used with heat, such as an iron, the permanent colour is burned
into the wall, for good.
Etching The technique of
reproducing a design by coating a metal plate with wax and drawing with a sharp
instrument called a stylus through the wax down down to the metal. The plate is
put in an acid bath, which eats away the incised lines; it is then heated to
dissolve the wax and finally inked and printed on paper. The resulting print is
called the etching.
Figurative Of or
portraying the (human or animal) figure. Figurative sculpture can be either
realistic (in varying degrees...) or stylized.
Firing (1)
To harden clay, you have to heat it at high temperatures which fuses the clay
particles.
Firing (2) Exposing to heat in a kiln a clay body
to harden it (see Terra cotta) or an investment casing containing wax so as to
"lose it" which is an integral part of the lost-wax process . See Foundry.
Fixative Spray For fixing charcoal drawing on canvas before
painting. Fixative spray is available in spray cans, or for use with mouth
atomizer.
Foreshortening The diminishing of certain
dimensions of an object or figure in order to depict it in a correct spatial
relationship. In realistic depiction, foreshortening is necessary because
although lines and planes that are perpendicular to the observer's line of
vision (central visual ray), and the extremities of which are equidistant from
the eye, will be seen at their full size, when they are revolved away from the
observer they will seem increasingly shorter. Thus for example, a figure's arm
outstretched toward the observer must be foreshortened--the dimension of lines,
contours and angles adjusted--in order that it not appear hugely out of
proportion. The term foreshortening is applied to the depiction of a single
object, figure or part of an object or figure, whereas the term perspective
refers to the depiction of an entire scene.
Form An element
of art, such as you would see in a sculpture that has three dimensions.
Foundry The building or place where the casting of bronze
takes place by the lost-wax, sand casting or ceramic shell processes. Typically
a foundry will have subdivisions of activities taking place. Most often these
breaks down to mould making or the making of a negative container, then the
pouring of wax into the moulds, cleaning up the seams from the wax, then making
a core, spruing and gating the wax cast of the sculpture with wax strips or
rods (sprues and gates) which will ensure the smooth arrival of the molten
metal into the negative space formed when the wax is "lost", encasing the
entire piece into an investment, then "losing" the wax out of the invested
piece by firing it, finally pouring the molten bronze into the main sprue,
hacking away the investment material, cutting off the bronze sprues and gates,
chasing away any other unwanted bronze (or filling in any holes), chiselling,
and then either polishing, or applying a patina and or wax to the sculpture.
Mounting the final piece on a base is sometimes also an intricate part of the
foundry's work. Foundries will often assist a sculptor with the installation
and securing of large pieces.
Fresco Pigment is applied
directly to damp plaster making this wall painting medium one of the most
permanent form of wall decoration.
Gate In casting,
any of the several channels or ducts through which molten material is carried
from the main channel or sprue, to the hollow part of the investment mould or
casing. The waste piece of material formed by such a duct is also called a
gate, and is removed from the cast metal along with the sprue as the first
stage of cleaning up the sculpture. A gate is also sometimes called a runner.
Gesture Drawing This quick drawing captures the energy and
movement of the subject. It does not necessarily have to be realistic.
Glaze colour that is thinned to a transparent state and applied over
previously painted areas to modify the original colour. (see also
Underpainting)
Greenware When clay is hard, but not yet
fired it is referred to as greenware. The clay can be made wet and turned back
into a useable material.
Gold Leaf Used for gilding, gold or
silver (for silver leafing) is beaten to extremely thin sheets.
Gouache (1) (Tempera) Opaque watercolours and the technique of
painting with such colours using white to make tints.
Gouache
(2) A medium of opaque watercolor applied to paper; also a work of art
so produced. The usual gouache painting displays a light-reflecting brilliance
quite different from the luminosity of transparent watercolors.
Haut relief French
for high or deep relief. Alto-rilievo in Italian. In a haut relief sculpture
the figures project at least half of their natural circumference from the
background. See Relief and Bas relief.
Highlight Small
areas on a painting or drawing on which reflected light is the
brightest.
Hors Commerce Hors Commerce (Not for Trade)
traditionally were the graphics pulled with the regular edition, but were
marked by the artist for business use only. These graphics were used for
entering exhibitions and competitions, but today, these graphics generally are
allowed into distribution through regular channels.
Hue Hue
is another word for colour. The attribute which describes colours by name, i.e.
red, blue, yellow etc.
Impasto (1) A
manner of painting where the paint is laid on thickly so texture stands out in
relief.
Impasto (2) Paint applied in outstanding heavy layers
or strokes; also, any thickness or roughness of paint or deep brush marks, as
distinguished from a flat, smooth surface.
Impressionism
Impressionism is referred to as the most important art movement of the 19th
century. The term impressionism came from a painting by Claude Monet. His
painting was titled titled Impression Sunrise. Impressionism is about capturing
fast fleeting moments with colour, light, and surface.
Intensity This term is used to describe the brightness, or the
dullness of a colour.
Intermediate colours Obtained by
mixing adjoining Primary and Secondary colours.
Investment A
containing negative mould, used in sculpture for casting metals. It consists of
either earth clay and sand or plaster of Paris mixed with clay, pulverized
plaster, asbestos fibres and glue size when mixed up for the lost-wax process.
Also sometimes called casing.
Kiln Kilns can be
electric, of natural gas, wood, coal, fuel oil or propane. The kiln is the
furnace used to fire ceramics or metal.
Line A line is an
identifiable path of a point moving in space. It can vary in width, direction
and length.
Horizontal lines run parallel such as ===
Vertical lines run up and down such as |||||
Diagonal
lines are slanting lines such as \\\\\
Angled lines are a
combination of diagonal lines such as /\/\/\/\/ ><<>
Curved lines are curly and express movement such as ~~~~~
Linseed Oil Used as a medium. The tradional "binder" for oil
colours.
Lithograph This is a printing process. A small
stone, or metal plate is used. The printer, usually with the artists
supervision covers the plate with a sheet of paper which are then run through
the printer.
Limited edition The set number of replicas or
copies a sculptor plans to make or has had made from an original, after which
the mould is destroyed. The practice of limiting editions and numbering proofs
originated with etching and drypoint, in which the quality of the proofs
declines as the copper plate begins to show signs of wear. By thus limiting the
size of an edition to first-rate examples of a sculptor's work, the sculptor
protects his or her artistic integrity and the value of the works to the
collector. There is no technical reason for limiting or numbering editions of
works of art that are made by processes capable of turning out an indefinite
number of uniformly good copies, such as lithography or casting methods that
employ durable moulds - and in any case a new mould can be taken from the
original to extend an edition (if not limited). Editions are frequently limited
however for financial reasons; by ensuring the relative rarity of the
sculptor's work, he or she increases its value.
Manifesto In art,
a public declaration or exposition in print of the theories and directions of a
movement. The manifestos issued by various individual artists or groups of
artists, in the first half of the twentieth century served to reveal their
motivations and raisons dâetre and stimulated support for or reactions
against them.
Maquette In sculpture, a small model in wax
or clay, made as a preliminary sketch, presented to a client for his approval
of the proposed work, or entered in a competition for a prize or scholarship.
The Italian equivalent of the term is bozzetto, meaning small sketch.
Marble In its entire form, one of the hardest stones to
carve; in fact a hard type of limestone (more or less crystallized by
metamorphism), often with streaks. Takes a high polish if desired. Also one of
the most expensive stones and therefore prized. In its powdered form, can be
used to create bonded marble casts or "faux" marble as an alternative to
plaster as a casting material. Resin can be loaded with marble powder, as can a
cement mix.
Medium The art material that is used in a work
of art such as clay, paint or pencil. Describing more then one art medium is
referred to as media. Any substance added to colour to facilitate application
or to achieve a desired effect.
Metal 1. A chemical element
that is more or less shiny, can be hammered, welded or stretched, as iron,
gold, aluminum, lead and magnesium. Distinguished from an alloy. In wire or
wire mesh form (of varying dimensions) can also be used to create sculpture.
Metalwork is the term used to describe the making of things from metal. 2.
Glass in its molten state.
Mixed Media The term is generally
used when two or more media are used in a single work of art, e.g. metal and
wood, or metal, wood and stone.
Medium Referred to as the
material used for a given sculpture. Bronze, terra cotta, plaster and wire are
all examples of media.
Mobile Three dimensional shapes
which are suspended and free moving.
Model - Modelling The
(very "forgiving", highly satisfying physically and emotionally) process
whereby a sculptor adds (bit by bit) wet clay or other soft media such as wet
plaster or cement to build up or construct his or her form - often using an
armature. It is essentially an additive, not a substractive process as
contrasted with carving, though substraction can also be and is often used in
the process of achieving the desired shapes. Thus "forgiving"...
Modelling Material Material that is formed into a shape. Most
modeling materials harden when the moisture in them evaporates, such as clay.
Some do not harden, such as plastecine and can be used again.
Monoprint A print that has the same underlying common image, but
different design, colour or texture.
Montage A picture made
up of various proportions of existing pictures, such as photographs or prints,
arranged so they join, overlap, or blend with one another.
Monotype
(1) A one of a kind print made by painting on smooth metal, creating a
texture that is not possible to paint directly on paper.
Monotype
(2) A one-of-a-kind print made by painting on a sheet or slab of glass
and transferring the still-wet painting to a sheet of paper held firmly on the
glass by rubbing the back of the paper with a smooth implement, such as a large
hardwood spoon. The painting may also be done on a polished plate, in which
case it may be either printed by hand or transferred to paper by running the
plate and paper through an etching press.
Mould A hollow,
or negative container used in the process of casting to give its form to a
substance placed within (wax for the bronze lost-wax process, or plaster,
cement, resin loaded or not with slate, marble or bronze powder, etc.) and
allowed to harden. Moulds can be made of plaster entirely, or in rubber with an
outer plaster jacket (also called mother mould or casing). A one piece mould
that must be destroyed to get the cast out is called a waste mould. A mould
consisting of two or more separable pieces is called a piece mould. Often a
sculptor will see his finished bronze sculpture through the making of two such
negative moulds either himself or at the foundry. A first one to produce the
mould in which the wax positive is poured. A second one built in (core) and
around the wax positive and its sprue and gates, from which the wax is lost by
firing in a kiln, and which is hacked off to reveal the rough cast bronze from
which the sprue and gates will have to be removed. Metal casting is done by
sand casting in which the negative, containing a mould and a positive core -
allowing the final piece to be hollow - are made of foundry sand.
Museum A building, place or institution devoted to the acquisition,
conservation, study, exhibition and educational interpretation of objects
having scientific, historical or artistic value. The word Museum is derived
from the Latin muses, meaning "a source of inspiration," or "to be absorbed in
one's thoughts."
Newsprint This
paper comes in large sheets, and is inexpensive. Newsprint will eventually
yellow, and is not a good choice for preserving artwork. Pen and market will
bleed through newsprint.
Oil Cup A
container that can be clipped to your oil palette. One cup for the medium, the
other cup for the brush cleaner.
Oil Paint A definition by
Winsor & Newton state: "Oils are one of the great classic media, and have
dominated painting for five hundred years. They remain popular for many
reasons: their great versatility, offering the possibility of transparency and
opacity in the same painting; the lack of colour change when the painting
dries; and ease of manipulation."
Organic Shapes that are
not regular or even, using a combination of edges that are curved or
angular.
Oxidation The firing atmosphere containing lots of
oxygen.
Oxides Applying metal oxides to the clay, mixing
with water, you can create an effect of stained wood.
Paint Box A piece
of equipment used for storing brushes, paint, palette, and accessories when
painting outdoors.
Painting Knife Knives come in a variety
of shapes and sizes. A trowel-type flexible knife.
Paper
Maché Papier maché is an ancient art consisting of paper
and a binder, such as wallpaper paste or glue.
Pastel (1)
colours go from soft to brilliant in a stick form. When the paper is covered
completely, it is known as a pastel painting. When the paper is exposed through
the pastel, it is known as a pastel sketch.
Pastel (2) A
colored crayon that consists of pigment mixed with just enough of a aqueous
binder to hold it together; a work of art produced by pastel crayons; the
technique itself. Pastels vary according to the volume of chalk contained...the
deepest in tone are pure pigment. Pastel is the simplest and purest method of
painting, since pure color is used without a fluid medium and the crayons are
applied directly to the pastel paper. Pastels are called paintings rather than
drawings, for although no paint is used, the colors are applied in masses
rather than in lines.
Patina (1) A film or an incrustation,
usually green, that forms on copper and bronze after a certain amount of
weathering and as a result of the oxidation of the copper. Special chemical
treatments will also induce different colored patinas on new bronzes. Bronzes
may be painted with acrylic and lacquer.
Patina (2) The
layman can relate to patina when it is defined as a mellowing of tone or
texture acquired by aging and use in furniture, leather, or paintings. In
sculpture, it is a film or incrustation that forms on copper or bronze after a
certain amount of weathering and as the result of the oxidation of the copper
contained within bronze. When green, it is known as aerugo or verdigris.
Patinas are often made to occur in the foundry upon the sculptor's request by
special treatments that duplicate the green copper carbonates and hydated
oxides of natural bronze patinas. Rarer bluish and reddish patinas can also be
effected. A patina is normally a kind of protection, which tends to retard
further corrosion considerably. However sometimes a malignant type of corrosion
known as bronze disease occurs. The process whereby a patina is either
naturally acquired or artificially induced is known as patination. Some
sculptors imitate the patination process on non-metallic sculpture with the use
of oils, waxes and pigments: i.e., shoe polish on plaster.
Pedestal 1a. The support or foot of a late classic or
neoclassic column. b. The base of an upright structure. 2. Base, foundation.
Pens Technical drawing pens produce a sharp line that never
varies in width. They come in a range of colours, and widths which create
different effects.
Pencils Pencils are categorized according
to the hardness of the lead. The hardest lead is found in the 9-B, which gives
you a sharp thin line. The opposite being a 9-B which creates a soft line which
is thicker and dartker.
Perspective (1) Perspective creates
the feeling of depth through the use of lines that make your image appear to be
three dimentional. The closer the image is, the more detailed it will appear,
and the larger it will be.
Perspective (2) The
representation of three-dimensional objects on a flat surface so as to produce
the same impression of distance and relative size as that received by the human
eye. In one-point linear perspective, developed during the fifteenth century,
all parallel lines in a given visual field converge at a single vanishing point
on the horizon. In aerial or atmospheric perspective, the relative distance of
objects is indicated by gradations of tone and color and by variations in the
clarity of outlines. Pigment Pigment is the material used to create
the effect of colour on any surface.
Pinch Pots Beginning
with a ball of clay, the artist can form a pot by pinching the clay to form the
center opening.
Plaster When mixed with water, this powder
will harden into a chalk-like solid used to create sculptures, and other forms
of artwork.
Pochoir A stencil and stencil-brush process for
making muticolored prints, and for tinting black-and-white prints, and for
coloring reproductions and book illustrations, especially fine and limited
editions. Pochoir, which is the French word for stencil, is sometimes called
hand-coloring or hand-illustration. Pochoir, as distinguished from ordinary
stencil work, is a highly refined technique, skillfully executed in a
specialized workshop.
Pointillism A branch of French
Impressionism in which the principle of optical mixture or broken color was
carried to the extreme of applying color in tiny dots or small, isolated
strokes. Forms are visible in a pointillist painting only from a distance, when
the viewer's eye blends the colors to create visual masses and outlines. The
inventor and chief exponent of pointillism was George Seurat (1859-1891); the
other leading figure was Paul Signac (1863-1935).
Porcelain
Porcelain is a combination of kaolin, silica and feldspar. You can work with
porcelain as you would clay, but when you fire it correctly, the result will be
similar to that of glass.
Portrait A portrait in sculpture
comprises of the head only or head and neck. Compare with Bust.
Primary colours Red, yellow, blue.
Raku This method
of firing pottery results in irregular surfaces and colours. The pottery is
removed when it is red hot. It is then placed in a bed of combustible materials
and covered.
Realistic Sculpture is dubbed realistic when it
portrays real life objects or people or recognizable, identifiable shapes. In
general, the term used for the depiction of human figures, real objects or
scenes as they appear, without (and this differentiates its definition from
that of figurative), distortion or stylization. Can also be used to mean
representational or objective sculpture as distinguished from abstract
sculpture.
Reduction Firing clay with an inadequate amount
of oxygen.
Relief In sculpture, any work that projects from
the background. Reliefs are classified by degree of projection. Relief
sculpture is distinguished from sculpture in the round. In a bas relief (low
relief or basso-relievo in Italian), the figures project only slightly and no
part is entirely detached from the background (as in medals, coins, or areas of
large reliefs in which the chief effect is produced by the play of light and
shadow). In a haut relief sculpture (high relief or alto-rilievo), the figures
project at least half of their natural circumference from the background.
Between these two is the demi relief (half-relief or mezzo-relievo). The lowest
degree of relief in which the projection barely exceeds the thickness of a
sheet of paper is called a crushed relief (relievo sticciato or schiacciato).
There is also a relief in reverse, called hollow relief, in which all the
carving lies within a hollowed-out area below the surface plane, and which,
through an illusion of depth and roundness, looks like raised relief. Hollow
relief, also called sunk or concave relief (cavo-relievo), incised relief
(intaglio-rilievato) are the kind of carving done on gems by the Greeks and
Romans. Reliefs may be carved from hard materials or modelled in wet clay,
softened wax, or plaster. Reliefs are often elements of architectural
sculpture.
Remarque A current practice of some artists is
the addition of a small personalized drawing or symbol near his pencil
signature in the lower margin. The practice is borrowed from Whister's famous
"butterfly" which was added to personalize many of his graphics.
Repetition Repetition is created when objects, shapes, space, light,
direction, lines etc. are repeated in artwork.
Repoussoir
From the French verb meaning to push back. A means of achieving perspective or
spacial contrasts by the use of illusionistic devices such as the placement of
a large figure or object i the immediate foreground of a painting to increase
the illusion of depth in the rest of the picture.
Rhythm
When the regular repetition of particular forms or elements occurs in a work of
art, that work is said to have rhythm. It suggests motion.
Sculpt The process
of creating what is described in the next entry... Also see the links there as
all 4 main methods apply when defining the verb "to sculpt"!
Sculpture Artform, 3-D or three dimensional - created in the
round which can be seen from all perspectives except the bottom or back (when
it is resting or placed down or against a surface, unless hanging from a
ceiling or other means) - or created as a relief by a sculptor. See assembly,
carving, modelling and welding.
Secondary colours Orange,
Violet, Green. Each colour is midway between the Primaries from which it can be
mixed.
Serigraph Serigraphy is a color stencil printing
process in which a special paint is forced through a fine screen onto the paper
beneath. Areas which do not print are blocked with photo sensitive emulsion
that has been exposed with high intensity arc lights. A squeegee is pulled from
back to front, producing a direct transfer of the image from screen to paper. A
separate stencil is required for each color and one hundred colors or more may
be necessary to achieve the desired effect. A serigraph, also referred to as a
screenprint, differs from other graphics in that its color is made up of paint
films rather than printing ink stains. This technique is extremely versatile,
and can create effects similar to oil color, transparent washes as well as
gouache and pastel.
Shade Using a mixture of black mixed
with a colour to make it darker. The opposite of shade is tint.
Silver print This generic term covers all prints made on paper that
is coated with silver salts. Black and white photographs are usually silver
prints.
Shape Shapes can be in the form of squares, circles,
triangles, rectangles, and ovals.
Slab built Clay slabs are
cut into shape, and joined together with scoring and wet clay called
slip.
Slip A liquid form of clay. Slip is used to fill in
pores, and even out the colour. Slip is used to join
clay.
Sprue In casting, the entrance hole and main channel in
the wall of a mould through which the liquid material (bronze or other metal)
is poured; it is joined to the model by smaller channels called gates. The
waste material formed by the channel is also called sprue and is cut away after
the investment material is removed, as the first step of cleaning up a cast
metal sculpture.
Stipple In painting, to apply small dots
of color with the point of the brush; also to apply paint in a uniform layer by
tapping a vertically held brush on the surface in repeated staccato touches.
Stone 1. Cut rock, suitable for carving and building. One of
the traditional materials of the sculptor, it has been carved, drilled, and
polished since prehistoric times. The most commonly used stones are alabaster,
marble, sandstone and limestone. 2. In the commercial world, any stone except
marble.
Stoneware Sturdier then earthenware, stoneware is
waterproof even without being glazed.
Spectrum The colours
that are the result of a beam of white light that is broken by a form of prism
into its hues.
Stencil The process in which an area is cut
out of paper, or material such as cardboard to enable paint or ink to be
applied to a piece of paper, or canvas through the cutout.
Symbol A symbol is a picture or image that tells a story of what it
is without using words.
Symmetry Symmetry is when one side
of something balances out the other side.
Terra Cotta (1)
Commonly used for ceramic sculpture, it is a brownish-orange earthenware
clay.
Terra Cotta (2) 1. Italian for fired or baked clay
(literally cooked earth). Terre cuite in French. The end product of a fired
sculpture. 2. The term terra cotta clay is often used for any clay suitable for
shaping and firing, except for the very fine porcelain clays.
Tempera Tempera is a word used to describe any type of binder such
as oil, water or egg that makes a pigment workable as a paint form.
Tertiary colours colours that represent a mixture of secondary
colours.
Texture Texture creates the feeling of an
object.
3-D Three dimensional. Sculpture can be referred to
as a 3-D artform as opposed to painting which is 2-D or two dimensional.
Tint Tint is the opposite of shade. Tinting is combining white
with a colour to make it lighter.
Tirage Document that
provides background information on the graphic edition such as edition size,
printer, technique, year of execution.
Trompe L´oeil
A french term meaning "deception of the eye." It is applied to painting so
photographically realistic that it may fool the viewer into thinking that the
objects or scene represented are real rather than painted.
Turpentine (or Grumtine) Used for cleaning equipment and to thin
mediums.
Underpainting
Preliminary painting used as a base for textures or for subsequent painting or
glazing.
Unity A feeling of completeness is created by the
use of elements in the artwork.
Value Shadows,
darkness, contrasts and light are all values in artwork.
Vintage A photograph printed within a few years of the negative
being made.
Wash A highly
fluid application of colour.
Wash Used in watercolor
painting, brush drawing, and occasionally in oil painting to describe a broad
thin layer of diluted pigment or ink. Also refers to a drawing made in this
technique.
Watercolour A translucent, water-based paint that
comes in cake or tube form.
Wax Crayon These crayons are
ideal to use to loosen up your drawing style. Crayons are cost effective, and
it is difficult to create really detailed drawings.
Welding
The process of joining together two pieces of metal by fusion. Intense heat is
applied by an oxyacetylene torch in gas or oxacetylene welding, and by
electrical means in arc welding. Sometimes a filler rod is melted along the
joint, in the process known as brazing. The direct welding of two pieces by
combining the molten edges is called fusion welding. It is done at much higher
temperatures than soldering and results in stronger, more durable joints. It is
used in making direct metal sculpture and comes under the general term of
assembly - as opposed to carving and modelling.
Wheel
Thrown Comes from an English term meaning 'spin'. The clay is placed on
the potters wheel and the piece is formed while the clay spins on the
wheel.
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