Elements of Design
Principles of Design
Artists & Art Movements
Materials, Mediums & Genres
General Art Terms
Color Theory
100

The light that reflects off an object and is perceived by the human eye.

Color

100

The artistic principle of creating motion within an artwork by using elements of design like line, color, texture and shape.

Movement

100

An English sculptor, photographer and environmentalist who produces site specific sculptures and land art situated in natural settings. He does not use any tape or glue, but sometimes he uses his own saliva!

Andy Goldsworthy

100

A depiction of natural scenery, such as mountains, rivers and forests. 

Landscape

100

The space in the back of an image.

Background

100

A color with black added to it.

Shade

200

An enclosed line that is two dimensional, such as square, circle, triangle or rectangle.

Shape

200

A principle of design that uses the repetition of elements to create a visual “beat”. 

Rhythm 

200

Art Nouveau artist and architect from Barcelona Spain who dedicated his life to building epic, unique, and intricately designed buildings, parks and cathedrals for the City of Barcelona, his signature style being done with the use of mosaic.

Antoni Gaudi 

200

A 2-D art form that uses small pieces of material to create a picture or design on a surface.

Mosaic

200

Any 2-D shape that isn’t geometric.

Organic Shapes

200

Colors on the color wheel associated with heat, light, and energy

Warm Colors

300

A mark made on a surface that joins two different points.

Line

300

The building blocks of an artwork's aesthetics; “the recipe”.

Principles of Design

300

This artist makes tessellating installations out of actual insects, some of them are over 150 years old!

Jennifer Angus

300

A type of visual art that combines more than one medium, method or material

Mixed Media

300

Objects in front of a composition that usually contain the subject matter

Foreground

300

A color with white added to it.

Tint

400

The basic units of any visual design which form its structure and convey visual messages; “the ingredients”

Elements of Art

400

The consistent reuse or recurrence of visual elements such as lines, shapes, colors or motifs within a single artwork..

Repetition

400

A Dutch artist, who made drawings and prints  inspired by mathematics. He is best known for his impossible staircases and hyperrealistic distorted reflections.

MC Escher

400

A work of art that depicts the artist that produced it

Self Portrait

400

The repetition of visual elements like lines, shapes, colors, or textures in a consistent or predictable sequence.

Pattern

400

Hues  on the color wheel like that are often associated with feelings of tranquility and calmness, the "chill colors".

Cool Colors

500

An element of art that is three dimensional and encloses, the physical structure of a shape to include volume as well as height and width.

Form

500

Prolific Dutch painter from the impressionist era, known for his famous Starry Night painting, and his many differing self portraits. Vincent is revered today, due to his “before his time” talent and insight of the world around him, and his heartfelt story. He has gone onto being one of the most well known painters of the modern era.

Vincent Van Gogh

500

A form of printmaking where a unique one of a kind image is created from a single impression.

Monoprinting 

500

Characterized by a reliance on mathematical shapes such as triangles, squares, circles and lines to organize space.

Geometric Shapes

500

Colors opposite each other on the color wheel.

Complimentary Colors

600

The perceived surface quality of a work of art

Texture

600

Artistic creations of ancient civilizations from the beginning of human history, until the fall of the Western Roman Empire (476 CE)

Ancient Art

600

Identifiable subject matter with simplified, altered, distorted, changed or rearranged visual elements.

Abstract

600

A repeating pattern of geometric shapes that completely covers a flat surface without any gaps or overlaps, they “fit” together.

Tessellation 

700

The area around, between, and within the elements of a composition

Space

700

A style or movement of painting originating in France in the 1860’s, characterized by a concern for depicting the visual impression of the moment, especially in terms of the shifting effect of light and color.

Impressionism

700

An art form that involves transferring an image from a template, or matrix, onto another surface.. 

Printmaking

700

The arrangement of elements within a work of art, and how they relate to each other to create a whole.

Composition

800

An international art style that emerged in the 1890s and was popular until World War 1. It is characterized by organic shapes and flowing lines

Art Nouveau

800

Artists’ paint made with a water soluble binder such as gum, arabic and thinned water rather than oil, giving it a transparent color. Uses water instead of white producing “paler colors”

Watercolor

800

The point on the horizon line where parallel lines appear to get smaller or vanish.

Vanishing Point

900

The dark shape and outline of someone or something visible against a lighter background, especially in dim light.

Silhouette 

900

A line that divides the sky from the ground or the eye-level of the viewer; often parallel to the horizon.

Horizon Line

1000

A versatile art medium that combines the characteristics of crayons and pastels. Invented in 1921, they are made from powdered pigment mixed with non-drying oil and wax, finishing with a “buttery” consistency. Otherwise known as “cray-pas”

Oil Pastels

1000

A drawing method that shows how things appear to get smaller as they get further away, converging towards a single "vanishing point" on the horizon line.

One Point Perspective

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