A long roll of clay sometimes called a snake.
What is a coil?
What are the Primary Colors?
The ground closest to a viewer in the artwork.
What is Foreground?
Where artwork and portfolios are stored.
What is the 7th Grade Drawer?
British artist famous for creating the Op Art movement.
An object to drink out of that is bigger than a teacup but smaller than a stein.
Colors made from two Primary Colors mixed together.
What are Secondary Colors?
The ground in the center of the artwork.
What is Middle Ground?
Where wet artwork is stored.
What is the drying rack?
The point where lines in a three-dimensional op art pattern connect to.
What is the vanishing point?
Scratching into the clay in order to attach two pieces together.
What is scoring?
Colors made by combining one Primary and one Secondary color together. There is a hyphen in the name.
What are Tertiary Colors?
The ground furthest away from the viewer in an artwork.
What is Background?
True or False: I can score lower than a C on a project I have finished and turned in.
What is false?
The name of our first Op Art pattern.
What is Vortex?
A tool used to form clay into a specific shape by pressing the clay around this or inside this.
What is a mold?
Any color plus white and any color plus black.
What are tint and shade?
The difference between an artwork showing nature and a landscape.
What is space?
What the brown cabinet in the corner of our room contains.
What is mixed media?
Op Art became so popular in Britain that patterns copied onto this item.
What is clothing?
The way both ends of the handle need to be cut so it sticks to the mug.
What is on an angle?
A color scheme with one color plus its tint and shade.
What is Monochromatic?
Objects that are further away from us appear to be this in color.
What is lighter?
This is the average temperature the kiln reaches when Ms. Jushka fires our ceramic projects.
What is 2,000 degrees Farenhite?