Red, Yellow and Blue
What are primary colors?
These marks span a distance between two points and can be straight or curved.
What is line?
The result of using the elements of art such that they move the viewer's eye around and within the image
What is movement?
Thin line to thick line
What is line weight?
When a painting is all one color.
What is monochromatic?
The complimentary color of green.
What is orange?
The result of closed lines and are two-dimensional.
What is shape?
The uniform repetition of any of the elements of art
What is repetition?
Lines give us information

This painting can be described as having...
What is warm color dominance?
Orange, Green and Violet
What are Secondary Colors?
When a shape acquires depth and becomes three-dimensional
What is form?
When the artist creates an area of the composition that is visually dominant
What is emphasis?
This type of line differentiates itself from pure outline by suggesting a third dimension
19th-century art movement characterized by relatively small, thin, yet visible brush strokes, open composition with emphasis on accurate depiction of light
What is Impressionism?
Mixing a primary color and a secondary color make...
What are Tertiary or Intermediate colors?
Positive or Negative.
What is space?
The difference between elements of art in a composition
What is contrast?
The technique by which line is used to create shading to suggest volume and space
What is Linear Modeling?
A 20th-century avant-garde movement which sought to release the creative potential of the unconscious mind, for example by the irrational juxtaposition of images.
What is Surrealism?
Mixing complimentary colors gives you...
What are neutrals?
The three building blocks of color
What are hue, value and intensity?
In which both sides of a composition have the same elements in the same position
What is symmetrical balance?
The manner in which positive and negative shapes visually interact
What is figure/ground relationship?
What five things make a specific work of art valuable? Name at least three.
What is Provenance, Condition, Authenticity, Exposure and Quality?