The three primary colours.
Blue, red, and yellow.
Famous inventor, genius, and painter of the Mona Lisa.
Leonardo Da Vinci.
Brightly-coloured art featuring cartoons, consumable objects, and other things from popular culture.
Pop art.
Liquid pigments spread onto a surface.
Painting.
The three secondary colours.
Green, orange, and purple.
Famous street artist whose true identity is unknown.
Banksy.
Highly detailed artworks that almost look like photos.
Realism.
Using an instrument to mark a surface.
Drawing.
Colours needed to make brown.
Famous Impressionist who cut off his ear and painted The Starry Night.
Vincent Van Gogh.
Art made using technology, like computers.
Digital art.
A three-dimensional creation of clay, wood, or the like.
Sculpture.
The element for what a surface feels like.
Texture.
Famous Cubist who painted Guernica.
Pablo Picasso.
Art that breaks people and things up into fragmented shapes.
Cubism.
Carving an image into a surface.
Etching.
The three-dimensional equivalent of shape.
Form.
Classic Italian artist who sculpted David and painted the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.
Michelangelo.
Art that doesn’t necessarily represent or look like something in the real world.
Abstract art.
Transferring an image with an inked template.
Printmaking.