Using Value to create form.
What is shading?
A 3-d shape.
What is form?
A tool where all colors hues are arranged in a circle.
What is the color wheel?
A method of clay building where you squeeze the clay between your fingers to create the form.
What is Pinching/Pinch Pot?
Materials used to create an artwork (i.e. glue, paint, pencil, etc.)
What is Media?
A type of drawing where you do not look at the page as you draw the outlines of something.
What is a blind contour drawing?
The surface qualities of a particular object or work of art- can be actual or implied.
What is Texture?
Colors that are opposite of each other on the color wheel.
What is Complementary?
Liquid clay used to adhere two pieces of clay to one another.
What is Slip?
The effect created when two things that are very different are placed next to each other.
What is Contrast?
The brightest part of a drawing.
What is a highlight?
A 2-d enclosed area-could be geometric or organic.
What is Shape?
The purest, most saturated version of a color.
What is a hue?
This term refers to ceramic pieces that are completely dry but have not been fired.
What is bone-dry clay?
Lines that define the outer edge and inner lines such as wrinkles of a form.
What are Contour lines?
The thing we change to create darker values with a pencil.
What is pressure?
This is element of art has hue, value, and intensity.
What is Color?
The relationship between colors on the color wheel.
What is a color scheme?
This term refers to ceramic pieces that have been fired once without glaze.
What is Bisqueware?
A painting with three panels.
What is a Triptych?
A small drawing made to sort out your ideas about an artwork before you start.
What is a thumbnail?
Background, middle ground and foreground.
What is space?
What is the last color in this triadic color scheme?
Red orange, Blue violet, and?
What is Yellow-Green?
Method of heating the clay product to a high temperature in order to bring about a particular chemical change in the clay.
What is firing?
The type of perspective that is created by looking through air at a long distance usually giving a lighter value to the background.
What is Atmospheric Perspective?