The "the path of a moving dot" creates this.
What is LINE?
These are the primary colors.
What are BLUE, RED & YELLOW?
These are the RULES that tell an artist how to use the Elements of Art.
What are the PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN?
Planned decoration that creates variety and interest in a work of art.
What is PATTERN?
The lightness and darkness of a color is called this.
What is a VALUE?
3D shape
What is FORM?
These are the secondary colors.
What are ORANGE, GREEN, & VIOLET
Area in a work of art that catches and holds the viewer's attention. Focal Point.
What is EMPHASIS?
A feeling that all of the parts are working together as a team - the quality of wholeness.
What is UNITY?
This is what we call the name of a color.
What is HUE?
The surface quality; smoothness, roughness, softness in visual art.
What is TEXTURE?
The third group of colors are called this. (mixing a secondary and primary color)
What is TERTIARY COLORS?
The repetition of elements to create a VISUAL tempo or beat.
What is RHYTHM?
These two principles in art are both concerned with size.
What is SCALE & PROPORTION?
Brown, & grey are called these type of colors.
What are NEUTRAL colors?
A flat (2D) area that is defined or outlined in someway.
What is SHAPE?
Colors that are opposite each other on the color wheel are called this.
What are COMPLIMENTARY COLORS?
The equalizing force or arrangement of things in art.
What is BALANCE?
A way of combining visual elements to produce a sense of action.
What is MOVEMENT?
When you add black to a hue you create this.
What is a SHADE?
The illusion of depth or distance: having back- middle- and fore-grounds.
What is SPACE?
Three colors side by side on the color wheel; blue, blue-green, green is an example of these.
Colors that are opposite each other on the color wheel are called this.
What are ANALOGOUS COLORS
A large difference between two things.
What is CONTRAST?
This is an art technique for creating an illusion of 3D (depth and space) on a 2D (flat) surface.
What is PERSPECTIVE?
When you add white to a hue you create this.
What is a TINT?