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Examining Art Works (p. 4-6)
Artists and Ideas
(p. 6-9)
Understanding Art (p. 16-19)
100
These are people who use imagination and skill to communicate ideas in visual form.
What are artists?
100
These are sponsors or supporters of an artist or art-related places and events.
What are patrons of the arts?
100
This is any object created or designed by an artist.
What is a work of art?
200
This is art made to be experienced visually.
What is fine art?
200
Myths and legends, their imagination, their hearts and minds, and real-world events and people are a few examples.
What are some of the places artists get their ideas?
200
The image the viewer can easily identify in a work of art.
What is the subject?
300
Applied art is made to be this as well as visually pleasing.
What is "functional?"
300
This is what an artist sees when he/she looks at a blank piece of paper.
What is a challenge?
300
This word -- meaning "around" or "about" -- might appear before the year in the credit line of a work of art.
What is "circa?".
400
A phrase often used for this type of art is "art for art's sake."
What is fine art?
400
The special goddesses the ancient Greeks prayed to for inspiration.
What are the Muses?
400
One of the six things this includes is the size of the work.
What is a credit line?
500
All art is made to be viewed, but some art has this added purpose.
Whart is "used".
500
Figure 1-7 in your book is an example of an artist using this source for ideas.
What are real-world events and people?
500
Robert Motherwell's "Elegy to the Spanish Republic 108," (figure 2-2 in your book) is an example of this type of art.
What is non-objective art?