The strong feeling that you have when something has happened that you think is bad.
Anger.
The group of people who have gathered to watch or listen to something (a play, concert, somebody speaking.
Audience.
A strong cloth material used for painting on.
Canvas.
A picture or a photograph.
Image.
Oral.
A painting, drawing or photograph of a person, especially of the head and shoulders.
Portrait.
A person who sees something happen and is able to describe it to other people.
Witness.
A strong feeling of surprise as a result of something happening, especially something unpleasant; the event that causes this feeling.
Shock.
Connected with seeing or sight.
Visual.
A person who draws or paints pictures for books, etc.
Illustrator.
To show somebody/something in a picture; to describe somebody/something in a piece of writing.
Portray.
An event or a situation that you see, especially one of a particular type.
Scene.
To photograph, film, record, paint, etc. somebody/something.
Capture.
To be a symbol of something.
Represent.
Representing things as they are in real life.
Realistic.
(of art) not representing people or things in a realistic way, but expressing the artist’s ideas about them.
Abstract.
A film or TV show made by photographing a series of gradually changing drawings or models, so that they look as if they are moving.
Cartoon.
A thing or person that is being discussed, described or dealt with.
Subject.
To continue for a particular period of time.
Last.
The knowledge that somebody has about a particular subject or situation / the ability to understand why people behave in a particular way.
Understanding.
Meaningful.
Specific but not explicitly named or stated.
Certain.
Method.
Clever and complicated in the way that it works or is presented.
Sophisticated.
The process of making films, videos and computer games in which drawings, models or images of people and animals seem to move.
Animation.