Line
Color cannot exist without this.
Light
Actual texture is experienced through this sense.
Touch
This is usually the first thing that captures the viewer's attention.
The focal point
This artist painted two versions of herself; one was cutting the other off.
Frida Kahlo
There are formed when lines meet each other.
Shapes
Colors next to each other on the color wheel are this scheme.
Analogous
This type of texture is the illusion of actual texture.
Visual
When comparing the size of two objects in a work, we are talking about this.
Scale
This civilization was obsessed with aesthetics and beauty and capturing that in their artwork.
Greece
These types of lines are usually the most energetic.
Diagonal
This is another word for saturation.
Intensity
A welcome mat made of nails demonstrates this type of texture.
Subversive
This type of balance is originates from central point.
Radial
After the rennaissance, this art period used harsh, dramatic lighting to highlight mainly religious subject matter.
Baroque
This type of line is not usually obvious in a work, but is indicated by the subject matter or arrangement of elements.
Implied lines
Achromatic
To create a pattern, you must use this Principle of Design.
Repetition
When artists want to symbolize ideas in their work, they use this.
Iconography
This artist is considered the father of cubism.
Pablo Picasso
This is an italian word that means to render lightness and darkness on a 2D surface.
Chiaroscuro
This type of color does not reflect visible reality.
This type of texture makes so reference to reality.
Invented
This generally refers to distinctive characteristics of art that are common to one specific era, culture, or group of artists.
Style
This type of art sometimes involves viewer participation.