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refracting light without dispersing it into its constitutent colors: giving images practically free from extraneous colors, neautral colors only |
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a clear plastic used as a binder in paint and as a casting material in sculpture |
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pertaining to the sense of the beautiful to heightened sensory perception in general |
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the visual image that remains after the initial stimulus is removed. staring at a singe intense hue may cause the cones of the eye to become fatigued and perceived the complement of the original hue after it has been removed |
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closely related hues, especially those in which a common hue can be seen; hues that are neighbors on the color wheel, such as blue, blue-green and green |
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a semicircular end to an aisle in a basilica or a Christian church. in christian churches an apse is usually placed at the eastern end of the central aisle. |
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a series of arches supported by columns or piers. also, a covered passageway between two series of arches between a series of arches and a wall |
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a rigid framework serving a supporting inner core for clay or other soft sculpting material |
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a trial print, usually made as an artist works on a plate or block, to check the progress of a work |
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in photography, the camera lens opening and its relative diameter. measured in f-stops, such as f/8, f/11, etc. as the number increases, the size of the aperture decreases, thereby reducing the amount of light passing through the lens and striking the film |
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creates an illusion of distance by reducing color saturation, value contrast, and detail in order to imply the hazy effect atmosphere between the viwer and distant objects...also known as aerial perspective |
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an arrangement of parts achieving a state of equilibrium between opposing forces or influences. major types are symmetrical and asymmetrical |
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the 17-century period in Europe characterized is the visual arts by dramatic light and shade, turbulent composition, and exaggerated emotional expression |
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a semicircular arch extended in depth; a continuous series of arches one behind another |
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sculpture in which 3D forms project from the flat background of which they are a part...degree of projection from the surrounding surface is slight...example: coin |
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a roman town hall, with 3 aisles and an apse at one or both ends. christians appropriated this form for their churches |
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German art school from 1919-1933, best known for its influence on design, leadership in art education, and its radically innovative philosophy of applying design principles to machine technology and mass production |
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the material used in paint that causes pigment particles to adhere to one another and to the support |
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a type of Buddhist holy person who is about to achieve enlightenment, but postpones it to remain on earth to teach others. frequently depicted in the arts of China and Japan |
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A support, usually exterior, for a wall, arch, or vault that opposes that lateral forces of these structures. A flying buttress consists of a strut or segment of an arch carrying the trust of a vault to a vertical pier positioned away from the main portion of the building. An important element in Gothic cathedrals |
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Styles of painting, design and architecture developed from the fifth century CE in the Byzantine Empire of ancient eastern Europe. Characterized in architecture by round arches, large domes, art used mosaic characterized in formal design, frontal and stylize figures, use of rich color especially gold, lots of religious subject matter |
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a dark room or box with a small hole in one side, through which an inverte image of the view outsie in projected onto the opposite wall, screen or mirror. Image is than traced |
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a beam or slab projecting a substantial distance beyond its supporting post or wall, a projection supported only at one end |
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a humorous or satirical drawing, a drawing completed as a full scale working drawing usually for fresco painting mural or tapestry |
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a substitution or replacement process that involves pouring liquid material such as molten metal, clay, wax, or plaster into a mold. When the liquid hardens, the mold is removed and form in the shape of the mold is left |
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clay hardened into a relatively permanent material by firing |
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Italian word meaning light dark. The graduations of light and dark values in 2D imagery, especially the illusion of rounded, 3D form created through gradations of light and shade rather than line. Highly developed by Renaissance painters |
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a self-contained or sxplicity limited form, having a resolved balance of tensions, a sense of calm completeness implying a totality within itself |
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a decorative sunken panel on the underside of a ceiling |
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from the frech coller, to glue. a work made by gluing various materials, such as paper scraps, photgraphs, and cloth on a flat surface |
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a row of columns usually sppaned or connected by beams |
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two hues directly opposite one another on a color wheel which, when mixed together in proper proportions, produce a neutral gray. The true complement of a color can be seen in its afterimage |
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the combining of parts or elements to form a whole; the structure, organization or total form of a work of art |
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an art form in which the originating idea and the process by which it presented take precedence over a tangible product. Conceptual works are sometimes produced in visual form, but they often exist only as descriptions of mental concepts or ideas. This trend developed in the late 1960s, partially as a way to avoid the commercialized of art |
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Italian for counterpose. The counterposition of parts of the human figure about a central vertical axis, as when the weight is placed on one foot causing the hip and shoulder lines to counterbalance each other—often in a graceful S-curve |
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colors whose relative visual temperatures make them seem cool. Cool colors generally include green, blue-green, blue-violet and violet. Warmness or coolness is relative to adjacent hues |
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drawing one set of hatchings over another in a differwnt directions so that the lines cross |
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20th century style, Picasso and Braque 1907. analytical cublism was developed from 1909-1911. synthetic cubism began in 1912 |
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formed or characterized by curving lines or edges |
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stone used for building that is cut to fit into a masonry wall |
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an itaglio printmaking process on which lines are scratched directly into metal plate with a steel needle. also the resulting print |
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sculpture forms made from earth, rocks or sometimes plants, often on a vast scale and in remote locations. some are deliberatley impermanant |
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In printmaking, the total number of prints made and approved by the artist usually numbered consecutively. Also, a limited number of multiple originals of a single design in any medium |
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in archetecture, a scale drawing of any vertical side of a given structure |
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a painting medium in which pigment is suspended in a binder of hot wax |
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In classic architecture, the slight swelling or bulge in the center of a column, which corrects the illusion of concave tapering produced by parallel straight lines |
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An intaglio printmaking process in which a metal plate is first coated with acid-resistant wax, then scratched to expose the metal to the bite of nitric acid where lines are desired |
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an important element in gothic cathedrals consisting of a strut or segment of an arch carrying the thrust of a vault to a vertical pier position away from the main portion of the building |
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art of people who have had no formal, academic training but whose works are part of an established tradition of style and craftmanship |
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the representaion of forms on a 2D surface by shortening the length in such a way that the long axis appears to prject toward or recede away from the viewer |
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the shape or proportions of picture plane |
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a painting technique in which pigments suspended in water are applied to a damp lime plaster surface. The pigments dry to become part of the plaster wall or surface. Sometimes called true fresco or buon fresco to distinguish it from painting over dry plaster |
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a narrow band of relief sculpture that usually occupies the space above the columns of a classical building |
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in ceramics, a vitreous or glassy coating applied to seal and decorate surfaces |
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an opaque, water-soluable paint. watercolor to which opaque white has been added |
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use of unnatural scale to show the importance of figures |
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the property of color identifying a specific, named wave length of light such as green, red, violet, and so on. often used synonymously with color |
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the symbolic meanings of subjects and signs used to convey ideas |
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in painting, thick paint applied to a surface in a heavy manner, having the apperance and consistency of buttery past |
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a line in a composition that is not actually drawn. it may be a slight line of a figure in a composition, or a line along which two which two shapes align with each other |
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any printmaking technique in which lines and areas to be inke and transferred to paper are recessed below the surface of the printing plate. Etching, engraving, dry point, and aquatint are all intaglio processes |
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the purity or saturation of a hue, on a scale from bright (pure) to dull (mixed with another hue or a neutral) |
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an oven which pottery or ceramic war is fired |
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greek for maiden, an archaic greek statue of a standing clothed young woman |
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greek for youth, an archaic greek statue of a standing nude young male |
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the use of parallel lines or edges that appear to converge and objects appear smaller as the distance between them and the viewer increases |
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the horizontal stone or timber placed across an architectural space to take the weight of the foot or wall above...also called a beam |
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a Planographic printmaking technique based on the antipathy of oil and water. The image is drawn with a grease crayon or painted with tusche on a stone or grained aluminum plate. The surface is then chemically treated and dampened so that it will accept ink only where the crayon or tushe has been used |
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the actual color as distinguished drom the apparent color of objects and surfaces; true color, without shadows or reflections. sometimes called object color |
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A style that developed in the sixteen century as a reaction to the classical rationality and balanced harmony of the high Renaissance, characterized by dramatic use of space and light, exaggerated color, elongation of figures, and distortions of perspective, scale and proportion |
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A nonrepresentational style of sculpture and painting, usually severely restricted in the use of visual elements and often consisting of simple geometric shapes or masses. The style came into prominence in 1960s |
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a color scheme limited to variations of one hue, a hue with its tints and or shade |
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a composition made up of pictures or parts of pictures previously drawn, painted or photographed In motion pictures, the combining of separate bits of film to portray the character of a single event through multiple views |
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An art medium in which small pieces of colored glass, stone, or ceramic tile called tessera are embedded in a background material such as plaster or mortar |
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House of public prayer in the Muslim religion. From the Arabic masjid, place of prostration |
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a large wall painting, often executed in fresco |
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the tall central space of a church or cathedral, usually flanked by side aisles |
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New classicism. A revival of classical Greek and Roman forms in art, music and literature, particularly during the 18th and 19th centuries in Europe and America. It was part of a reaction against the excesses of Baroque and Racoco art |
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Not associated with an single hue. Black, whites, grays, and dull gray-browns. A neutral can be made by mixing complementary hues |
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art without reference to anything outside itself, without recognizable objects |
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imperturbable by light; not trasparent or translucent |
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any color agent, made from natural or synthetic substances, used in paints or drawing materials |
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an impression made on a piece of paper by pressing a print plate onto it |
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a system of painting using tiny dots or points of color, developed by french artist Seurat in 1880s |
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A style of painting and sculpture that developed in the late 1950s in Britain and the US, based on visual clichés, subject matter, and impersonal style of popular mass-media imagery |
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those hues that cannot be produced by mixing other hues. Pigment primaries are red, yellow and blue. Light primaries are red, green and blue. Pigment primaries can be mixed together to form all other hues in the spectrum |
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the size relationship of parts to a whole and to one another |
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the regular or ordered repetition of dominant and subordinate elements or units within a design |
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From French rocaille meaning rock work, late Baroque style used in interior decoration and painting. Characterized by playful, pretty, romantic and visually loose or soft. Used on a small scale and ornate decorations, pastel colors, asymmetrical arrangement of curves |
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literally saint-maker, a person in Hispanic traditions who carves or paints religious figures |
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the size or apparent size of an object seen in relation to other objects, people, or its environment or format. Also used to refer to the quality or monumentality found in some objects regardless of their size. In architectural drawings, the ration of the measurements in the drawing to the measurements in the building |
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pigment secondaries are hues orange, viloet, and green, which may be produced in slightly dulled form by mixing two primaries |
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the legal distance a building must be from property lines. Early seatback requirements often increased in hight, resulting in a step like recessions in the rise of tall buildings |
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a 2D or implied 2D area defined by line or changes in value or color |
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clay that is thinned to the consistency of cream and used as paint on earthenware or stonewear ceramics |
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a characterize handling of media and elements of form which give a work its identity as the product of a particular person, group, art movement, period or culture |
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sculpture made by removing material from a larger block or form |
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a form or image implying or representing something beyond its obvious and immediate meaning |
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bit of colored glass, ceramic tile, or stone used in a mosaic |
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the tactile quality of a surface or the representation or invention of appearance of such a surface quality |
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french for fool the eye, a 2D representation that is so naturalistic that it looks actual or real |
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in lithography, a waxy substance used to draw or paint images on a lithographic stone or plate |
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two-and-three-dimensional |
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2D--having the dimensions of height and width only 3D--having the dimensions of height and width and depth |
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the appearance of similarity, consistency, or oneness. interrelation factors that cause carious elements to appear as a part of a single complete form |
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The lightness or darkness of tones or colos. White is the lightest value: black is the darkest. The value halfway between thse extremes is called middle gray. Sometimes called tone |
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a method suggesting 3D in a 2D work by placing an object above another in the composition. the object above seems further away than the one before |
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colors whose relative visual temperature makes them seem warm. warm colors or hues include red-violet, red, red-orange, orange, yellow-orange, and yellow |
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a thin, transparent layer of paint or ink |
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a type of relief print made from an image that is left raised on a block of rood |
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a covered walkway outdoors or indoors esp the passageway or the apse in the choir of a church |
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the representation of abstract ideas or principles by characters, figures, or events |
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art used in the design or decoration of useful objects |
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a manmade canal that looks like bridge made from carrying waterflow |
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masonary construction using a square stone |
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a prayer book intended for lay use in private or family devotions highly decorative |
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any large or important church |
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overlapping, horizontal, wood-plank-siding, made from either rectangular planks or taped planks |
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a theme in roman sculpture |
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lines the define the edges of shapes |
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hanging cloth that is used for a blind |
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the front exposure of any building |
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the ingredient to make things last longer thin varnish sprayed over a completed charcoal drawing to help bind the charcoal to the paper |
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a series or carved-out semicircular grooves usually found on columns, molding, or wooden legs |
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the front side of the building |
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painting that depicts scenes of everyday life rather that idealized or religious subjects |
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water-soluable gum from the accacia tree used as a thickening agent (binder) |
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means in place, the natural place or original place |
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block used to print the outlines of a print |
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the central wedge-shaped stones of an arc that locks the other together |
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a circular design symbolizing the cosmos and specific to a deity |
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form of a literary work submitted for publication |
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an object upon which a design has been placed and which is then used to make an impression on a piece of paper thus creating a print...woodblock plate and a lithographic stone can be used as a matrix |
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a circular opening esp one at the apex of a dome |
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shapes that are found in nature |
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surface found on coins caused by oxidation over a long period of time |
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a triangle shape above a door or window |
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the concave triangular section of a wall that forms the transition between a square shape and a circular base of a dome |
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a rectangular vertical member projecting only slightly from a wall with a base and capital as with a column |
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to make a proof or impression |
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a scale drawing of a landscape as it would appear if cut by an intersecting plane so that the internal structure is displayed |
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italian term describing a delicate gradation of light and shade |
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style of painting in which light is rendered in great contrast to dark to create dramatic effect |
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a circle-shaped work of art |
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the surface characteristic of paper...allows to take ink more readily |
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a structural framework based on a triangle system |
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