Art Glossary

If you're a little mystified about art terms, don't feel alone! This art glossary will help you with some of the common art terms out here. And since you are interested in some art knowledge, we also provide you with a way to buy art. You'll probably just want to browse, so you can apply your new-found knowledge about art. Well, that's OK, too.

This is just a sampling of some terms you might want to know. It'll get you started, and it sure beats wading through a massive reference text. Ugh.

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Art Glossary: A

Abbozzo. Think of this as a sketch or outline. It's really the "underpainting." An abbozzo is in a single color. The idea behind it is to show a piece's general composition. It's a planning tool.

Absidiole. This is a form of abstract art. It may represent nothing at all, or it may represent something--but without reference to the original source. You're supposed to read patterns as independent relationships.

Abstract Expressionism. This art style was prominent for about one generation. With its roots in New York, it started in World War II times and ended in the Korean War times. You may have heard of surrealism? The leaders of that movement lived in the U.S. (in exile) during World War II. AE was a mix of surrealism and some other concepts--notably expressionism. The influence of American culture is heavy in this form of art. The two main categories of AE are iconic and calligraphic

Academic art. In the 17th through 19th centuries, academies of painting and sculpture had official status in Europe. They also had a high degree of control over what was "acceptable art." So, art in compliance with the standards set by these academic institutions is academic art.

Academy of art. We figured you'd want to know this if you read the previous definition! AAs were institutions that sprang from the many associations artists formed during the Renaissance. These institutions were, effectively, part of a revolt against the medieval Guild system--which artists felt oppressed them and their work. Under the Guild system, they weren't painters or sculptors, but just artisans--a term that conferred about much status as blacksmith. The academies were a way for artists to show they were highly educated professionals with a comprehensive theory of art and technical skill. The academies provided standards and status--both of which the artists of the time found very attractive.

Academy figure. This a drawing or painting the female or male nude, done as an exercise by a student of one of the academies. Now that you know this, you won't overpay for one of these, based on the idea they must be very good if they have that "academy" label attached. Think of your barber school haircut.

-B-

Balance. This is just what it says it is. You're looking for things to "add up" in an artwork, for equal amounts of yin and yang, etc. Think in terms of equilibrium. Look for a center point or axis. And think of a seesaw. Part of the beauty of art is you can see the math behind it, if it follows convention. So, a small figure far from the axis would balance out a large figure close to the axis--just as a child at the end of a see saw would balance out an adult near the fulcrum. Only, in art, you must balance more than physical weight or size. For example, you must balance color and "depth." And you deal with balance of abstract to non-abstract. Bear in mind, balance is not always the goal of an artwork. Sometimes, imbalance is the goal, because it highlights some theme or message by increasing its "weight" or importance.

Baldachin. This was originally a cloth canopy, or baldachino, supported by four poles--one at each corner. That's a simple configuration, and the definition grew to include any architectural canopy in one of several forms--including suspended from above.

-C-

Cameo. A gemstone whose layers have different colors molded or carved such that one color stands out in relief against another. The gemstone may be made of shell, glass, or ceramic.

Camera lucida. An art tool that uses a prism to concentrate and project light onto paper (or some other surface) so you can trace the resulting image.

-D-

Deinos (or dinos). A wide-mouthed vase with no handles. The vase is for mixing water and wine, and the more elaborate ones may have matching stands.

Desco da parto. You may see these in medieval paintings. The literal translation is "birth plate," and the desco da parto is simply a decorated tray. Medieval Italians used these trays to bring small gifts--such as pastries--to new mothers.

-E-

Earth Art. Works of art that use natural materials such as earth. The phrase, very popular in the 1960s, came to mean any art that used terrain for materials. And that would include such things as rocks and snow.

Earth colors. These are really "Earth pigments," because the phrase refers to the pigments themselves, not their colors. The pigments exist naturally in earthen soil, and are often metallic oxides. Chemically, these are the most stable of all pigments--least likely to change with age. The colors are usually brown or yellow.

-F-

Face-painting. Just an old synonym for portrait painting.

Fanlight. A fan-shaped window over a door--it lets light in. The window is fan-shaped because of both its semicircular shape and the glazing bars that resemble the spokes of a fan.

-G-

Gable. The triangular upper part of a wall closing the end of a ridged roof. 

Gadrooning. Lobed decoration consisting of convex curves. You'll usually see gadrooning on a surface curved in more than one plane--such as embossed bronze.

Galilee. A one-story porch or chapel at the entrance of a church house.

-H-

Hallmark. An official mark stamped on a piece of gold or silver as a guarantee that it conforms to a certain standard of purity. The main mark is that of the appropriate Assay Office (indicated by a symbol, e.g. a leopard's head for London), others showing the precise standard of fineness, the maker and the date.

Hamam (or hammam). The Arabic word for "bath." A real hamam, or Turkish bath, is generally large and heated from underneath. It has three sections: the camekan (dressing room), hararet (steam room), and sogukluk (antechamber).

-I-

Icon. A painting, mosaic, or enamel representation of a religious figure. In Greek and Russian Orthodox Catholicism, the artist follows a strict set of rules for making the artwork. Other religions tend not to have these restrictions.

Iconoclast art. A type of art--without religious figures--created during the reigns of Leo III and a string of his successors (AD 730-843). These rulers banned religious figures.

Iconography. The systematic investigation of subject matter, rather than style.

-J-

Jacobean Style. England's King James I is probably best-known for the King James Bible (1611). During his reign of 1603-1625, however, he had additional influence--on architecture and decoration prevalent. The look is coarse, but employs elaborate woodcarving and plasterwork.

Jacobethan. A mix of Jacobean and Elizabethan art styles. Imitations were popular in the 19th Century.

-K-

Kachina doll. A carved wooden doll. The North American Indians used these to represent supernatural beings. These people used Kachina dolls both to teach children about spirits and to perform fertility rites.

Kalathos. A basket made of some material other than wicker, but representing a wicker basket nonetheless.

-L-

Lacquer Ever wonder what lacquer really is? Well, it's an extremely hard, waterproof varnish. Shellac is a kind of lacquer.

Lampas. A special, heavy cloth. In the 18th Century, lampas appeared in high-quality silk upholstery.

-M-

Magic Realism (or sharp-focus realism). German art critic Franz Roh coined this phrase in 1924 to describe the less expressive (and more conservative) element of the neue sachlichkeit. 

Magot. Cheap, ugly wares from China or Japan.

MahIstick. A long stick a painter uses to support his/her brush-holding hand.

-N-

Nailhead. A small architectural ornament (often for a molding) shaped like a series of pyramids.

Naive art. A condescending reference to untrained 20th Century painters.

-O-

Obelisk. A single tapering rectangular block of stone. The movie 2001: A Space Odyssey had obelisks as a central part of the story. Obelisks are were prominent in Ancient Egypt, as monuments.

Objet d'art. French for "art object." The phrase usually refers to small, exquisite, and decorative art.

Objet trouve. French for "found object." An artist finds something, hardly does a thing to it, and presents it as either part of a work of art or a piece of art in its own right.

-P-

Palette. A small, usually wooden or plastic tray that holds an painter's colors.

Palimpsest. A writing (parchment, slab, or brass sheet) with the original text removed or hidden to allow a new text to be placed on it.

-Q-

Quadrature. A class of painted mural decorations depicting architectural subjects.

Quarry. A small square glass pane.

-R-

Rail. A wooden strip fixed to the wall as protection at chair-back height (dado rail or chair rail); or horizontal framing in a paneled door (or wall paneling); or the front piece of the seat-frame on a chair (seat-rail).

Raising. Making a cup or container shape from a metal sheet by hammering it into shape over a wooden block.

-S-

S-curve. Any serpentine line in art. The phrase often refers to the shape formed by figures in gothic sculpture, with their hips thrust forward or to one side.

Saddle bar. A horizontal bar that holds a pane in a window.

-T-

Table. The artist does not mean a dining table! The word can refer to a picture painted on panel.

Tachisme. The French art critic Charles Estiennie, in the early 1950s, started using this word to characterize abstract painting where the artist applied the color in blots or stains.

-U-

Ukiyo-e. These Japanese pictures (17th to 19th centuries) celebrated the culture of the Yoshiwara (brothel) quarter of Edo (Tokyo). Geishas were favorite subjects, but so were landscapes and scenes from historical legends, epics, and folktales.

Uncial. This is a type of calligraphy, introduced in the 4th century AD. The letters look much like Roman capitals, but with rounded--instead of sharp--angles.

-V-

Vanishing point in perspective.  The point towards which a set of lines appear to converge, though they are really in parallel to each other.

Vanitas. From the Latin for "'vanity."' These are still-life paintings--often featuring a skull--that try to remind the viewer of how temporary human life really is. In the 17th Century, these paintings were very popular in Holland.

-W-

Wainscot. Interior paneling in wood.

Waldglas. Utilitarian glass (usually pale green) made in the late Middle Ages in Bohemia and Germany.

Wall plate. A beam running along the top of a wall to support the roof joists.

-X-

X-height. Printing lingo for the height of the lowercase letters of a given font or typeface.

Xylography. Wood engraving.

Xystus. An open colonade.

-Y-

Yamato-e. The Japanese naturalistic narrative style of painting (circa, 10th century).

Yantra. A geometric diagram Buddhist mystics use for focusing during meditation.

-Z-

Zenga. Japanese paintings (in ink) characterized by their boldness and spontaneity.

Zwischengoldglas. This is German for "gold and glass sandwich." The art is glass formed of two layers that sandwich a decoration in gold leaf.

 

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