quiz 2


1-camera obscura
2-Albrecht Durer
3-Vitruvian Man
4-Leonardo da Vinci
5-Renaissance humanism
6-fresco
7-Petrarch
8-Jan van Eyck
9-one point perspective
10-Modernism
11-wealthy merchant
12-Avant-garde
13-Giotto
14-Fauvism
15-Picasso
16-Cubism
17-abstract painting
18-Greenberg
19-photographers
20-Nicephore Niepce
21-Etienne Jules Marey
22-Muybridge
23-semiotics
24-Gutenberg




1 __________ is the natural optical phenomenon that occurs when an image of a scene is projected through a small hole and appears on the wall opposite the opening as an inverted image. 

 

2 __________ looked through the grid on the pane of glass and reproduced the image on paper with grid drawn on it. 

 

3 In this pen and ink drawing, __________, Leonardo da Vinci illustrates the ideal measurements of man as created by God.

4 Three great masters– __________, MichelangeloLinks to an external site. and Raphael–dominated the period known as the High Renaissance, which lasted roughly from the early 1490s until 1527.

 

5 __________was an intellectual movement typified by a revived interest in the classical world and studies.

 

6 __________a painting done rapidly in watercolor on wet plaster on a wall or ceiling, so that the colors penetrate the plaster and become fixed as it dries.

 

7 __________ is often cited as the father of Humanism.

 

8 Flemish painter __________is known as the Father of Oil Painting.

9 Renaissance artists used a mathematical system for representing three-dimensional objects and space on a two-dimensional surface by means of intersecting lines that are drawn vertically and horizontally and that radiate from one point on a horizon line known as

10 __________, in the fine arts, late 19th to mid-20th century was a break with the past and the concurrent search for new forms of expression.

 

11  Much of the art produced during the early Renaissance was commissioned by the __________.

 

12 The term,__________, is used to describe a group that is innovative, experimental, and inventive in its technique or ideology,

particularly in the realms of culture, politics, and the arts.

 

13  The Florentine fresco painter, __________, the most famous artist of the Early Renaissance, made enormous advances in the technique of representing the human body realistically.

 

14 __________ emphasized painterly qualities and strong color over the representational or realistic values retained by Impressionism.

 

15 __________ was an innovator whose greatest achievement was the co-invention (together with Georges BraqueLinks to an external site.) of "CubismLinks to an external site." - a revolutionary way of representing reality in a painting.

 

16 __________ is fragmented subject matter that is deconstructed in such a way that it can be viewed from multiple angles simultaneously.

 

17 __________ is made up of bright colors, shape, line, and form with no particular subject from real world.

18 __________ was an art critic who said modernism is caring about texture, color and the application of paint on the canvas instead of caring about the objects they are painting if they are painting objects anymore.

19 In the1800’s, the first __________ were actually scientists and inventors who were looking for a way to make permanent copies of their work.

20 So in the 1800’s we have a radical new development – __________ invents photography. 

21 __________ was a French photographer and scientist who was studying movement.  He used one camera and juxtaposes many photos on one frame in order to show movement.   

22 __________ was a pioneer of capturing time on film.  He experimented in trying to capture time using several cameras.  Each camera representing a frame.

23 __________ is basically the study of meaning. It looks at how we attach meaning to, the real world, images, words and sounds.

 

24 Around the 1430’s, __________ originated a method of printing     from movable type.





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