The Belgian Surrealist artist ________ created The Treachery of Images, a work that calls our attention to the illusionary characteristics of painting.
  • relief (raised form on a largely flat background)
  • René Magritte
  • cross-hatching
  • linear perspective
The element of art that describes the relative lightness or darkness of a hue, compared to another hue, is known as ________.
  • volume
  • shade
  • Raphael
  • value
A sculpture designed in the round can be viewed from ________.
  • nearly every angle
  • relief (raised form on a largely flat background)
  • isometric perspective
  • linear perspective
The French artist Georges Seurat employed a new technique to create a jewel-like diffusion of light and vibration of color in his work The Circus. This type of painting, made up of small dots of color, is known as ________.
  • pointillism
  • vibrate
  • red, green, blue
  • optical color
This system, which derives its name from theGreek meaning "equal measure," uses diagonalparallel lines to communicate depth.
  • isometric perspective
  • linear perspective
  • nearly every angle
  • cross-hatching
In order to create value in his drawing Head of a Satyr, Michelangelo used both hatching and ________, a variation where the lines overlap, allowing for the depiction of darker tones.
  • red and green
  • relief (raised form on a largely flat background)
  • cross-hatching
  • linear perspective
The element of art that defines the amount of space occupied by an object is ________.
  • vibrate
  • volume
  • closer
  • value
This type of relief, which takes its name from the French word for low, does not imply great depth.
  • three-dimensional
  • value
  • depth
  • bas-relief
If you were to design an eye-catching poster using only two colors, the combination that would most stand out to passersby would be ________.
  • optical color
  • analogous
  • red, green, blue
  • red and green
This term refers to the substance contained in an object, but it does not necessarily imply weight.
  • absorb
  • mass
  • value
  • Raphael
This method of applying value to a two-dimensional artwork in order to create the illusion of three-dimensional solid form is called ________.
  • chiaroscuro (lit. light-dark in Italian)
  • orthogonals (converging parallel lines)
  • CMYK (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Key/Black)
  • two-point
Colors that do not contrast strongly with each other, and which are similar in wavelength, are ________ colors.
  • complementary colors
  • optical color
  • analogous
  • closer
A color that is almost gray has a ________ saturation.
  • low
  • hue
  • depth
  • value
In Mantegna's The Lamentation over the Dead Christ, the body of Jesus is portrayed at an extreme angle. This ________ view creates an unusual perspective and grabs the viewer's attention.
  • red, green, blue
  • orthogonals (converging parallel lines)
  • chiaroscuro (lit. light-dark in Italian)
  • foreshortened (dramatic angle)
A Summer Shower by the British artist Edith Hayllar employs linear perspective to create depth. The painting contains imaginary sightlines that converge toward a single vanishing point. These lines are also called ________.
  • orthogonals (converging parallel lines)
  • atmospheric perspective
  • foreshortened (dramatic angle)
  • CMYK (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Key/Black)
Most commercial color printing is achieved using four separate colors, represented by the matrix ________.
  • Raphael
  • chiaroscuro (lit. light-dark in Italian)
  • red, green, blue
  • CMYK (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Key/Black)
An upright stone that has an incised relief on its surface, such as the Maya sculpture, is known as ________.
  • closer
  • absorb
  • a stela
  • Raphael
Physicists have explained that when we see a color, it is the portion of the light spectrum that a surface fails to ________.
  • Raphael
  • closer
  • a stela
  • absorb
Because it is three-dimensional, a form has these three spatial measurements: height, width, and ________.
  • bas-relief
  • depth
  • three-dimensional
  • alternating value, relative size, overlapping, relative position
A color that is lighter than its basic hue is known as a tint. A color that is darker than its basic hue is called a ________.
  • a stela
  • closer
  • shade
  • value
A three-dimensional surface that is designed to be viewed from only one direction is known as a _______.
  • isometric perspective
  • linear perspective
  • nearly every angle
  • relief (raised form on a largely flat background)
Paul Gauguin's use of the color ________ in his 1889 depiction of a crucified Christ enhances the work's connection with the seasons, and expresses a message of optimism and rebirth.
  • volume
  • vibrate
  • absorb
  • yellow
Colors that are on opposite sides of the color wheelare radically different in wavelength and are called ________.
  • optical color
  • analogous
  • complementary colors
  • two-point
The traditional primary colors are ________.
  • Raphael
  • complementary colors
  • red, green, blue
  • red, yellow, blue
An artist can use color to indicate depth. When a color is very pure and intense then it seems to be ________.
  • analogous
  • closer
  • absorb
  • a stela
This type of perspective is used when an object is being viewed from an angle rather than from directly in front.
  • subtractive
  • Raphael
  • two-point
  • analogous
When using a series of squares that are exactly the same shape, implied depth can be achieved by ________.
  • depth
  • alternating value, relative size, overlapping, relative position
  • bas-relief
  • three-dimensional
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