Alphabetical by word
A |B | C |
D | E | F |
G | H | I | J |
K |
L |
M |
N |
O |
P |
Q |
R |
S |
T |
U |
V |
W |
X |
Y |
Z
A
Abstract
Expressionism - Abstract style originating in the United States in the
1940’s emphasizing spontaneity and energy.
Acrylic paint-
Acrylic
is a water-based "plastic" paint.
Synthetic painting colors made by distributing pigments in
a vehicle made of a polymethyl methacrylate solution in mineral spirits.. They
are valued for their versatility and clean up can be done with soap and water.
Appliqué - French meaning
“applied” and pronounced “ap-li-kay”. A cutout attached to a background.
Aquarelle - (pronounced “ak-we-rell”)
A transparent watercolour.
Aquatint - a process in which spaces rather than lines are
acid-etched onto a metal plate. Prints pulled from an aquatint plate show a
tonal effect similar to a wash drawing or a watercolour.
Art
- a form of human activity created primarily as an aesthetic expression,
especially, but not limited to drawing, painting and sculpture.
Art Deco - Style in
decoration and architecture, originating in the 1920’s characterized by
streamlined, rhythmic patterns.
Art Nouveau -
Ornamental style from the 1890’s, influential in design, employing sinuous lines
and simplified forms.
Artist Proof -
(abbreviation: A.P.) A print outside of the numbered series, usually one tenth
the edition. Hand signed or approved by the artist for quality control and
colour correctness. Most often sought after by collectors. May or may not be a
numbered series.
Artist Signed Stamp -
A stamp signed by the artist and framed in combination with a stamp print.
Assemblage - Sculpture
formed by joining individual pieces, sometimes “found objects”.
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B
Bas-Relief - (French
meaning “low relief” and pronounced “Bah relief”) Sculpture in which figure
projects only slightly from background.
Batik
- a method of dyeing textiles. Wax is applied to sections of material
which are to remain uncolored; the dyes do not penetrate wax. Once dyed, the wax
can be removed by various methods, one of which is boiling. Repeated waxing and
dyeing results in colorful patterns. The lines typically found in batiks are
produced by cracking the hardened wax before applying the dye.
Bon-a-Tirer - (French
meaning “good to pull”—Pronounced “bone-ah-ti-ray”. The first impression of a
print run acceptable to the artist and used as the standard with which each
subsequent impression is compared.
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C
Canvas - Fabrics that
are prepared for painting. Available in panels, stretched on frames, or obtained
by the yard.
Casein paint - Derived
from milk, is a fast-drying, water-soluble medium used by artists. It generally
has a glue-like consistency, but can be thinned with water to the degree that
fits a particular artist's style and desired result. It can be used on canvas
panels, illustration boards, paper, wood and masonite.
Catalogue Raisonne -
(French meaning “ raised catalogue” and pronounced “catalog re-zo-Nay”) Complete
descriptive listing of an artist’s work.
Certificate of
Authenticity - Certificates that identify the authenticity of the limited
edition print or canvas print.
CPF (Certified
Picture Framer) - One who has passed the Professional Picture Framers
Association’s certification examination.
Clayboard - Archival
particle board, coated with acid-free porcelain onto which a giclée or serigraph
is printed.
Coated Paper - Paper
manufactured with a thin surface coating of clay. This coating produces a sharp,
finely detailed image because it prevents ink from absorbing into the fibers.
Collage - (pronounced
“co-LAZH”) a work made by gluing pieces of paper, fabric, etc. onto a flat
surface.
Commission Print -
Also called “ time-limited edition” print, or “subscription edition”. The
edition size is determined by the number of orders received as of an established
deadline date.
Commission – To order
an original work from an artist.
Computer Art - Images
electronically produced and generated by a computer.
Condition - A print’s
physical condition influences its market value. Condition typically is described
as ranging from “mint”- completely undamaged and original, to “poor”. A poor
condition print may be creased, torn, water or tape blemished, trimmed smaller
than its original size, or otherwise damaged.
Conservation
framing - is the careful maintenance and protection of works of art.
In conservation (preservation) framing, using materials and procedures that will
have no adverse effects on a piece of artwork and will protect the artwork.
Charcoal - A drawing
medium (pencil or crayon) made from a porous carbonaceous material.
Chromolithography - A
colour-printing process in which separate printing plates are used to apply each
component colour. Often called “four colour” printing because the full range of
colour tones are achieved with only four plates- red, blue, yellow, and black.
Cubism - Style
inaugurated by Picasso and Braque in the early 20th century featuring
fragmentation and re-arrangement of natural forms.
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D
Dadaism - Movement
originating during and after World War One emphasizing the incongruous and
accidental while mocking the traditions of art.
Diptych - A two-part
painting often of attached panels.
Dry Mount - Framing
method in which a print is fastened to a stiff backing with non-liquid adhesive.
Dry–mounting is not recommended for prints of any value.
Dry Point - An
intaglio technique like engraving in which the image is drawn on a metal plate
with a needle, raising a ridge which prints a soft line.
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E
Easel
- a freestanding structure designed to hold an artist’s canvas or
panel during painting. Also may be decorative for display.
Edition - The
authorized number of impressions made from a single image, including all
numbered prints and proofs; a limited edition has a specified number noted on
the impression. Edition size: number of prints in the edition.
Egg Tempera - This
painting medium combines pigment with egg yolk and distilled water.
Embossed Print -
Un-inked relief print in which dampened paper is pressed into recessed areas of
a plate to produce a three-dimensional impression.
Encaustic - style of
painting using pigments mixed with hot wax, which are burned-in as an inlay.
Engraving - An
intaglio process in which lines are cut into a metal plate and then filled with
ink to transfer the image onto paper.
Etching - An intaglio
process in which an image is scratched through an acid resistant coating on a
metal plate. The plate is then dipped in acid, which eats into the exposed
surface. Prints are then made from the etched surface.
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F
Fauvism - ( French meaning “ wild beast”
and pronounced “FOHV-ism”) An early 20th century French style employing thick
outlines and bold, often clashing colours unrelated to the subjects in nature.
Fillet - a
small molding that may be used as an edging on a mat, liner or frame lip.
Profiles may differ somewhat.
Frame
- the decorative or functional element which surrounds an item, providing
protection and display functions. Typically made of wood or metal, a frame
generally provides the architectural support element for a work of art.
Fitting -
The process of assembling glass, mats, artwork and filler board into a picture
frame, including the addition of a dust cover and hangers.
Foreshortening -
Alteration of scale of an image to suggest perspective.
Found Object - A
natural object incorporated in a work of art, such as a leaf, feather, etc.
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G
Giclee:
a French word meaning “to spray”. Ink-jet
technology specifically for fine art reproduction. The ink-jet printer produces over four million droplets of ink,
each second, that combine to form more than two thousand shades of color.
The information controlling the jets comes directly from a computer - no
printing film or plates are required. The computer's information is scanned
directly from the artist's original work. This modern method of creating
reproductions is gaining in popularity because of it’s ability to
closely resemble the original.
Gouache -
an opaque watercolor paint. A painting done with such a medium.
Graphic - Any work
printed from a plate or block.
Ground - The
surface upon which a painting is done- canvas, masonite, and so on.
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H
Haute Relief -
(French for “high relief” and pronounced “O relief”) High sculpture relief in
which figures project from a background at least half of their depth.
Hors De Commerce -
French meaning “outside of sale” and pronounced “Or de com-airce.” A designation
for prints not in the numbered series pulled for the use of the publisher,
normally limited to 5 or 6.
Hyperrealism-
is a
genre of painting and sculpture resembling a high resolution
digital photograph. In painting and sculpture the phrase
"Hyperrealism" is used to describe a photorealistic
rendering of people, landscapes and scenes.
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I
Image - 1)
The printed or colored portion of a print. 2) A physical likeness or
representation of a person, animal or thing; photographed, painted, sculpted or
otherwise made visible.
Impasto
- Thick applications of paint creating a textured surface.
Impressionism - Loose spontaneous style developed in the late 19th century
in France, in which artists tried to capture their impressions of light and
shade.
Intaglio:
In this method of printing reproductions, the area of the image to
be printed is recessed into the surface of the printing plate and the
recessed areas are filled with ink. The incised image may be etched,
engraved with chemicals or tools. An example of Intaglio printing is paper currency,
money. The image to be
printed is incised into the plates, the incisions filled with ink, and
excess ink wiped from the plates. Heavy pressure is applied to transfer the
ink from the plates to the paper, leaving the surface slightly raised and
the back side slightly indented.
Issue
Price - The original price of a limited edition print when first offered
for retail sale.
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J
Joining - in framing,
the operation of gluing and nailing the corners of a frame together.
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K
L
Limited edition print
A reproduction of
an original work of art that is signed and sequentially numbered by the artist
and is limited to a certain quantity of numbered copies. The first number
indicates the number of the piece; the second number indicates the total
quantity of the edition, e.g., 135/250.
Linocut - A process in which an image
is cut in relief on a linoleum block.
Lithography -
uses the principle that
oil and water
don't mix as the basis of the printing process. A flat stone
such as limestone or a metal plate is treated so that the image area
attracts oil-based inks and the wet non-image areas repel the oil-based
inks. In lithography, the printing surface is flat with both image and
non-image areas at the same level on the printing plate.
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M
Margin - The white, unprinted area
surrounding a printed image.
Matrix - A printing
surface on which an image is drawn or incised. The matrix may be made of wood,
stone, metal, plastic, linoleum, or any other substance that will print images
on paper.
Medallion - Cast
metal medallions sometimes are issued in conjunction with the publication of
prints, especially stamp prints. Design of the medallion artwork usually
duplicates some portion of the print.
Medium -
is the materials that an artist uses in creating a work
and can be oil paint, acrylic, watercolor, pencil, or pastel to name a few
of the popular mediums. What the work is “painted on” or “applied to” is
also part of the medium. For example: oil paintings can be on canvas or
prepared board. Watercolors are usually painted on paper of various thicknesses.
Describing more then one art medium is referred to as media. Any substance added
to color to facilitate application or to achieve a desired effect.
Mezzotint - An intaglio process in which the plate surface is roughened and
then an image is created by smoothing the areas to be printed.
Minimalism - Style emerging in the mid 20th century in which the elements
are the simplest possible forms.
Mint Stamp - An unsigned stamp framed with a copy of the print from which
the stamp was made.
Mixed Media - The use of different materials in the same work.
Mobile - A sculpture that permits motion.
Molding - wood or metal which has been
refined and shaped and which includes a rabbet for use in the framing industry
as frame stock to frame pictures.
Monotype - A unique print made from an
inked, painted glass or metal plate.
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N
Numbered - Each copy of a limited edition
print is marked with two numbers, separated by a slash mark. The first number
identifies the particular copy, and the second indicates edition size. 35/950,
for instance identifies print number 35 of a 950-copy edition.
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O
Offset Lithography - is
one of the most commonly used printing process’ to create reproductions. How
this process works is first transferring an image photographically to thin
metal, paper, or plastic plates. Rollers apply ink and water to the plates.
Since oil and water don't mix, the oil-based ink doesn't adhere to the
non-image areas. Only the inked image portion is then transferred to a
rubber blanket (cylinder) that then transfers the image onto the paper as it
passes between it and another cylinder beneath the paper. The term offset
refers to the fact that the image isn't printed directly to the paper from
the plates, but is offset or transferred to another surface that then makes
contact with the paper.
Oil
painting
- developed over time during the 15th and 16th centuries, the
technique or result of using paints made from pigments mixed with oil on a
canvas.
Op Art
- Name coined in the 1970’s for a style popular in 1947 employing optical
illusion by juxtaposing colour and line in geometric patterns that seem to
vibrate.
Open
edition - An edition having an unlimited number of prints in it.
Original - as defined by the
dictionaries: Preceding all others in
time; first. Any work considered to be an authentic creation by an artist,
rather than a copy, reproduction or imitation. Original comes
from the word Origin.
Origin: the
place where something begins, where it springs into being.
Overall Print Size - The physical dimensions of the paper upon which
a print is made.
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P
Papier en
Metal
A unique
process combining layers of metallic foil. opaque white ink, process inks and
touch colors onto fine art paper to reproduce the radiant halo effects of
gold, silver, and bronze in the original art.
Pastel
- a crayon made from pigment mixed with gum and water and pressed into a
stick-shaped form. A work of art created from these crayons is also called a
pastel. Pastel can also indicate a pale color.
Pencil
- A drawing implement made of graphite, crayon, or a similar substance enclosed
in wood or a hand-held mechanism made of plastic or metal.
Picture
frame - A structure, usually of wood or metal in which a painting, print or
other object is enclosed to improve or enhance its appearance, to isolate it
from a wall or to link it to a decor, as well as to support and protect it.
Planography - Any process of printing from
a surface level with the plate, as in lithography.
Pointillism - Late 19th century French
style using small dots of pure colour to produce images.
Pop Art - American style of the 1960’s
employing imagery from popular and commercial culture to satirize or give
emblematic value to familiar objects.
Poster - An
inexpensive printed reproduction of a piece of artwork in
unlimited quantities. Four-color lithographic reproductions
of a painting, usually with colored borders and wording on
or around the image to advertise an artist, show or event.
This
art medium comes from the ancient practice of "posting"
messages in public places.
Proof - A publisher’s sample of a future
limited edition release. Not for sale. Usually has the word “ PROOF” or “SAMPLE”
stamped on or in the image.
Provenance -
A record of previous ownership and previous
locations for a work of art.
Publisher - A company whose business is to
produce and market prints.
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Q
R
Rag Paper - Paper used for prints, which
contains a certain proportion of cotton fiber in its physical structure. The
higher the cotton content, the higher the quality of paper.
Refit -To
remove an artwork from a frame and reinstall in the same or different frame.
Relief - A technique in which the portions
of a plate intended to print are raised above the surface, as in woodcut,
linocut, etc.
Remarque - A small original drawing or
sketch made by an artist in the margin of a print. An artist personalization.
Reproduction -
a copy.
Restoration -
repair of an object to recreate its original
appearance.
Rice paper -
a common misnomer for Japanese paper. A smooth,
white material favored by Chinese painters; cut off, in a spiral manner, from
the pith of the Fatsia papyrifera tree. Not a paper, similar to papyrus and tapa
in that regard.
Rigiclée - A giclee process on archival
porcelain coated Masonite board for supreme longevity.
Roman Numbered Edition - A smaller edition
numbered with Roman numerals, usually a deluxe edition on higher quality paper.
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S
Scratchboard - Cardboard coated with chalk
forms a smooth, glossy surface, which is used as a ground for drawing or
painting in ink. Parts of the image may then be scratched off with a pointed
tool to create a variety of effects.
Screw eye -
A screw with a head shaped into a loop to which the
hanging wire on the back of a picture frame is attached.
Secondary Market Value - The value of a
print, determined by supply and demand, after all copies have been sold out at
original issue price.
Security hanger -
A type of hanger with one section attached to the
back of the frame and the other to the wall. When positioned together, the frame
is held securely and requires a special tool to separate the hanger parts. Used
to help avoid theft of artwork.
Serigraphs:
Also commonly
known as silk-screening, serigraphy is a time-honored technique, based on
stenciling, for creating prints by hand. Ink or paint is carefully brushed
through a fine fabric screen, portions of which have been masked for
impermeability. For each color, a different portion of the screen must be
masked, and each color must be allowed to dry before the next is applied.
Shadow
box - a frame made from a deep molding or material in which
three-dimensional objects may be displayed.
Signature: on an artwork establishes
the identity of its maker and is important in determining the authenticity
of a painting. It is a person's name as written by that person, as
distinguished from how anyone else would sign either that person's name or
their own name. Signatures have been placed in many locations on works. Most
commonly on drawings and paintings, signatures have been placed just inside
one of the bottom edge corners of the picture. Typically
artists sign works only when they've been finished. Signing a work is
frequently the gesture marking a work's completion -- the moment, as Picasso
put it, that it is ready to be "abandoned."
Signed and Numbered - A print bearing
an original signature and copy/edition number.
Signed Only - A print signed by the artist
but not numbered. (See open edition)
Signed in the Plate - Refers to the
artist’s signature on an original work, as it appears in a print.
Sold Out - Said of a limited edition print
once it is no longer available at issue price and is being sold instead at
secondary market prices.
Stamp Print - Limited edition print made
from a work originally created as the design for a conservation group. Print and
stamp customarily are framed together.
Still
life - a painting or drawing of a group of inanimate objects contrived
by the artist according to some theme, either symbolic or merely aesthetic.
Stretch -
To pull a fabric taut over a rigid support and secure; e.g., a canvas over a
stretched frame or a needle art over foam board.
Stretcher bar -
A strip of wood with tongue-and-groove ends. Bars
are joined to form an expandable frame over which canvas is stretched.
Subscription Edition - A size of edition
determined by the number of orders received before a pre-determined deadline.
Surrealism - Style using imagery from
dreams and the subconscious, often distorting forms of ordinary objects or
placing them in new contexts.
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T
Tempera - Pigments mixed with a
water-soluble base such as casein, size, or egg yolk. Tempera dries with a flat,
dull finish.
Tetraptych - (pronounced “te-TRAP-tick”) A
four part painting.
Triptych - (pronounced “trip-tick”) A
three-part painting. Three panels.
Trompe L’oeil - French meaning “fool the
eye” and pronounced “trom-LOY” Style in painting so naturalistic that the eye is
deceived into flat surfaces as three dimensional.
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U
Ultraviolet
(UV) light - short, high energy invisible light waves beyond violet in the
spectrum with a length of 250 to 400 nanometers.
United inches - In framing, the combined
inches of one length and one width of a frame; e.g., an 8x10 frame is 18 united
inches.
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V
W
Watercolors - a paint that uses water as its base usually painted on
heavy paper.
Watermark -
a design, pattern or mark on paper, usually produced
by a raised area on which the paper is made. Watermarks on handmade papers are
made by very low relief molds or designs of fine wire set on the screen on which
the moist pulp collects.
Woodcut - A process in which the image is
cut in a relief on a wood block.
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X
Y
Z
We are constantly adding to this art glossary. If
you have any questions or
comments please
mailto:info@picturethisgallery.com
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