Use LEFT and RIGHT arrow keys to navigate between flashcards;
Use UP and DOWN arrow keys to flip the card;
H to show hint;
A reads text to speech;
14 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
subtractive and additive processes
|
Subtractive: sculptor begins with a mass of material larger than the finished work
And removes material Carving is a subtactive process Additive: the sculptor builds the work adding material as the work proceeds. Modeling, construction, and assemblage are additive processes |
|
relief (low and high),
|
meant to be seen from one side only, very often used to decorate architecture
Low or high relief- low relief is where the figures have a shallow depth High relief is where the sculptures project forward from the base at least half their depth Frontal vs. in-the-round |
|
sculpture in-the-round
|
Impossible to represent in a single photograph all at once.
Ex. Giovanni da Bologna. The Rape of the Sabine Women. completed 1583 |
|
frieze
|
A sculptural band
Ex. Maidens and Stewards, fragment of the Panathenaic Procession, from the east frieze of the Parthenon, Acropolis, Athens. 447–438 BCE |
|
carving
|
subtractive process in which the material being carved is chipped, hammered, or gouged away from an inert, raw block of material
-sculptors who work in stone must take into account the different characteristics of each type of stone |
|
Modeling
|
Additive process in which a pliant substance (usually clay) is molded
Ex. Robert Arneson. Case of Bottles. 1964 |
|
naturalism
|
A brand of representation in which artist retains apparently realistic elements but presents the visual world from a distinctly personal or subjective point of view.
|
|
contrapposto,
|
counter-balance
In contrapposto, the weight falls on one foot, raising the corresponding hip. This shift in weight is countered by a turn of the shoulders, so that the figure stands in a sort of S-curve Ex. Praxiteles. Hermes and Dionysos. c. 330 BCE |
|
Casting
|
Employs a mold into which some molten material is poured and allowed to harden.
Ex. Tomb of Emperor Shih Huang Ti. 221–206 BCE |
|
lost wax process
|
Technique developed to create hollow pieces rather than solid ones
|
|
assemblage
|
The process of bringing individual objects or pieces together to form a larger whole.
Often associated with the transformation of common materials into art Ex. Louise Nevelson. Sky Cathedral. 1958 |
|
installation
|
Artwork that radically changes the space it is shown in by introducing sculptural materials in order to transform our experience of it
|
|
site-specific art
|
Site-specific art: art that is designed for a specific space
Ex. Kara Walker. Insurrection! (Our Tools Were Rudimentary, Yet We Pressed On), installation view. 2000. Cut paper silhouettes and light projections, site-specific dimensions. |
|
earthworks
|
Large scale out-of-doors environments
Ex. Robert Smithson. Spiral Jetty. April 1970 |