art uil 2012-2013 study guide ** picture memory- practice spelling name of artist and artwork **...

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Art UIL 2012-2013 Study Guide ** Picture Memory- Practice spelling Name of Artist AND Artwork ** RENAISSANCE (1400-1600, Age of exploration, discovery, and Rebirth of art/science, Church/ruling class were patron of the arts) 1. Master of the Osservanza - Adoration of the Shepherds , Saint John the Baptist, Saint Bartholomew 2. van der Weyden- Virgin and Child 3. Mantegna - Portrait of a Man 4. Cranach the Elder - A Prince of Saxony 5. Bordone - Salome Given the Head of St. John the Baptist by Herod 6. Mor - Portrait of Alessandro Farnese 7. Empoli - Three Maries at the Tomb BAROQUE (1600-1750, Newton, Galileo, ordinary citizen becoming patron of arts, artworks characterized by Movement/Energy) 8. van Breen - Skating on the Frozen Amstel River 9. van der Ast - Still Life of Flowers in a Glass Vase 10. Reni - Saint Joseph and the Christ Child 11. Passeri - Musical Party in a Garden 12. Hobbema - A Wooded Landscape 13. Murillo - The Nativity 14. Carreno - Portrait of the Dwarf Michol 15. Bakhuysen - The Dutch Man-of-War “de Gouden Leeuw” on the River Y near Amsterdam 16. Watteau - Heureux age! Age d’ or (Happy Age! Golden Age) 17. Oudry - Allegory of Europe

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Art UIL 2012-2013 Study Guide** Picture Memory- Practice spelling Name of Artist AND Artwork **RENAISSANCE (1400-1600, Age of exploration, discovery, and Rebirth of art/science,

Church/ruling class were patron of the arts)

1. Master of the Osservanza - Adoration of the Shepherds , Saint John the Baptist, Saint Bartholomew

2. van der Weyden - Virgin and Child

3. Mantegna - Portrait of a Man

4. Cranach the Elder - A Prince of Saxony

5. Bordone - Salome Given the Head of St. John the Baptist by Herod

6. Mor - Portrait of Alessandro Farnese

7. Empoli - Three Maries at the Tomb

BAROQUE (1600-1750, Newton, Galileo, ordinary citizen becoming patron of arts, artworks characterized by Movement/Energy)

8. van Breen - Skating on the Frozen Amstel River

9. van der Ast - Still Life of Flowers in a Glass Vase

10. Reni - Saint Joseph and the Christ Child

11. Passeri - Musical Party in a Garden

12. Hobbema - A Wooded Landscape

13. Murillo - The Nativity

14. Carreno - Portrait of the Dwarf Michol

15. Bakhuysen - The Dutch Man-of-War “de Gouden Leeuw” on the River Y near Amsterdam

16. Watteau - Heureux age! Age d’ or (Happy Age! Golden Age)

17. Oudry - Allegory of Europe

MODERN – (1750-1900) Revolution in American colonies, Industrial Revolution. Invention of airtight tube for oil paint. Popular Styles -Neoclassic, Romantic, Impressionism, & Pointillism18. Liotard - Jean-Louis Buisson-Boissier

19. Stubbs - Lord Grosvenor’s Arabian with a Groom

20. Romney - Lady Hamilton

21. Boilly - The Geography Lesson

22. Friedrich - A Mountain Peak with Drifting Clouds

23. Delacroix - Selim and Zuleika

24. Courbet - Stream of the Black Pond

25. Bierstadt - Sunrise, Yosemite Valley

26. Bridges - Pink Cyclamen

27. Cassatt - Children in a Garden (The Nurse)

28. Hovenden - Chloe and Sam

29. McEwen - The Witches

30. Luce - Rue Ravignan, Paris

31. Russell - Indian Family with Travois

20th Century – (1900-2000) Social & Technological change, World Wars, inventions. Popular Styles – Cubism, Fauvism, Abstract Art32. Derain - The Turning Road, L’Estaque

33. Rolshoven - Street Scene in Tunis

34. Picasso - Still Live in a Landscape

35. Monet - Water Lilies

36. O’Keefe - Series I – No. 1

37. Henri - (Carl) Boy in Blue Overalls

38. Kloss - Viacito in White

39. Takayama - Expectation

40. Huckaby - Big Momma’s Room

Master of the Osservanza - Adoration of the Shepherds , Saint John the Baptist, Saint

Bartholomew*** Learn important info about artwork ***

1. The artist know as Master of the Osservanza is called Osservanza because that is C. a church where one of his paintings is located.

2. The nationality of the artist known as the Master of the Osservanza was Italian

3. Adoration of the Shepherds, Saint John the Baptist, Saint Barholomew was created with tempera and gold on wood

van der Weyden - Virgin and Child

1. In Virgin and Child, the artist used light and shadow to B. show details and form.

2. Van der Weyden’s nationality is D. Netherlandish

3. Virgin and Child was painted with A. oils

4. Van der Weyden is particularly famous for creating works in the Romantic style. False

5. In Virgin and Child, the artist used the posed of the baby to give emotional impact to his image. True

1. The side view pose used in Portrait of a Man is called a profile pose.

2. Mantegna served as official painter to B. a ruling family in Italy

3. The type of paint Mantegna preferred to use was C. tempera

4. Portrait of a Man was originally created on a wood panel. True

Mantegna - Portrait of a Man

Cranach the Elder - A Prince of Saxony

1. A pyramid shape is used to structure the composition of A Prince of Saxony.

2. The artist used light to focus attention on the sitter’s face in A Prince of Saxony. True

3. A Prince of Saxony and (carl) Boy in Blue Overalls are most alike in their B. backgrounds

4. The sons of Lucas Cranach the Elder trained and worked as assistants in his workshop. True

Bordone - Salome Given the Head of St. John the Baptist by Herod

1. The gold jewelry and gold trims on clothing in Salome Given the Head of St. John the Baptist by Herod provide an example of an artist’s use of rhythm.

2. Red fabrics at the sides of Salome Given the Head of St. John the Baptist by Herod create a visual frame within the image. True

3. In this painting the artist showed a variety of textures realistically.

4. Paris Bordone is best known for painting c. small works for private patrons

Mor - Portrait of Alessandro Farnese

1. To show the importance of his subject in Portrait of Alessandro Farnese, the artist used the a. sitter’s pose b. point of view c. size of canvas D. all of the above.

2. In which of these portraits are the subject’s clothes and possessions most important? D. Portrait of Alessandro Farnese

3. For Portrait of Alessandro Farnese, the artist chose a point of view that b. makes his sitter seem more important than other people

4. In Portrait of Alessandro Farnese, the pose holds viewers at a distance.

Empoli - Three Maries at the Tomb

1. The contrast between light and dark in Three Maries at the Tomb helps create a dramatic mood.

2. Jesus can be seen in two places in Three Maries at the Tomb. False

3. Jacopo da Empoli painted a. still life b. religious works c. portraits d. All of the above

4. The artist used realistic hand gestures in Three Maries at the Tomb to help show the surprise the women felt at the angel’s news. True

van Breen - Skating on the Frozen Amstel River

1. Most of the works created by Adam van Breen are b. winter scenes

2. Warm colors in the foreground of Skating on the Frozen Amstel River and faded colors in the background are an example of an artist’s use of Perspective.

3. The city in the background of Skating on the Frozen Amstel River is d. Amsterdam

4. Which of these works was created on wood? C. Skating on the Frozen Amstel River

van der Ast - Still Life of Flowers in a Glass Vase

1. Cut flowers are a reminder to viewers that earthly beauty does not last long in d. Still Life of Flowers in a Glass Vase.

2. Balthasar van der Ast specialized in painting b. still lifes

3. Still Life of Flowers in a Glass Vase was painted on b. copper

4. Thick paints give substance and texture to the flower petals and insects in Still Life of Flowers in a Glass Vase. False

Reni - Saint Joseph and the Christ Child

1. Saint Joseph and the Christ Child was painted during the Baroque period of history.

2. Saint Joseph and the Christ Child and Virgin and Child both show images of a parent’s love for a child. True

3. Guido Reni was often in debt during his life because b. he lost money gambling

4. In Saint Joseph and the Christ Child, Joseph’s outward gaze makes viewers feel connected to him. False

5. This painting is an example of a Renaissance work created to serve the Catholic Church. False

Passeri - Musical Party in a Garden

1. To tie the foreground and background of Musical Party in a Garden together, the artist used a. warm colors.

2. Giovanni Passeri worked during the Baroque period of art history.

3. Which of these techniques is NOT used in Musical Party in a Garden to help show perspective? C. using warm colors in the foreground but not in the background

4. The biographies Passeri wrote of other artists provide important information for art historians. True

Hobbema - A Wooded Landscape

1. In A Wooded Landscape, the artist gave us a point of view as if we are c. in the air above the scene.

2. The artist used sunlight in A Wooded Landscape to c. guide viewers’ eyes through the painting

3. Hobbema sometimes hired other artist to paint people into his landscapes. True

4. Small figures of people in A Wooded Landscape keep viewers’ eyes moving around the image. True

Murillo - The Nativity

1. The colors that are most important in The Nativity are a. primary.

2. Many of the paintings created by Murillo were commissioned by the a. the Catholic Church

3. The artist used vertical lines in the obsidian on which The Nativity is painted to b. represent heavenly light

4. Bartolome Esteban Murillo’s nationality was Spanish

5. In which of these paintings did the artist use a background that creates shallow visual space and pushes the subject forward? B. The Nativity

Carreno - Portrait of the Dwarf Michol

1. Portrait of the Dwarf Michol shows information about the sitter’s life and work as well as a likeness of his features. True

2. Juan Carreno de Miranda was the official painter to the queen and king of Spain.

3. In which of these works are Neutral colors most important? B. Portrait of the Dwarf Michol

4. In Portrait of the Dwarf Michol, the pomegranate represents eternal life.

Bakhuysen - The Dutch Man-of-War “de Gouden Leeuw” on the River Y near Amsterdam

1. This work would be considered a seascape. True

2. Details are shown more clearly in the foreground of The Dutch Man-of-War “De Gouden Leeuw” on the River Y near Amsterdam than in its background. True

3. Bakhuysen began his art career with pen and ink drawings of shipping.

4. Tsar Peter the Great was one of the European rulers who bought paintings from Bakhuysen. True

Watteau - Heureux age! Age d’ or (Happy Age! Golden Age)

1. Watteau is considered the founder of the Rococo style.

2. The mood of Heureaux age! Age d’or (Happy Age! Golden Age!) is a. light-hearted.

3. Jean-Antoine Watteau’s nationality was French.

4. What style of painting developed in France late in the Baroque period of art history? Rococo

Oudry - Allegory of Europe

1. The mood of Allegory of Europe is light-hearted and carefree/playful.

2. Allegory of Europe was painted during the Renaissance period of art history. False

3. The sheet music and instruments in Allegory of Europe are still life objects and also serve as symbols that represent air.

4. Jean-Babptiste Oudry’s father was b. an art dealer

Liotard - Jean-Louis Buisson-Boissier

1. Jean-Louis Buisson-Boissier was created with pastels on sheepskin.

2. Liotard was a Swiss painter. True

3. The shallow visual space created in Jean-Louis Buisson-Boissier seems to push the man’s figure forward toward viewers. True

4. Which of these artists was given the nickname ‘the Turkish painter’? A. Liotard

Stubbs - Lord Grosvenor’s Arabian with a Groom

1. Lord Grosvenor’s Arabian with a Groom fits best into the portrait subject group.

2. Stubbs wrote a book called The Anatomy of the Horse.

3. To focus attention on the subject of Lord Grosvenor’s Arabian with a Groom, the artist used c. warm color.

4. The nationality of Stubbs was British.

Romney - Lady Hamilton

1. A volcano is pictured in the background of Lady Hamilton.

2. George Romney’s work was influenced by his study of classical Italian statues and paintings. True

3. A contrast of light and dark areas of the canvas is used in Lady Hamilton to create a mood of drama and surprise. False

4. The coolest colors in Lady Hamilton are used for the c. sitter’s hat.

Boilly - The Geography Lesson

1. The mood of The Geography Lesson is a. calm and serious

2. In The Geography Lesson, only the dog looks out toward viewers.

3. Which of these works show some examples of characteristics of the Neoclassical style? C. The Geography Lesson

4. The canvas of The Geography Lesson has a smooth, polished surface. True

Friedrich - A Mountain Peak with Drifting Clouds

1. The mountain in A Mountain Peak with Drifting Clouds represents eternity and salvation.

2. Casper Friedrich painted in a style called Romantic.

3. Which of these objects in A Mountain Peak with Drifting Clouds serves as a symbol? A. evergreen trees b. fallen tree trunk c. the clouds d. all of the above

4. In A Mountain Peak with Drifting Clouds, arrow shapes point viewers’ eyes toward the distant mountain. True

Delacroix - Selim and Zuleika

1. Selim and Zuleika illustrates a story from a C. poem

2. For inspiration for his paintings, Delacroix often turned to a. books

3. Delazroix learned to paint partly by copying works of earlier artists. True

4. This work was painted in the Romantic style. True

5. Delacroix thought that the most important elements of painting was a. color

Courbet - Stream of the Black Pond

1. Stream of the Black Pond was painted during the Modern period of art history.

2. To guide viewer’s eyes through Stream of the Black Pond, the artist used c. lines

3. Which of these artists said he could not paint an angel because he had never seen one? C. Courbet

4. Courbet called an exhibition of his own works “Realism”. True

Bierstadt - Sunrise, Yosemite Valley

1. Albert Bierstadt was a member of a group of artists know as the b. Hudson River School

2. The Light in Sunrise, Yosemite Valley represents God’s presence.

3. Dramatic light is a common characteristic of Bierstadt’s paintings. True

4. A figure of a bear in Sunrise, Yosemite Valley helps create a sense of scale. True

Bridges - Pink Cyclamen

1. Pink Cyclamen was created with watercolor paints.

2. The artist added liveliness to Pink Cyclamen by using b. complementary colors.

3. To tie different parts of the composition of Pink Cyclamen together, the artist used the c. plant stems

4. Before she became an artist, Fidelia Bridges worked a. as a teacher

Cassatt - Children in a Garden (The Nurse)

1. Mary Cassatt’s nationality was American.

2. Children in a Garden (The Nurse) was painted in the Impressionist style.

3. Details are left out and edges are blurred in Children in a Garden (The Nurse) to a. give the image a feeling of catching a passing moment.

4. The way the artist applied paint to Children in a Garden (The Nurse) gives the canvas a smooth, polished surface. False

Hovenden - Chloe and Sam

1. Hovenden use and “abolition barn” as his painting studio.

2. Choe and Sam is a c. history and legend painting.

3. Thomas Hovenden created many works showing b. everyday lives of African-Americans.

4. To keep viewer’s eyes moving around Chloe and Sam, the artist used b. light.

McEwen - The Witches

1. Most of the colors used in The Witches are Neutral.

2. The Witches was one of the most popular paintings exhibited at the c. 1893 Chicago World’s Fair

3. The large size of the original painting is an important element of c. The Witches

4. The people in The Witches are alll concentrating on each other and on their own activities. False

Luce - Rue Ravignan, Paris

1. The style used to paint Rue Ravignan, Paris is called Pointillism. True

2. The touches of orange scattered throughout the mostly blue shades in Rue Ravignan, Paris are an example of a. contrast

3. Maximilien Lude was born and raised in the city of Paris.

4. A rhythm of vertical lines in Rue Ravignan, Paris create a feeling of permanence and stability.

Russell - Indian Family with Travois

1. Russell worked for many years as a cowboy.

2. Russell is an American artist.

3. When Charles M. Russell was a teenager, he c. moved to Montana.

4. The kind of line that leads viewers into the distance in Indian Family with Travois is b. diagonal

Derain - The Turning Road, L’Estaque

1. The Fauvist style got its name from a French word meaning wild beasts.

2. The artist used color in the Turning Road, L’Estaque to a. create decorative patterns

3. Derain was a leader of the artist who painted in the Fauvist style.

4. The busy pattern in The Turning Road, L’Estaque is anchored by the road.

Rolshoven - Street Scene in Tunis

1. Julius Rolshoven was a member of the a. Taos Society of Artists.

2. Roshoven’s father was a goldsmith.

3. Rolshoven traveled widely and had homes in both Italy and New Mexico. True

4. People walking along the street are the most important features in Street Scene in Tunis. False

Picasso - Still Live in a Landscape

1. Picasso and an artist friend developed the Cubist style of painting.

2. Geometric shapes are important in the composition of Still Live in a Landscape. True

3. Picasso’s nationality was French. False

4. Still Live in a Landscape was painted during the Twentieth Century art history period. True

Monet - Water Lilies

1. The Impressionist style got its name from the title of a painting by Monet. True

2. Monet often painted many versions of the same scene because he d. wanted to show the scenes in different conditions of light and weather.

3. Strokes of thick paint make the flowers in Water lilies seem to stand out from the canvas. True

4. The artist used shape and color to focus attention of the subject of Water Lilies. True

O’Keefe - Series I – No. 1

1. Georgia O’Keefe was one of the first American artists to paint abstract works. True

2. Warm colors are used in Series I – No. 1 to c. give energy to the image.

3. Still Life in a Landscape and Series I – No. 1 both fit into the same subject group. False

4. Georgia O’Keefe taught in a. Texas

Henri - (Carl) Boy in Blue Overalls

1. Robert Henri led a group of artists who often painted poor people and back alley scenes and came to be called the b. Ashcan School

2. The artist gave (Carl) Boy in Blue Overalls an active, energetic feeling by using b. broad, loose brushstrokes

3. Robert Henri taught art in b. New York

Kloss - Viacito in White

1. Which of these landscapes was painted by a woman? B. Viacito in White

2. Kloss painted during the Twentieth Century period of art history. True

3. Small patches of warm color add visual interest to Viacito in White. True

4. By the time Kloss began her career, women were accepted as artists as readily as men were. False

Takayama - Expectation

1. The artist created an image that suggests depth in Expectation by using c. colored shapes which seem layered over one another

2. Takayama’s father did not encourage is son to develop his skills and follow a career in art. True

3. Curved lines are least important in the composition of b. Expectation

4. Takayama liked to listen to music while he painted.

Huckaby - Big Momma’s Room

1. The artist used light and shadow in Big Momma’s Room to c. show three-dimensional forms

2. Sedrick Huckaby was born and raised in a. Texas

3. Thin glazes of oil paint help give Big Momma’s Room its smooth, polished surface. False

Types of Artwork1. Most still life paintings show objects in a landscape background. False

2. A painting that illustrates a story from a book fits best into the History & Legend subject group.

3. An artist might choose to create a very large painting to a. fit a large public building b. strengthen the work’s impact on viewers c. show that the subject is important D. All of the above

4. Gradual shading can make an object seem to have a three-dimensional shape. True

5. Which of these subjects was most popular for paintings during Renaissance? B. portrait

Art PeriodsRENAISSANCE 1. Renaissance style painting started in Italy and spread to other parts of Europe. True

2. During the Renaissance, artists developed b. techniques for showing perspective or distance in paintings

3. Right, pure colors and very formal composition are common characteristics of paintings from the Renaissance period of art history.

BAROQUE4. The Netherlands was one of the most important centers of art during the Baroque period.

True

5. New discoveries and increased knowledge about science influenced the way artists painted during the Baroque period of art history. True

6. Some characteristics of Rococo style paints are straight lines, dark colors, and serious moods. False

Art Periods IIModern1. The Impressionist style of painting first developed in the Modern period of art history.

2. Airtight metal tubes to carry paints were invented during the Modern period of art history.

3. The Industrial Revolution took place during the Modern period of art history. True

4. Dutch artist first began to paint new subjects for an open market during the Modern period. False

5. The printing press was invented during the Modern period. False

20th Century6. Two World Wars occurred during the 20th Century period of art history.

7. Which of these events occurred during the Twentieth Century art history period? D. development of the airplane

Art Elements & Principles1. Composition is the way an artist puts the elements of art together to create a painting. True

2. Using bright and neutral colors together in a painting is an example of contrast. True

3. The colors red and green are d. complementary

4. A blue balloon is reflecting c. blue light

5. The position from which a viewer sees objects in a painting is called point of view. True

6. Painting roads or rivers wide in the foreground and growing narrower in the background is a technique artists use to show perspective.

7. A man painted as a small figure near the top of a painting looks closer than one painted as a large figure near the bottom of the picture. False

8. Artists sometimes create large paintings of subjects that are considered important and smaller paintings of other subjects. True

9. A soft drape hanging against a stone wall would be an example of a contrast of texture.

10. The way something feels when you touch it is called texture.

11. Diagonal lines in a painting can create a sense of movement or a mood of drama or tension.

12. Something in a painting that repeats and creates a kind of pattern is called rhythm.

13. A painting would be called a triptych if is b. is created on three panels.

14. It is hard for artists to make changes as they work on oil paintings because the oil paint dries quickly. False

15. The invention of air-tight metal tubes for carrying paint made it practical for artists to complete works outdoors instead of in their studios. True