Perspective Quiz #2 1.What do we call the type of perspective
drawing technique needed to portray someone who is lying down in
front of us or who has their feet or hand extended out toward us?
foreshortening 1.What do we call a viewpoint as seen from low on
the ground? Worms eye view 1.What do we call a viewpoint as seen
from up in the sky? Birds eye view 1.What is anamorphic art?
stretched artart that is intentionally deformed and only correctly
viewed from a certain angle 1.What is a common or practical use of
this type of artwork in the world today? road signs
Slide 5
1. What do we call the imaginary line formed where the sky and
land meet? Horizon line 1. What else do we sometimes refer to this
as? Eye level 1. What do we call the point at which most diagonal
lines meet in perspective drawing? Vanishing point 1. If an opaque
cube is held right in front of your face, what sides are visible to
you? One, the front 1. What must an artist include to add depth and
interest in a graphite (pencil) drawing? values Art One Exit
Ticket
Slide 6
barren an instrument used to burnish (or rub) the back of the
paper when printing from an inked relief plate bench hook a device
used to hold a relief plate while carving into it; it hooks over
the edge of the table brayer a rubber, gelatin, felt, or leather
covered roller used to ink linoleum plates or wood blocks chargeto
load a brush or brayer with paint or ink composit e print a print
made from a number of different stencils, plates, or blocks when
doing multicolor printing edition a special issue of prints made;
represented as a fractionthe top number represents the sequence
number (was it printed first, second, third, etc) and the bottom
number represents the total number of prints made ink slab a large
piece of glass, marble, plexiglass, or some other nonabsorbent
surface upon which ink may be prepared plate a wood block, stone,
linoleum, metal or other material upon which an image has been
carved or etched into for the purpose of printing proof a trial
print obtained for the purpose of being studied and corrected
before further printing pullthe act of peeling a print from a
block, plate, or stone register the exact correspondence of
separate plates or screens in multicolor printing in order to
ensure proper alignment reliefa type of print typically made from a
wood block or linoleum; what will print will be whats left of the
surface; areas carved out will not print, except for possibly a few
ridge lines left after the carving process; this is not necessarily
a bad thing, thougha little of it can add texture and character to
a print Art One Reduction Relief Printmaking terminology