Academic Decathlon ART Section I

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250 Terms

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Art history

This discipline is dedicated to reconstructing the various contexts in which a work of art was produced.

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Aesthetics

This term refers to the philosophical inquiry into the nature and expression of beauty.

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Art criticism

This term refers to the explanation of current art events to the masses.

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Formal analysis

This type of analysis focuses on only the visual qualities of an artwork.

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Contextual analysis

In this type of analysis, critics look at the environment surrounding a work of art's creation and consumption.

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Chronological

Art historians follow this development pattern.

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Close examination of artwork

Art historians begin an analysis with this act.

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Photographs

These artworks appear flatter and lacking in subtlety when reproduced in books.

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Participant observation

This method of art historical study is influenced by anthropology.

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Pliny the Elder

This ancient Roman historian wrote Natural History.

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The Lives of the Artists

Giorgio Vasari wrote this important art historical work.

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Artistic genius

This concept developed during the Renaissance and is discussed in The Lives of the Artists.

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Johann Joachim Winckelmann

This German scholar emphasized the study of stylistic development in relation to historical context.

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Feminist historians

This group of historiansrevised art history to include more women.

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Visual culture

This broad area of artistic concern includes advertisements, television, etc.

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Stone, metal, and fired clay

These three enduring materials reveal much about early civilizations.

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Papyrus

This delicate material survived in Egypt due to its hot, dry climate.

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Caves and tombs

These two types of sealed areas helped preserve ancient artworks around the world.

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Western art was often better preserved.

Art criticism has focused on Western cultures for this reason.

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Central and South America

This geographical region features known but unexplored historical sites.

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Chauvet Cave

This cave is the site of Old Stone Age cave paintings in southeastern France.

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Red ochre, black charcoal, and a bit of yellow

These three colors appear in the Chauvet Cave paintings.

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Animals such as horses, rhinoceros, lions, buffalos, and mammoths

These beings are the subjects of the Chauvet Cave paintings.

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Lascaux and Altamira

These caves are the two most famous cave painting sites.

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Human hands

This part of the human body is depicted in Lascaux and Altamira.

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Venus of Willendorf

This Old Stone Age statuette exhibits exaggerated female features.

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Fertility statue

Historians suspect that this use may be the purpose of Venus of Willendorf.

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Rock shelters

These dwellings developed during the Middle Stone Age.

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Depiction of the human figure

This detail distinguished rock shelter paintings from older cave paintings.

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Megaliths

These large rock constructions were built during the New Stone Age.

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Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire, England

This location is the home of Stonehenge.

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Sarsen

Stonehenge uses this form of sandstone.

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Tigris and Euphrates

These two rivers border Mesopotamia.

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Ziggurats

Sumerians built these stepped pyramids for religious purposes.

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King of Ur

This neo-Sumerian ruler reasserted control of Sumer after the Guti conquest.

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Shamash

This sun-god appears upon the stone stele of the Code of Hammurabi.

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Relief carvings depicting battles, sieges, hunts, and other important events

These carvings are the most notable Assyrian artworks from 900 to 600 B.C.E.

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Bel

The Ishtar Gate is dedicated to this Babylonian deity.

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Persepolis

Location of Persian palace constructed of stone, brick, and wood in an Egyptian architectural style

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Alexander the Great

This man conquered Egypt in 332 B.C.E.

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Queen Nefertiti

This Egyptian queen's portrait bust is among Ancient Egypt's most recognizable works.

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Hierarchical scale

This manner of depicting figures in an artworkportrays those with greater social status in a larger scale.

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Palette of King Narmer

This Egyptian artifact used for mixing cosmetics displays hierarchical scale.

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Fractional representation

This Egyptian painting method depicts each part of the body as clearly as possible.

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Elaborate burials

This Egyptian custompreserved rich stores of objects.

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Tutankhamen

This Egyptian boy king's tomb contained a wealth of artifacts.

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Gold, blue glass, and semi-precious stones

These three materials appear on Tutankhamen's burial mask.

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Nubia

This kingdom south of Egypt once ruled its northern neighbor.

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Simplified, geometric nude females

The Cycladic culture is famous for these sculptures.

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Knossos on Crete

The Minoan culture was centered on this city.

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Minotaur

This half-man, half-bull creature was rumored to live in a Minoan maze.

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Mycenaean culture

This culture arose and replaced the Minoans.

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Gold

The best-known Mycenaean artifacts are made from this metal.

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Limestone and marble

The Greeks used these two types of stone to create freestanding sculptures.

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Doric and Ionic

These two architectural styles were used in building Greek temples between 660 and 474 B.C.E.

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Corinthian style vases

Figures are portrayed against a floral background in this style of vase.

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Large, linear black figures

These types of figures appeared on Athenian style vases.

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Roman replicas of Greek art

Information about Doric columns has survived in this manner.

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Contrapposto

This manner of posing standing figures by shifting their weight onto one leg was developed by the Greeks.

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Persians

This culture was responsible for destroying the Parthenon.

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Peloponnesian War

This war signaled the beginning of the Late Classical Period and the decline of architecture.

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Venus de Milo and the Laocoön Group

These two statues are notable artworks of the Hellenistic Period.

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Brick and wood

Etruscan structures were built from these two materials.

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Ceramic models

Information about Etruscan buildings has survived in this manner.

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Clay and bronze

Most surviving Etruscan art is constructed from these two media.

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Concrete

This Roman discovery allowed the construction of huge domed buildings.

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Curved arch

This development allowed the Romans to construct bridges and aqueducts.

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The Pantheon and the Colosseum

These two buildings, still standing in Rome, represent the genius of Roman engineering.

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Relief sculptures portraying Roman emperors or military victories

These artworks often sit atop Roman triumphal arches.

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Carrying small carved images of the deceased

This funereal ritual became common in the Roman Republic.

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Mosaics made from small ceramic tiles.

Byzantine artists are best known for these artworks

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Ravenna

This Italian city is famous for its Byzantine mosaics.

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Latin

This language was the international language in the medieval period.

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Book of Kells and the Coronation Gospels

These two books are notable examples of medieval illuminated manuscripts.

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Germanic peoples

These early medieval people were famous for their metalwork

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Vikings

This medieval culture was famous for itsimmense wooden ships.

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Saint-Sernin

This famous Romanesque church is in Toulouse, France.

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Vault

This arch-shaped structure can be used as a ceiling or to support a roof.

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Ribbed vaults

This term refers to a framework of thin stone arches or ribs beneath intersections of vaulted portions of Gothic ceilings.

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Flying buttresses

This term refers to arches or bracing materials placed on the outsides of buildings.

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Chartres Cathedral

This French Gothic cathedral is famous for its large stained-glass windows and flying buttresses.

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Giotto di Bondone

This Florentine fresco painter is famous as a transitional artist between the Gothic and Renaissance.

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Paper money

This innovation allowed the Medici family to acquire a vast fortune.

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Intellectual figures of high status

Artists played this role during the Renaissance.

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Baptistery

A competition was held in Florence to design the doors for this building.

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Twenty-five years

The "Gates of Paradise" required this number of years for for Lorenzo Ghiberti to complete them.

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Double-shelled dome

This type of structure was Filippo Brunelleschi's winning design for the dome of the cathedral in Florence.

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Linear and aerial

These two types of perspective were used by Masaccio in frescoes.

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A bronze statue of David

This statue is Donatello's most well-known work.

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The Birth of Venus

This work by Botticelliestablished a long-lasting image of female beauty.

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Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo

These two men inspired the term "Renaissance Man."

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Locks which control water flow through canals

These prototypes designed by da Vinci are still used today.

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The Last Supper and the Mona Lisa

These two paintings of da Vinci's have become well known in popular culture.

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Sfumato

This term refers to the use of mellowed colors and blurred outlines allowing colors to blend subtly in paintings.

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David

Michelangelo created this sculpture from an immense piece of cracked marble.

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Pope Julius II

This religious leader commissioned Michelangelo to design first his tomb and then the ceiling of the Sistine chapel.

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Raphael Sanzio

This High Renaissance artist painted frescoes, including the School of Athens, and influential images of the Madonna.

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Giorgione

This Venetian painter is credited with making landscapes viable subject matter for paintings.

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Titian Vecelli

This Venetian portraitist, known as an influential colorist, used columns or drapes as backgrounds for portraits.

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Mannerism

This painting style featured warped perspective and acidic colors.