2-Art

art

People can create material objects using new materials or designs {art, arts}. Painting and sculpture {pure art} have no practical function. Architecture, illustration, interior decoration, typography, design, and advertising are arts {applied art} with form and function.

art principles

Art principles are idea synthesis, people and nature observation, concentration, creativity, joyful emotions, beauty ideals, symbolism, composition, form, nuance sensitivity, and discrimination among alternatives, and generalization from concrete to abstract.

emotion

Emotion ranges from wild to restrained.

culture

Art depends on culture, which supplies themes, ideas, and perspectives, and art tradition, which supplies forms.

criticism

Art depends on knowledgeable audiences, to judge and discuss new and old works.

arts

Major arts {arts} are painting, sculpture, and architecture.

painting

Painting includes drawings, illustrations, cartoons, calligraphy, engravings, woodcuts, etchings, miniatures, mosaics, murals, and sand paintings. Painting techniques include pens, pencils, chalk, crayon, brushes, air guns, inks, frescoes, tempera, acrylic paint, oil paint, and water color. Painting materials include paper, sand, cloth, wood, plaster, tile, glass, and metal.

sculpture

Sculpture includes statues, reliefs, clothing, rugs, pottery, utensils, furniture, glassware, stained glass, bone, and wrought iron. Sculpture techniques include casting, chiseling, forging, weaving, hanging, and turning. Sculpture materials include ivory, whalebone, clay, bronze, steel, marble, wood, glass, and plastic.

architecture

Architecture includes buildings, bridges, roads, aqueducts, canals, docks, wharves, automobiles, trucks, boats, airplanes, trains, monuments, power plants, communications exchanges, utility networks, and town plans. Architecture techniques include urban studies, mechanical drawing, computer-assisted design, materials science, and engineering. Architecture materials include steel, concrete, wood, glass, aluminum, and plastic.

craftsmanship

People can create material objects by copying previous design {craftsmanship}.

graphic arts

drawing, illustration, or mechanical drawing {graphic arts}.

2-Art-Style

style in art

Styles {style, art} {art style} can follow rules or be freeform.

Apollonian art style

Art can follow principles of order, harmony, composition, and form {classic style} {rationalism, art} {classicism} {Apollonian art style}.

Dionysian art style

Art can be emotional, personal, discordant, and free-form {romantic style} {romanticism} {baroque style, art} {Dionysian art style}.

2-Art-Architecture

architecture

Art {architecture} can be about buildings and building parts.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts

cornerstone

commemorative stone {cornerstone} placed at main building corner just after building has begun.

fixture

Living room, bathroom, kitchen, and bedroom items {fixture}, such as sink, bathtub, toilet, ceiling lights, and power outlets, attach to house.

millstone

Circular stones {millstone} can grind grain.

moat

Ditches {moat} can be around castles.

scaffold

Temporary platforms {scaffold} can be for construction or execution.

woodwork

moldings, doors, and ornamental pieces {woodwork}.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Arch

arch of building

Stones {arch, building}| can curve over space between two stone columns. To build, stones rise from column tops. Scaffolding holds stones. Top middle has a stone {keystone}, added last. Arches have side and downward pressures. Steel arches use steel rectangles. Beams or bridges can be on arch tops.

post and lintel

Straight beams {lintel} can lie across two column tops {post} {post and lintel}|.

truss of arch

Visible frames {truss, roof}| can support roofs over halls.

voussoir

Semicircular arches can have wedge-shaped blocks {voussoir}, not overlapping stones.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Arch-Kinds

corbel

First arches {corbel} had center point.

Gothic arch

Gothic cathedrals had pointed arches {Gothic arch}.

Romanesque arch

Romanesque churches had round arches {Romanesque arch}.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Basement

crypt

Church basements {crypt}| can store the dead.

foundation

concrete building base {foundation}.

sepulcher

tomb {sepulcher}.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Beam

beam

main horizontal wood or steel board {beam, building}.

butt joint

flat end connector {butt joint}.

girder

main horizontal beam {girder}.

I beam

steel beam {I beam}.

joint of beam

metal beam connector {joint, building}.

mortise

Holes {mortise} can receive tenons to make joins.

quoin

Blocks {quoin} can make angles on building exteriors.

rafter

Sloping beams {rafter} can go from top horizontal beam to roof edge, under joists.

ridgepole

Horizontal beams {ridgepole} can be along rooftops.

scantling

Short light wood beams {scantling} can insert vertically in building frames.

tenon

Points {tenon} can insert into mortises to make joins.

two-by-four

Wood beams {two-by-four} are 1-5/8 inch by 3-3/8 inch.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Column

abutment

bridge-end support {abutment}.

caryatid

Columns can have woman shape {caryatid}.

pendentive

Byzantine churches can have buttressed main columns {pier, column}, with rim {pendentive} at dome.

pilaster

square pillar {pilaster}|.

piling

Large wood, steel, or concrete posts {piling} {pile, building}, deep in ground, can support buildings.

pillar

Columns or beams {pillar, column} can support roofs.

pontoon

floating-bridge support {pontoon}.

pylon as pole

wire-carrying steel pole or ceremonial gateway {pylon, column}.

spandrel of arch

Triangular regions {spandrel, building} can be between two arches or from column tops to arch tops.

stanchion

vertical post {stanchion}.

totem pole

North-American tree trunks {totem pole} can have carved animal totems.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Door

doorjamb

Wedges {doorjamb} can hold doors open.

Dutch door

Doors {Dutch door} can have top and bottom halves that open separately.

French door

Doors {French door} can have glass.

jamb of door

doorframe side {jamb, door}.

mullion

vertical door divide {mullion}.

portal door

entranceway {portal}.

postern

rear gate {postern}.

pylon as gateway

Egyptian New Kingdom temples had ceremonial gateway {pylon, gateway} between two walls at entrance.

rail of door

horizontal door side {rail, door}.

shoji

Japanese light sliding or folding door {shoji}.

snubber

A chain and spring {snubber, door} can prevent doors from opening too wide.

stile of door

vertical door side {stile, door}.

stoop

small entrance stairs {stoop}.

storm door

heavy door {storm door}.

threshold as door

entrance or under-door wood or stone panel {threshold, door} {saddle, door}.

torii gate

Shinto shrine gate {torii, gate}.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Floor

joist

Parallel horizontal beams {joist} can hold floors or ceilings.

parquet

Wood flooring {parquet} can have checkerboard look.

rostrum

public speaker's raised platform {rostrum}.

terrazzo

Polished stone chips {terrazzo} can be in marble floors.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Furnace

briquette

charcoal square {briquette}.

clinker

burned coal remains {clinker}.

ember

hot burned wood remains {ember}.

hearth

Brick areas {hearth} can be in front of fireplaces.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Greek Temple

Greek temple

Greek Archaic had different temple styles {Greek temple}: Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian. Temple stones fit together, with no clay, concrete, or cement. Temple roofs were terra-cotta tiles on wood rafters over wood beams.

entablature

Archaic temples had stepped platform, platform columns, and stones above columns {entablature}|.

capital of column

Doric columns had tops {capital, column} including echinus and abacus.

echinus

Doric columns had capitals including lower flared piece {echinus} and abacus.

abacus of column

Doric columns had capitals including echinus and higher thick piece {abacus, column}.

volute

Ionic columns had bottom flat base, capital, deeper fluting, and curved piece {volute}| between echinus and abacus. Corinthian columns had more-elaborate volutes.

entasis

Doric columns taper and are slightly convex {entasis}, but Ionic columns are cylindrical.

architrave

Entablature included stone blocks {architrave}| {epistyle}, resting on columns, around top. Entablatures had stone-block friezes over architraves.

triglyph

Doric friezes had regularly repeated blocks {triglyph}.

glyph of frieze

Doric friezes had triglyphs with two vertical grooves {glyph, frieze}.

chamfer

Doric friezes had triglyphs with two half-grooves {chamfer} alternating with metope.

metope

Doric friezes had triglyphs with glyph and two chamfer alternating with blank spaces {metope}. Ionic friezes had three vertical small rectangles alternating with reliefs.

pediment

Entablatures had triangles {pediment}| between flat ceiling and sloping roof sides, on short sides.

frieze

Entablatures had bands {frieze}| around building tops, on long sides.

facade of temple

Entablatures had horizontal pieces on long sides and triangular stones on short sides {facade, temple}, projecting over cornice.

cornice

Entablatures had horizontal pieces on long sides and facades projecting over frieze tops {cornice}|.

cella

Temples had a central room {cella} {naos} for god image. In front of cella was a pronaos walled porch with two front columns. Closed porches can be behind cella. Cella and pronaos were like megaron of Mycenaeans.

colonnade

In large temples, columns {colonnade}| {peristyle} went around naos and pronaos.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Greek Temple-Kinds

Doric temple general

Archaic temples {Doric temple} had an oldest style.

Ionic temple

Archaic temples {Ionic temple} had a newer style.

Corinthian temple

Archaic temples {Corinthian temple} can vary Ionic style.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Pipe

conduit

pipe {conduit}.

duct

pipe {duct}.

penstock

Pipes {penstock} can carry water to turbines.

standpipe

Vertical pipes {standpipe} can hold water to make pressure.

water main

street water pipe {water main}.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Roof

crenel

battlement {crenel}.

fascia of roof

overhang and beam end {fascia, building}.

flashing

Metal or plastic {flashing, roof joints} can be over roof joints, such as where chimney meets roof.

hip

Convex edges {hip, building} can be where two sloping roofs meet.

plenum roof

Spaces {plenum, roof} can be between suspended ceilings and roofs or raised floor and ground.

rake

roof slope {rake, roof}.

ridge of roof

sloping-roof horizontal top {ridge, roof}.

soffit

under overhangs and beams {soffit, roof}.

valley

Concave edges {valley} can be where two sloping roofs meet.

vault

Roofs {vault} can have arches.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Roof-Ornaments

belfry

bell tower {belfry}.

belvedere

raised turret or pavilion {belvedere}.

cupola

small roof dome {cupola}.

dormer

roof-window gable {dormer}.

eave

Roof edges {eave} can extend beyond wall.

gable in roof

Triangles {gable, roof} can be at rooftop ends.

gargoyle

fantastically carved drain spout or beam {gargoyle}.

pinnacle

point {pinnacle}|.

sky lick

Temple roof points can have upward curved metal points {sky lick}.

skylight

Roof openings {skylight} can have transparent material to let in light.

windsock

Sleeves {windsock} can rotate in wind.

yak on roof

tall plaster demon {yak, roof}.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Roof-Kinds

canopy

Cloth roofs {canopy} can be on poles.

hipped roof

Russian Orthodox cathedrals {tented church} can have roofs {hipped roof} {tented roof} with small arches in tiers.

mansard

Roofs {mansard} can have two levels on all four sides, with lower roof steeper than upper.

marquee

large tent or theater-entrance small roof {marquee}.

shake

wood roof tiles {shake}.

shingle

Thin wood, rubber, composite, brick, or terra cotta rectangles {shingle} can overlap to cover roof.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Roof-Vault

barrel vault

cylindrical roof {barrel vault}.

cross vault

Early Romanesque church vaults had groined vaults {cross vault}.

groined vault

intersecting barrel vault {groined vault}.

ribbed groin vault

Later Romanesque church vaults {ribbed groin vault} used wood or masonry in intersecting groined-vault lines {rib, vault}.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Room

ambulatory dome

Column rings can hold domes, with aisles {ambulatory, building} between inside columns and outer wall.

anechoic chamber

Closed rooms {anechoic chamber} can prevent echoes.

antechamber

small waiting room {antechamber}.

anteroom

small waiting room {anteroom}.

atrium

Houses can have hall rooms {atrium, building}. Churches can have colonnaded end courts.

attic

Spaces {attic} can be under roofs and above top floors.

campanile

Romanesque churches can have bell towers {campanile}.

chamber room

room {chamber}.

comfort station

bathroom/restroom {comfort station}.

darkroom

Rooms {darkroom} can be for developing photographs.

den room

home study room {den, room}.

drawing room

living room or special reception room {drawing room}.

foyer

lobby or entrance hall {foyer}.

garret

attic loft or room {garret}.

grandstand for field

Rising plank seats {grandstand, building} can be beside reviewing areas or playing fields.

lavatory

bathroom {lavatory}.

lobby entrance

government or business building entrance hall {lobby, building}.

lounge

bar {lounge}.

megaron

Mycenaean palaces had centers with audience halls {megaron}.

mezzanine

Theaters can have lowest balconies or half stories {mezzanine}.

narthex

Churches can have an entrance hall {narthex} between atrium and nave.

nave

Long halls have ends {nave}|.

parlor

Businesses or houses have visiting rooms {parlor}.

patio

uncovered paved recreation area {patio}.

penthouse

Apartments {penthouse} can be on top stories, or sheds can use building walls.

portico

Covered areas {portico}| with two parallel column rows can be at entrances.

powder room

ladies restroom {powder room}.

privy latrine

latrine {privy}.

root cellar

Basement areas {root cellar} can be for keeping vegetables.

rotunda

domed round large room {rotunda}.

salon

drawing room or fancy shop {salon}.

scullery

Rooms {scullery} can be beside kitchens for dish washing and food preparation.

solarium

windowed south room or porch {solarium}.

study

reading or writing room {study}.

suite of rooms

room set {suite, building}.

sun parlor

windowed south room {sun parlor}.

transept

Churches can have crosswise halls or side halls {bema} {transept} between apse and nave.

verandah

Roofed open porches {verandah} {veranda} can be along building sides.

vestibule

small lobby, small entrance hall, or train-car enclosed end {vestibule}.

vestry

sacristy or church meeting room {vestry}.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Room-Parts

alcove

small extra space {alcove}.

apse

Long halls can have two large circular end niches {apse}|.

chancel

Areas {chancel} around alter can be for choirs.

corncrib

corn holder {corncrib}.

cubicle

Enclosed square areas {cubicle} in large rooms can be for office workers.

gable as porch

triangular-ended porch {gable, porch}|.

kitchen midden

garbage area {kitchen midden}.

larder

Rooms or closets {larder, room} can be for meat and other foods.

midden

house garbage dump {midden}.

module of building

Standardized building units {module, building} have functions.

mow

Raised racks {mow} can be for grain or hay storage.

nook

room corner {nook}.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Sewer

cleanout

Waste drain systems have extensions {cleanout} from lowest drain to above-house trap, with covers.

septic tank

Tanks {septic tank} can receive house wastewater and have anaerobic bacteria. They do not connect to public sewer systems.

soil stack

Waste drain systems can have main pipes {soil stack} that lead from lowest drain to roof.

vent stack

Waste drain systems can have branch pipes {vent stack} that lead from toilet to roof.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Theater

bleacher

stadium plank seats {bleacher}.

box seat

enclosed theater seat {box seat}.

footlight

Stages can have lights {footlight}| in front at stage level.

house lights

theater lights {house lights}.

loge

Theaters can have enclosed seating rooms {loge}|. Theater mezzanines can have front rows.

proscenium arch

Theater stages can have arches {proscenium arch}| over front.

tableau curtain

Curtains {tableau curtain} can draw sideways and upward, as on theater stages.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Walkway

baluster

banister or railing vertical post {baluster}.

balustrade

walkway railing and posts {balustrade}.

banister

stair railing {banister}.

breezeway

Roofed open walkways {breezeway} can be between two buildings.

catwalk

Narrow walkways {catwalk} can be beside bridges or posts.

loggia

Buildings can have front or side open-sided galleries or arcades {loggia}|, above street level.

newel

Posts {newel} can be at upper or lower staircase banister ends.

railing

hand rail {railing}.

riser

Vertical boards {riser, stairs} can be under staircase steps.

stringer

Vertical boards {stringer, stairs} can be on staircase sides.

tread of stair

staircase step {tread, stairs}.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Wall

baseboard

5-centimeter to 10-centimeter wood boards {baseboard} can be on walls beside floors.

buttress

Arched roof vaults can have outside wood or stone supports {buttress}|.

clerestory

Walls can go up to windowed walls {clerestory}| above one roof level.

curtain wall

Buildings can have steel skeletons and glass sides {curtain wall}.

facade wall

front wall {facade, building}.

facing

Materials {facing} can be on building outside surfaces.

firewall

insulated wall {firewall}.

flying buttress

Gothic cathedrals had outside arch supports {flying buttress}|, from ground to clerestory.

furring strip

wall-frame horizontal board {furring strip}.

mantle of fireplace

Horizontal wood board or bricks {mantle, fireplace} can be over fireplace tops.

niche

Temples can have concave wall recesses {niche, wall}, to hold sculptures.

rampart

Walls or banks {rampart} can guard soldiers against attack.

scarcement

wall or embankment ledge {scarcement}.

shoe molding

baseboard horizontal molding {shoe molding}.

siding

Aluminum or wood boards or panels {siding, wall} can attach to frames to make walls.

sole plate

wall-frame bottom board {sole plate}.

stud of wall

wall-frame vertical board {stud, wall}.

top plate

wall-frame top board {top plate}.

wainscot

wall wood panel or wall lower half {wainscot} {wainscoting}.

westwork

Later Medieval chapels had tall monumental entrance {westwork} with two towers.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Wall-Fence

paling

picket {pale, picket} {paling}.

picket post

Fence sticks {picket, post} can have point pounded into ground.

sunk fence

Ditches {sunk fence} can be beside walls at land borders.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Wall-Niche

mihrab

Mosque qibla has a center niche {mihrab}, to cause illusion of limitless horizontal distance.

qibla

A Mosque side {qibla} faces Mecca.

stupa

Hindu temples can have bell-shaped reliquary niches {stupa}|.

2-Art-Architecture-Building Parts-Window

apron of window

Supports {apron, window} can be under window stools.

bay window

Windows {bay window} can curve outward from walls.

blind

Horizontal or vertical window slats {blind} can turn or slide.

casing

Decorative trim {casing, window} can be around window frames.

embrasure

door or window recess or wall gun opening {embrasure}.

grate

Parallel or crossed bars {grate over opening} can be over openings.

jamb of window

window-frame side {jamb, window}.

louver

Movable slats {louver} can be over windows or over roof or wall openings.

molding

surface decorative strip {molding}.

muntin

vertical or horizontal window divide {muntin}.

pane of window

glass window {pane}.

picture window

large living-room window {picture window}.

rail of window

movable-sash horizontal wood side {rail, window}.

sash

window-frame movable frame {sash, window}.

shutter

Outer window covers {shutter, window} can be on hinges or hooks.

sill of window

window-frame and outer window-ledge bottom horizontal part {sill, window}.

stile of window

movable-sash vertical wood side {stile, window}.

stool of window

inner window ledge {stool, window}.

storm window

Second windows {storm window} can hook outside windows.

transom

Windows {transom} above doors or windows can be on hinges, or windows can have horizontal pieces.

triforium

Gothic cathedrals had windows in openings {triforium} between arches.

weather stripping

Cloth or rubber strips {weather stripping} can be between door and door jamb or window and window sill.

windowsill

Horizontal boards {windowsill} can be below windows.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings

annex building

added building {annex, building}.

complex of buildings

single-purpose building set {complex, building}.

edifice

building {edifice}.

field house

stadium end building {field house}.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Church

abbey

monastery building {abbey}.

baptistery

Domed round or polygonal buildings {baptistery} are for baptizing.

basilica

Churches can have long halls {basilica}|.

central plan church

Early Renaissance churches {central plan church} had polygon shapes.

chapel

Domed round or polygonal buildings {chapel}| are for funerals.

cloister

monastery, convent, or covered columned walkway {cloister}.

convent

nuns' building {convent}.

madrasah

Mosques {madrasah} can have open squares with four rectangular, vaulted side halls. Domes can be over open squares.

megalith stones

Late New Stone Age peoples built large stone monuments {megalith}, using tall massive stones, with stones {cromlech} across tops, arranged in concentric rings.

minster

cathedral or monastery church {minster}.

monastery

monks' building {monastery}.

nunnery

nuns' building {nunnery}.

pagoda

Buddhist temple or tower {pagoda}.

parsonage

parson's home {parsonage}.

priory

monastery or convent {priory}.

rectory

school-headmaster or parish-priest home {rectory}.

sacristy

Church rooms {sacristy} can be for ceremonial utensils and clothes.

sanctuary

church {sanctuary}.

tabernacle

large temple or Eucharist-items holder {tabernacle}.

Wailing Wall

Jerusalem wall remnant {Wailing Wall} can be old-temple remains.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Home

abode

living place {abode}.

barracks

Buildings {barracks} can house soldiers, who sleep together in a large room.

brownstone

brick townhouse {brownstone}.

bungalow

small house {bungalow}.

cabin house

small rough wood house or ship living quarters {cabin}.

chalet

Houses {chalet} can let snow slide off roof.

condominium

One-story apartments {condominium}| can be in homeowner associations and have monthly fees for maintenance, security, insurance, and recreation facilities.

diggings

living place {diggings}.

duplex

Houses {duplex} can have two similar-size living quarters.

habitation

house {habitation}.

hovel

shack {hovel}.

igloo

domed ice-block house {igloo}.

keep

castle {keep}.

lean-to

Shacks {lean-to} can have sloping roofs and open fronts.

lodge

large cabin {lodge}.

manor

estate house {manor}.

pad

house or apartment {pad}.

ranch house

single-story house {ranch house}.

rest home

Houses {rest home} can be for old people unable to care for themselves.

row house

townhouse {row house}.

tenement

poorly maintained apartment {tenement}.

townhouse

Two-story houses {townhouse}| can be in homeowner associations and have monthly fees for maintenance, security, insurance, and recreation facilities.

villa

large estate {villa}.

walk-up

Apartments or office buildings {walk-up} can have no elevators.

wickiup

Temporary dwellings {wickiup} can have wood frames covered by bark, hides, twigs, or grass.

wigwam

Dome-shaped or cone-shaped dwellings {wigwam} can have wood frames covered by bark, hides, twigs, or grass.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Home-Animal And Plant Housing

apiary

bee buildings or hives {apiary}.

arboretum

enclosed trees and plant building {arboretum}.

aviary

enclosed bird building {aviary}.

dovecote

dove building {dovecote}.

hutch

small house or domesticated-rabbit holder {hutch}.

kennel

dog building {kennel}.

paddock

Fenced areas {paddock} can be for horses to wait for races.

stable

horse house {stable}.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Inn

boardinghouse

Houses {boardinghouse} can rent rooms and provide meals.

caravansary

traveler lodging {caravansary}.

flophouse

cheap hotel {flophouse}.

hospice

travel shelter or rooms {hospice}.

hostel

backpacker inn or rooms {hostel}.

hostelry

inn or hotel {hostelry}.

roadhouse

inn {roadhouse}.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Prison

calaboose

prison {calaboose}.

hoosegow

prison {hoosegow}.

house of correction

prison {house of correction}.

oubliette

Prisons {oubliette} can have ceiling entries.

penitentiary

federal or state prison {penitentiary}.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Public Area

concourse

Open areas {concourse} can be for many people to gather or pass through.

courtyard

enclosed yard {courtyard}.

labyrinth maze

Walls or hedges {labyrinth, maze} can form mazes.

longhouse

communal house {longhouse}.

monolith

large stone {monolith}.

obelisk

tall thin four-sided stone tower {obelisk}.

pantheon building

Buildings {pantheon} can showcase famous people statues.

quad

Campuses can have quadrangular central areas {quad}, typically with four surrounding buildings.

terrace

Porches, balconies, patios, or flat areas {terrace} can be on raised earth or mountainsides.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Restaurant

automat

Rooms {automat} can be for buying food from machines.

bistro

small restaurant {bistro}.

cafe restaurant

small restaurant {café, restaurant}.

canteen

eating hall {canteen}.

coffeehouse

Restaurants {coffeehouse} can serve mainly specialty coffees.

delicatessen

Shops {delicatessen} can sell cold meats, cheeses, and prepared vegetables.

refectory

cafeteria {refectory}.

soup kitchen

Buildings {soup kitchen} can be for poor people to receive free food.

teahouse

Japanese buildings {teahouse} can be for tea ceremonies.

tearoom

Restaurants {tearoom} can have refreshments.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Restaurant-Bar

cabaret

nightclub {cabaret}.

dive

low-class nightclub {dive}.

gin mill

bar {gin mill}.

public house

bar {public house}.

saloon

bar {saloon}.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Theater

amphitheater

large outdoor theater {amphitheater}.

arena

large sports or theatrical-event building {arena}.

band shell

Clamshell-shaped enclosures {band shell} can be behind outdoor stages.

clamshell

Stages can have semispherical backdrops {clamshell}|.

coliseum

ancient large arena {coliseum}.

discotheque

dance hall {discotheque}.

hippodrome

horse-show arena {hippodrome}.

stadium

large roofless sports arena {stadium}.

theater-in-the-round

Theaters {theater-in-the-round} can have stage in middle, with seats all around.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Tomb

beehive tomb

Tombs {tholos} {beehive tomb} can have deep shafts with conical stone chambers.

catacomb

tomb {catacomb}.

hecatomb

tomb building {hecatomb}.

mausoleum tomb

burial chamber {mausoleum}|.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Transportation

apron of airport

airplane parking area {apron, airport}.

autobahn

German highway {autobahn}.

boardwalk

raised wooden walkway {boardwalk}.

causeway

Elevated roads {causeway} can be across wetlands or water.

cloverleaf

Highway interchanges {cloverleaf}, in which vehicles do not cross paths but only merge, can look like four-leaf clovers from above.

gantry

tall supporting frame {gantry}, as for rockets.

trunk line

main telephone line {trunk line}.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Transportation-Train

ell

elevated train structure {ell}.

metro

city or subway {metro}.

railhead

railroad track beginning {railhead}.

roundhouse

Train engines turn around in buildings {roundhouse}.

semaphore

Towers {semaphore} can have flags, arms, or lights that can go up or down.

trestle

Structures {trestle} can be under bridges, or horizontal bars can have end legs.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Waterway

aqueduct waterway

Sluices {aqueduct}| can transport water over long distances using steady grade.

cistern

water storage pond or tank {cistern}.

culvert

Pipes {culvert} can go under roads or earth berms.

drawbridge bridge

Machines {drawbridge} can raise or tilt bridge middle sections, to allow ships through.

millrace

Channels {millrace} to water wheels can speed water.

seaway

Waterways {seaway} can go from ocean inland.

sluice

Sloping water channels or troughs {sluice} can have gates.

spillway

reservoir water-overflow channel {spillway}.

Turkish bath

Buildings {Turkish bath} can have steam baths, massage, and cold showers.

viaduct

Roads or railroads {viaduct} can be above valleys on arches.

waterworks

water-processing buildings {waterworks}.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Waterway-Dam

breakwater

Rocks or concrete {breakwater} can block tides at sea inlets.

cofferdam

People can build enclosures {cofferdam} from bottom to surface, to empty of water and allow work on bottom.

embankment

Earth or stone piles {embankment} can hold back water.

jetty

Concrete or rock lines {jetty} can block tides or currents at harbors or shorelines.

levee

Earth or concrete banks {levee} can prevent river overflow.

seawall

Earth or concrete banks {seawall} can be at shore.

weir

River dams {weir} can change water flow or trap fish.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Waterway-Dock

dock

Walkways and vehicle ways {dock, building} can lead into water for tying ships and boats.

dry dock

Docks {dry dock} can lift boats out of water for work on hulls.

pier

Vertical columns or beams {pier, building} can support buildings or platforms for boat docking.

quay

wharf {quay}.

wharf

Platforms {wharf} can allow boat docking.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Workplace

atelier

artist workshop {atelier}.

athenaeum

library or education building {athenaeum}.

bandstand

raised roofed outdoor platform {bandstand}.

bazaar

Outdoor/indoor marketplaces {bazaar} can have vendor stalls.

boutique

Shops {boutique} can sell rare or fancy goods.

cabana

beach bathhouse {cabana}.

capitol

legislative building {capitol}.

casino

high-class-gambling building {casino}.

clinic

Buildings {clinic} can be where several doctors practice most specialties.

conservatory

arts-education building {conservatory}.

customhouse

border tax-collection building {customhouse}.

dispensary

Buildings {dispensary} can be where people get medical supplies and medicines.

emporium

large shop {emporium}.

experiment station

Buildings {experiment station} can hold measuring apparatus.

finishing school

Schools {finishing school} can be for learning manners and etiquette.

flea market

Outdoor/indoor markets {flea market} can be for used or discounted items.

foundry

Buildings {foundry} can be for molding or casting metal.

gallery

Buildings {gallery} can be for exhibiting art works.

kiosk

Very small buildings {kiosk} can be for selling small items.

machine shop

Shops {machine shop} can cut and grind metal.

mall

Enclosed or open shops {mall} can have parking areas.

midway

Ride and amusement areas {midway} can be at fairs or circuses.

natatorium

swimming pool {natatorium}.

observatory

Buildings {observatory} can hold telescopes.

package store

liquor store {package store}.

penny arcade

old-time amusement center {penny arcade}.

pharmacy

Shops {pharmacy} can dispense drugs.

planetarium

Domed buildings {planetarium} with projectors can display star and planet positions on ceilings.

sanatorium

Buildings {sanitarium} {sanatorium} can be for people with chronic diseases or tuberculosis, or can be resorts for exercise and rest.

shed

small storage building {shed}.

statehouse

state legislative building {statehouse}.

station

Buildings {station} can be for waiting for trains or buses.

stoa

Greek Classical towns had municipal halls {stoa} near market.

studio room

Buildings {studio} can be for producing entertainments or can be artist workshops or practice rooms.

sweatshop

Workplaces {sweatshop} can have large rooms where underpaid and overworked workers work.

wind tunnel

Cylindrical chambers {wind tunnel} can have large fans.

windmill

Buildings {windmill} can have four large blades on a rotor that turns in wind.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Workplace-Death

crematorium

Buildings {crematory} {crematorium} can be for cremation.

funeral home

Buildings {funeral home} can be where bodies wait for burial or cremation.

morgue

Buildings {morgue} can be for dead people waiting for autopsy or identification.

mortuary

Buildings {mortuary} can be for preparing bodies for burial or cremation.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Workplace-Farm

abattoir

slaughterhouse {abattoir}.

creamery

Buildings {creamery} can process dairy products.

distillery

Buildings {distillery} can make alcohol.

granary

Buildings {granary} can hold stored grain.

hothouse

Enclosed buildings {hothouse} can be for sensitive plants, with filtered light.

packinghouse

Slaughterhouses {packinghouse} can package meat.

plantation

Estates or farms {plantation} can have workers living there.

silo

Cylindrical buildings {silo} can hold fodder.

stockyard

Areas {stockyard} can hold livestock.

truck farm

Small farms {truck farm} can be for produce.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Workplace-Military

bastion

fort or fortified palace {bastion}.

blockhouse

fortified wood or concrete building {blockhouse}.

commissary

military grocery and general store {commissary}.

presidio

Military grounds {presidio} can have fort and quarters.

2-Art-Architecture-Buildings-Workplace-Prostitution

bagnio

Buildings {bagnio} can hold working prostitutes.

bordello

Buildings {bordello} can hold working prostitutes.

brothel

Buildings {brothel} can hold working prostitutes.

2-Art-Painting

painting

Color ranges from full to pastel {painting}. Blacks, grays, and whites are colors. Paintings can depict nature realistically, though with distortion or abstraction. Surface ranges from thin to thick.

aureole

halo around head {aureole, head}|.

background

Compositions have scenes behind main objects {background, art}, to complement subjects.

biomorphic abstraction

Paintings can use curved outlines {biomorphic abstraction}.

calligraphy

Writing {calligraphy}| can have floriated and foliated embellishments.

color in painting

Paintings have color mixtures {color, painting}|.

colors

Primary pigments are blue, yellow, and red. Colors can be similar {analogous, color}.

brightness

Color has lightness or darkness {value, color}. Color can mix with white {tint}. Red with white makes pink. Color can mix with black {shade, color}. Red with black makes burgundy.

saturation

Colors can have less whiteness.

pigment mixing

Complementary colors mix to brown: red and green, orange and blue, and yellow and violet.

warm and cool colors

Red, orange, and yellow are warm colors. Green, blue, and violet are cool colors.

Warm colors and/or intense colors appear closer {advancing color}. Cool colors and/or dull colors appear farther {receding color}.

Warm colors and/or intense colors appear more exciting. Cool colors and/or dull colors appear more calming.

Warm pigments have higher saturation and lighter value than cool pigments have.

contrast

Adjacent large regions increase contrast. Small regions in large regions acquire large-region color {assimilation, color}. Adjacent small regions mix colors.

illumination spectrum and brightness

Color changes with illumination. Studio painters like daylight from north. Outdoor painters like south-France daylight. Paintings in galleries and homes have illumination that differs from original illumination.

composition in painting

In painting, triangles, lines, or circles determine main-object positions {composition, art}. For example, Christian altarpieces use triangle, to suggest the Holy Trinity.

locations

People or objects can be at center. People or objects can be in groups, be in isolation, or oppose each other. Objects can be at different depths.

viewpoint

Perspective has observation points.

number

Numbers of people and objects can balance or not.

movement

Object angles and contours can suggest motion or stillness.

mood

Line shapes and lengths can suggest mood, such as calm, energy, or tension. For example, smooth curves flowing into each other suggest calmness. Straight lines interrupting each other at angles suggest tension.

lighting

Painting uses light from above or side, with different brightness and color contrast.

surface

Painting has thin or thick surface.

depth in painting

Depth {depth, art} can be shallow or deep.

embellishment in art

Extra features {embellishment, art} can range from full to spare.

epigonal style

Art {epigonal style} can use angles and squares.

geometric form

Forms {geometric form, art} can be regular geometric forms, irregular forms, or no form.

hilyah

Words and phrases, such as Prophet descriptions {hilyah}, can have bird or animal shapes.

horror vacui

Early Minoan and Greek art fills all spaces {horror vacui}.

nimbus in art

Rings {nimbus, ring}| of light can be around head.

nonrepresentational art

Paintings can have no recognizable objects or events {nonrepresentational art}| {non-objective art}.

perspective painting

Viewpoints {perspective, art} can be geometric, such as linear perspective, or flat, such as looking perpendicular to all scene surfaces.

2-Art-Painting-Categories

abstractionism art

Art {abstract art} can suggest scenes or ideas with pure lines and colors, using contours, composition, and contrast {abstractionism}|. All art uses abstractions.

objective art

Art {objective art} can depict actual objects or people.

realism in art

Art can accurately represent scenes {realism, art}.

2-Art-Painting-Japan

suiboku

Japanese ink painting {suiboku}.

sumi style

Japanese fine brush style {sumi style} uses special brushes for incisive strokes.

2-Art-Painting-Lighting

lighting

Illumination {lighting, art} can be from above, below, or side. Brightness ranges from light to dark. Contrast ranges from high to low.

chiaroscuro

Figures can be bright or dark {chiaroscuro}|, with light coming from undefined source.

sfumat

Soft veiled hazy {sfumat}| atmosphere suggests more depth.

synthetism

Flat picture can have strong colors, as in pre-Renaissance style {synthetism}.

tenebrism

Light from one source can highly contrast with dark areas {tenebrism} {dramatic illumination}.

2-Art-Painting-Linear Perspective

linear perspective

An artistic technique {linear perspective}| depicts scenes as they appear to human eyes.

picture plane

Imagine standing in front of a window looking onto a street or yard. Window is a vertical plane, parallel to line between your eyes. Straight lines of sight go from eye to scene points. See Figure 1.

Lines go through window at unique points. Artists paint scene-point color at the unique point in the picture plane. See Figure 2. Farther scene points have higher picture-plane points.

lines

In linear perspective, vertical lines stay vertical. See Figure 3. Scene points 1 and 2 make vertical line, and their picture-plane points make vertical line.

In linear perspective, horizontal lines stay horizontal. See Figure 4. Scene points 3 and 4 make horizontal line, and their picture-plane points make horizontal line.

The ground is plane and meets wall in horizontal line in scene and picture-plane. Ground meets sky in horizontal horizon line in scene and picture-plane.

horizon

Horizon height depends on eye height. Observer high above ground sees large ground amount and low horizon. Observer close to ground sees small ground amount and high horizon.

Observer attention typically moves along eye-level line.

line convergence

In linear perspective, non-vertical and non-right-left parallel lines converge and intersect at vanishing point. See Figure 5. Scene points 5/6 and 7/8 make two parallel lines, and their picture-plane points form two lines that converge toward a horizon point.

For parallel lines in horizontal plane, vanishing point is on horizon. For parallel lines in plane that rises as it goes farther from observer, vanishing point is above horizon. For parallel lines in plane that goes lower as it goes farther from observer, vanishing point is below horizon.

history

In Early Renaissance, Europeans studied al-Hazen's book [al-Haytham, 1010] about perspective and began to paint using linear perspective.

convergence line

In linear perspective, parallel lines that are not vertical or horizontal intersect at vanishing point, so line ends converge {convergence line, painting} {orthogonal line, painting} {vanishing line, painting}.

eye-level

Where horizon line goes through imaginary window indicates eye viewpoint {eye-level}. Observer attention typically moves along eye-level line. Viewpoint depends on ground amount compared to sky amount. Eye-level/horizon high in window or painting shows much ground. Eye is looking down on scene from high above ground. Eye-level/horizon low in window or painting shows little ground. Eye is looking up at scene from close to ground.

ground line

Objects have lowest point, through which line {ground line} can be horizontally parallel to window plane.

horizon

Horizontal ground plane, including treetops, buildings, or hills, and sky or wall bottom meet in a horizontal line {horizon, painting} in windows or paintings. Where horizon line goes through window indicates eye level.

picture plane

Imagine standing in front of a vertical rectangular window {picture plane} {plane of picture} looking onto a street or yard. The picture plane is a vertical plane parallel to the line between the two eyes.

sightline

Straight lines {line of sight} {sightline} go from eye to scene points.

station point

Eye is reference point {station point} in linear perspective.

vanishing point

In linear perspective, parallel lines that are not vertical or horizontal intersect at a point {vanishing point}|, so line ends converge {convergence line, perspective} {orthogonal line, perspective} {vanishing line, perspective}.

2-Art-Painting-Materials

crayon

Powdered chalk can be in wax {crayon}.

decalomania

Pressure from another surface can apply oil to surface {decalomania}|.

encaustic

Pigments can be in hot wax {encaustic}|.

fresco

Painter can apply water-based pigments onto wet lime plaster {fresco}|.

frottage

Rubbing something on other materials leaves impressions or tints {frottage}|.

palette

Oval boards {palette, painting}, with thumbhole, can have different-color oil paints.

pastel

powdered chalk sticks {pastel}.

tempera

Pigments can be in egg yolk {tempera}|.

watercolor paint

Water-soluble pigments dissolved in water can make paint {watercolor}.

2-Art-Painting-Kinds

anamorphic art

People can draw paintings using projections from scene through cylinder or cone onto flat surface {anamorphic art}. Viewing the painting in cylindrical or conical mirrors reveals scene.

illuminated book

painted book {illuminated book}.

lekythio

Greek oil jugs {lekythio} had paintings.

mise en abyme

A painting can contain itself or a part of itself {mise en abyme} (place in the abyss).

oriflamme

painted banner {oriflamme}.

polyptych

Paintings can be on several panels {polyptych}.

split-style drawing

Painting can show all figure parts by spreading the figure flat, looking from top {split-style drawing}.

woodcut

Artists can chisel flat wood blocks {woodcut}|, inked, and pressed to paper.

2-Art-Sculpture

headstone

stone grave marker {headstone}.

kaleidoscope

Sighting-tube {kaleidoscope}| ends have colored translucent-plastic layers in geometric shapes, which move when tube rotates.

lost wax process

Artists can shape wax, cover wax with earth, heat to bake earth and melt wax {ciré-perdue process} {lost wax process}, then pour bronze into mold to cool.

mosaic

Artists can set small cersamic pieces in cement {mosaic, art}.

sarcophagus

Stone caskets {sarcophagus}| had clay lids.

schiacciato

Early Renaissance relief was very shallow {schiacciato, sculpture}|, using light and shadow.

scrimshaw

whalebone carvings {scrimshaw}|.

stele as marker

Upright stone slabs {stele, sculpture} can be markers.

2-Art-Sculpture-Furniture

altarpiece

altar artwork {altarpiece}.

broadloom carpet

wide carpet {broadloom carpet}.

censer

incense burner {censer}.

chandelier lamp

Glass or crystal light arrays {chandelier} can hang in dining rooms or halls.

dumbwaiter

Pulley systems {dumbwaiter} can go from basement to dining area.

easel

Frames {easel} can hold paintings for painting.

finish

wood-furniture surface coating {finish, furniture}.

fire iron

fireplace pokers, tongs, and shovels {fire iron}.

font

baptism water basin {font}.

lectern

lecture-note stand {lectern}.

reliquary

relic holder {reliquary}.

shelf

Flat horizontal boards {shelf} can attach to walls.

shelving

shelves {shelving}.

shim

Thin wood wedges {shim} can be under legs to make legs even, to prevent rocking.

silent butler

Small boxes {silent butler} with hinged lids can hold crumbs or ashes.

sitz bath

Bathtubs {sitz bath} can be for hips and buttocks.

ticking

pillow and mattress-cover tightly woven fabric {ticking, furniture}.

trellis

climbing-plant wooden lattice {trellis}.

triptych

three-panel painting {triptych}.

upholstery

Springs, stuffing, and cushions can have fabric covers {upholstery}.

urinal

Restroom receptacles {urinal} can be for urine.

valance

Frames or drapery {valance} can be over window tops.

veneer

thin expensive wood covering {veneer}.

2-Art-Sculpture-Furniture-Bed

batting

mattress or quilt cotton or wool stuffing {batting, furniture}.

box spring

Lined spring sets {box spring} can be under mattresses.

comforter

quilt {comforter}.

counterpane

bedspread {counterpane}.

coverlet

bedspread {coverlet}.

crib holder

baby bed or holder {crib}.

four-poster

Beds {four-poster} can have posts at frame corners.

headboard

bed-frame front board {headboard}.

Hollywood bed

Metal frames {Hollywood bed} can have low legs and optional headboards.

Murphy bed

Single beds {Murphy bed} can hinge to wall.

trundle bed

Small low beds {trundle bed} can store under larger high beds.

2-Art-Sculpture-Furniture-Cabinet

cabinet

Cases {cabinet, furniture} can have shelves, drawers, and/or doors.

armoire

large cupboard or wardrobe {armoire}.

chest

Large wood boxes {chest, furniture} can have hinged lids.

chiffonier

slim drawer chest {chiffonier}.

commode

toilet, washstand, waist-high cabinet, or waist-high drawer chest {commode}.

console

radio or television cabinet {console}.

credenza

legless sideboard {credenza}.

dresser

drawer chest {dresser}.

highboy

tall long-legged drawer chest {highboy}.

hope chest

small chest {hope chest}.

lowboy

waist-high drawer chest {lowboy}.

sideboard

dining-room linen and utensil drawer chest {sideboard}.

2-Art-Sculpture-Furniture-Chair

chair

Seats {chair} can have three or four legs.

antimacassar

arm or chair back cover {antimacassar}.

cane

woven rattan strips {cane, furniture}.

chaise longue

long-seat chair {chaise longue, chair}.

club chair

soft leather chair {club chair}.

davenport

large sofa {davenport}.

deck chair

Folding chairs {deck chair} can have wood frames and cloth seats and backs.

divan

sofa or long couch {divan}.

hassock

legless round or square seat {hassock}.

love seat

two-person sofa {love seat}.

Morris chair

adjustable removable-cushion chair {Morris chair}.

ottoman

upholstered footstool or backless sofa {ottoman}.

pew

long church bench {pew}.

platform rocker

Rocking chairs {platform rocker} can have curved flat pieces.

sedan chair

Chairs {sedan chair} can be on horizontal poles.

settee

high-backed wood bench {settee}.

sofa

Long upholstered seats {sofa} can have backs and arms.

splat

chair slat {splat}.

stool as chair

four-legged round top {stool, furniture}.

studio couch

couch or bed {studio couch}.

Windsor chair

Walnut or birch chairs {Windsor chair} can have shaped wood seats and side legs [1700 to 1800].

wing chair

Chairs {wing chair} can have high backs with sides.

2-Art-Sculpture-Furniture-Platform

bier

casket stand {bier}.

dais

speaker's raised platform {dais}.

podium

speaker's or conductor's raised platform {podium, platform}.

pulpit

Raised areas {pulpit} can have lecterns for leading church services and/or delivering sermons.

2-Art-Sculpture-Furniture-Table

table

four-legged round or rectangular surface {table, furniture}.

altar

church-ceremony table {altar}.

bar as table

High tables {bar, furniture}, for serving drinks, can have high chairs.

carrel

small library desk {carrel}.

coffee table

Low tables {coffee table} can be in front of sofas.

drop-leaf

Desks can have hinged wood pieces {drop-leaf} that can drop down or be flat.

end table

Small tables {end table} can be at sofa sides.

rolltop desk

Desks {rolltop desk} can have flexible covers that can roll down to cover writing surface or roll up for writing.

secretary

writing desk {secretary, furniture}.

trivet

Stands {trivet} can have three legs.

vanity table

dressing table {vanity, furniture}.

2-Art-Sculpture-Pottery

amphora

Two-handle storage jars {amphora}| can have narrative decoration with expressive figures.

faience

Pottery can have ground-quartz, ash, or copper-oxide or azurite coatings {faience}, fused to surface.

kylix

Greek drinking cup {kylix}.

2-Art-Sculpture-Statue

action-in-repose

Sculptures can show mental force in calm body {action-in-repose}.

Archaic smile

Classical-Greek statues had quiet tight smiles {Archaic smile}.

chiastic balance

Statues can balance shoulder and hip tension and relaxation {chiastic balance}.

counterpoise

Human statue can have weight on one leg {contrapposta} {counterpoise}|.

exomis

toga {exomis}.

fillet as headband

headband type {fillet, sculpture}.

foam and mist

Indian sculpting style {foam and mist}.

putti

cherubs {putti}.

tribhanga

Female sculpture can show head tilted to left, trunk tilted to right, and hips tilted to left {triple flexion} {tribhanga}. Male pelvic shape prevents this pose.

2-Art-Sculpture-Tableware

candelabra

multiple-candle holder {candelabra}.

centerpiece

dining-table decoration {centerpiece}.

doily

small lace mat {doily}.

lazy susan rotator

rotating serving platter {lazy susan}.

potsherd

shard {potsherd}.

saltcellar

salt container {saltcellar}.

sandwich board

wooden bread-cutting board {sandwich board}.

Sevres

French porcelain {Sèvres} [1756].

shard

broken pottery piece {shard}.

stone

baking stone {stone}.

tine

fork point {tine}.

toby

Beer mugs {toby} can have shapes like stout men with three-cornered hats.

2-Art-Sculpture-Textiles

textile as art

Textiles {textile, art} include curtains, rugs, and tapestries.

tapestry

Colorful woven cloths {tapestry} with scenes can hang on walls.

2-Art-Sculpture-Textiles-Curtain

drape

curtain {drape}.

drapery

curtains {drapery}.

drawstring

Strings {drawstring} can close bags or sacks.

tieback

curtain string or rope {tieback}.

2-Art-Sculpture-Textiles-Rug

mat

carpet pad {mat, carpet}|.

Persian rug

Patterned rugs {Persian rug} can have wool or silk loops knotted to wool or silk backing.

steamer rug

Blankets {steamer rug} can be for ship passengers using deck chairs.

tatami

Japanese mat {tatami}.

2-Art-Museum

British Museum

London, United Kingdom {British Museum}.

Field Gallery

Chicago, Illinois {Field Gallery}.

Guggenheim Museum

New York, New York {Guggenheim Museum}.

Hermitage Museum

St. Petersburg, Russia {Hermitage Museum}.

Lido Museum

Venice, Italy {Lido Museum}.

Louvre Museum

Paris, France {Louvre Museum}.

Metropolitan Museum of Art

New York, New York {Metropolitan Museum of Art}.

Museum of Modern Art

New York, New York {Museum of Modern Art}.

National Gallery

Washington, DC {National Gallery}.

Prado Museum

Madrid, Spain {Prado Museum}.

Uffizi Gallery

Florence, Italy {Uffizi Gallery}.

Vatican Museum

Rome, Italy {Vatican Museum}.

2-Art-History

art in history

Art history is about architecture, art styles, painting, and sculpture.

2-Art-History-Architecture

White Temple

Sumerian temples had shrines, workshops, and storehouses around them.

Hierakompolis

Egyptian Old-Kingdom tombs were rectangular earth mounds, with brick or stone sides, for kings and courts. Chapel in mound had shaft to burial chamber. Tombs had mummies, sculptures, household items, and paintings.

ziggurat

Sumerians built high rising platforms {ziggurat}|, with temples opposite stair tops. Sumerian temples had a narrow cella hall with small side chambers and had shrines, workshops, and storehouses around them. Sumerian buildings used rectangular sun-dried clay-and-straw mud bricks, as well as wood.

Beaker Folk 1

Wiltshire is in Wessex, near Stonehenge.

Abu Temple

Giant Sumerian statues had conical or cylindrical bodies and large inlaid eyes.

Imhotep

He lived -2635 to -2595, multiplied using times-two table, and built pyramid. Egyptian Old Kingdom 3rd Dynasty pyramids had temples, palaces, and tombs {funerary district}. Palaces had fluted columns.

Sumerian tombs

Sumerian tombs contained harps and statues.

Pyramids

Egyptian Old Kingdom 4th Dynasty kings built pyramid burial chambers. First and largest pyramid was for Cheops. Second, next largest pyramid was for Chefron. Last, smallest pyramid was for Mycerinus. Pyramid sides had smooth dressed stone. Burial chamber is in pyramid middle. East of each pyramid is Old-Kingdom temple with causeway leading to another temple near Nile. One temple has giant diorite seated Chefron. Another temple has giant slate statue of Mycerinus standing with his queen. Third temple has giant limestone statue of seated Prince Rahotep and his wife Nofret. Bodies are rectangular in style, but faces are individualistic.

Beaker Folk 2

Tall massive stones, with cromlechs, were in three concentric rings. Third ring was four meters high. Ditches were 100 meters diameter. Inner ring had no lintels. In center were five eight-meter-tall posts and lintels. Upright stones surrounded central altar stone. Stone alignments pointed to sunrise or sunset on some days each year. Main axis pointed to sunrise on June 24. Nearest quarries were 200 kilometers away.

Ur Great Ziggurat Sumer

Shulgi of Urim, second king of Sumer, built it [-2047 to -1999]. Shulgi was son of Ur-Nammu, Third Dynasty of Ur founder.

Minoan palaces

Minoan palaces had stairs and airshafts and had low ceilings. Porticos were at entrances. Interiors had decorations and paintings. Palaces had no fortifications.

Carnac tombs

Late New Stone Age peoples built large dolmen tombs with stone walls and stone tops.

Beni Hasan tombs

Egyptian Middle Kingdom kings built tombs.

Minos Palace

Large Minoan palace was the labyrinth of Greek myth.

Mycenaean tombs

Mycenaean beehive tombs were in deep shafts with conical stone chambers and contained mummies, golden facemasks, and household items.

Queen Hatsheput Temple

Deir el-Bahri is near Thebes.

Hittite Lion Statue

Hittites built rough-cut stone fortresses, with gates flanked by lion statues.

Mycenaean fortresses

Mycenaeans built hilltop fortresses with stone block walls, similar to Hittite fortresses.

Mycenaean palaces

Mycenaean palaces had a center with a megaron audience hall.

Amon-Re Precinct

Amon-Re is largest of four parts of Karnak Temple Complex to north. Karnak is near Luxor. Theban kings conquered Hyskos 15th dynasty and ruled Egypt in New Kingdom, especially 18th dynasty. In older mythology {Theban mythology}, Thoth created Amen or Amon or Amun, god of creation in Theban mythology. Amun was main Theban god. Ra or Re is spirit. His original wife was Amenet. In New-Kingdom mythology, his wife was Mut, goddess of motherhood in Theban mythology. Khons was god of moon in Theban mythology and was Amen's and Mut's son.

Ptah was creation god {Memphis mythology}. Re-Harakhte was sun god {Heliopolis mythology}. After New-Kingdom Aten-cult, Amen, Ptah, and Re-Harakhte merged to make Amen.

Amen-Re Temple

Egyptian New Kingdom temple had gateway between two walls at pylon entrance, then court with low walls, then hall of pillars, and then second court. Halls and chapels were around square room with four columns. High walls were around main temple and halls. Columns were massive and had top lintels.

Ramses II Temple

Ramses II Temple is for Amen, Ptah, and Re-Harakhte.

Atreus Treasury

Atreus Treasury is largest tholos beehive tomb. Mycenaeans used cut stones to make arched vaults, with outside wood or stone buttresses. They also built first corbel arches.

Jerusalem Temple built

Over rock, King Solomon of Israel built temple, which Babylonians destroyed later.

Ashurbanipal II Palace

Relief shows Ashurbanipal II Killing Lions.

Sargon II Palace

Brick walls with turrets surrounded Assyrian palaces.

Hunting and Fishing Tomb

Etruscan tombs were stone house imitations in conical earth mounds. Sarcophaguses had sculptured clay lids with reclining figures in happy poses. Etruscan tombs had bird and dolphin paintings.

Etruscan houses

Etruscan houses had an atrium.

Etruscan towns

Etruscan towns had north-south road and east-west road. Narrow aqueducts transported water over long distances. They built fortifications, bridges, and drainage systems.

Doric temple began

Archaic Style had different temple styles: older Doric, newer Ionic, and Corinthian Ionic variant.

Ashurbanipal Palace

Nineveh is in north Iraq.

Tower of Babel

Nebuchadnezzar II built Tower of Babel. New Babylonians put smooth transparent glossy hard surface glazes on baked bricks.

Ur Great Ziggurat Babylon

Nebuchadnezzar rebuilt Sumerian ziggurat to Moon goddess.

New Babylonian bridges

New Babylonians built first wood bridges, with stone piers.

Petra

Petra was capital of Nabatean Arabs and is east of Wadi Musa in southwest Jordan.

Artemis Temple Corfu

Corcyra is Corfu.

Ishtar Gate

Babylon had eight gates.

Paestum Basilica

Paestum is near Salerno in Campania in southwest Italy.

Siphnians Treasury

Pediment has Contest of Herakles and Apollo. Delphi is on Mount Parnassus in Phocis (Fokis) in central Greece.

Darius I Palace

Old-Persian palace was on a raised platform. Rooms, halls, and courts had many slender, fluted columns. Wooden roofs had beams fitted into column capitals. Relief sculptures had solemn ceremonial figures, mixing nomadic ornamentation styles with Greek and Sumerian styles.

Portonaccio Temple

It includes Vulca's muscular and aggressive terracotta Apollo of Veii. Etruscan is Tuscan. Veii was in south Etruria, north of Rome.

Libon of Elis

Olympia is on Greece west coast.

Miletus old town

Greek Classical town has stoa municipal halls near market.

Poseidon Temple

Paestum is near Naples.

Ictinus

He worked with Callicrates and Phidias on Parthenon.

Callicrates

He worked with Ictinus and Phidias on Parthenon.

Mnesicles

Plutarch mentions him.

Tomb of the Reliefs

Etruscan rock tombs looked like house insides, with square pilaster pillars.

Mausoleum Halicarnassus

Halicarnassus is on Aegean-Sea coast in southwest Asia Minor.

Polykleitos

He lived -365 to -320. Tholos is at Asclepios sanctuary.

Paeonius Demetrios

Artemis is Diana. Chersiphron and his son, Metagenes, built first temple [-550], but it burned [-356]. The replacement temple burned [262] and invaders destroyed it [401].

Great Wall of China built

Eastern wall, begun by Ch'in Shih Hwang-ti, averages eight meters tall, is seven to ten meters wide at bottom, and is five meters wide at top. Western wall is an earth mound with stone facing and is in ruins. Complete wall goes from Shanhaikuan on Yellow Sea to Chaiyukuan in Gobi Desert, 2500 kilometers, with side branches, and has 24,000 gates and towers. Ming Dynasty did next major work. Wall is largest construction in size, labor, and weight.

Brazen Palace

First capital [-500] had giant earth stupas, with stone facings, and a temple carved from solid rock. Some stupas were larger than the Pyramids. Anuradhapura is north of Columbo.

Porta Augusta

Porta Augusta had two wide towers, with a semicircular arch of voussoir wedge-shaped blocks, not overlapping stones.

Great Stupa

Great Stupa is in central India.

Zeus Alter

Eumenes II, king of Pergamon in northwest Asia Minor, built it. East pediment shows race between Pelops and Oenomaos.

Fortuna Virilis

Ionic temples can have high platform {podium, temple}. Portunus protected harbors.

Sibyl Temple

Roman temples were concrete covered with plaster.

Ixion Room

Pompeii is near Naples in Campania.

domus

Roman private houses {domus, house} had central atrium and rectangular central hall, with outer rooms.

insula as apartment

Roman apartments {insula, apartment} had small central court, then space open to sky, and then opening to street. Shops were on first floor, with living quarters above.

true arch

Romans built first semicircular true arches, which had no buttresses.

Fortuna Primigenia

Roman temples had cylindrical-roof barrel vaults.

Roman Forum built

Imperial Rome civic center first had Forum of Caesar and then Forum of Peace, Forum of Nerva, Forum of Augustus, Forum of Trajan, and Column of Trajan.

Jerusalem Temple rebuilt

King Herod built temple over rock where Solomon had built temple. Romans destroyed it [70].

Pont du Gard

Aqueduct of Nîmes is 50 km long. Nimes is between Provence and Languedoc in south France.

Colosseum

Colosseum used barrel vaults and intersecting barrel groined vaults.

Vitruvius

He lived -90 to -20.

Pantheon temple

Niches have sculptures.

Castel Sant'Angelo

Castel Sant'Angelo was a fortress [271]. Nicholas II connected it to Vatican by corridor. First floor has long winding ramp. Fourth floor has papal apartment and loggia of Julius II, designed by Bramante.

Sassanid Palace

Arch of Ctesiphon is the 30-meter gate finished by Chosroes I of Sasanian Empire.

Diocletian Palace

Roman palaces had columns and arches {arcade}.

Constantine Arch

Constantine Style reliefs had no spatial perspective, flat background, immobile figures, large-headed figures, different measurement scales, and unrelated images.

Santa Costanza

Constantine-Style round or polygonal domed baptistery buildings were for baptisms. Constantine-Style chapels were for funerals. Column rings supported domes, with ambulatories. Santa Costanza has mosaics.

Constantine Basilica

Constantine Style churches had three large aisles, with groined vault and wide wooden roof, copied after public baths. Basilicas had apses at naves and colonnades down sides.

St. Peter's Basilica

On site of Nero's amphitheater, Constantine built small church with long nave and long side aisles and with windows separated by columns. Apse with altar was at one end. Atrium was at other end. Narthex was between atrium and nave. Transept was between apse and nave. Roof was wood. Outside was brick or mortar. Inside walls were marble. Inside had colored stone pieces, small colored-glass-cube tesserae, and glazed clay mosaics embedded in plaster or cement.

Much later, pope crowned Charlemagne and other kings there.

St. Paul's outside the Walls

It is on Via Ostiense.

Santa Maria Maggiore church

Pope Liberius built it.

San Vitale

San Vitale has famous mosaics.

Hagia Sophia

Byzantine churches can have buttressed main piers with pendentive rim at dome.

Sant'Apollinaire

Ravenna is in Emilia-Romagna region in northeast Italy.

Shiva Temple Bombay

Shiva Temple is on Elephanta Island in Bombay harbor. Trimurti is Brahma, Vishnu/Krishna, and Shiva. Main statue is Shiva as Maheshwara.

Anundshog

Anundshog is near Stockholm. In the Ynglingasaga, Yngvar's son Anundr became king after Yngvar died [600].

Shwedagon Pagoda

Buddhist temple is on Singuttara hill.

Mecca Mosque

It contains Kabaa and Zamzam Well.

Potala Palace

Potala Palace is in Potala, a hill next to Lhasa (place of gods or Forbidden City), capital of Tibet, and is home of Dalai Lama. Songtsan Gambo, ruler of Tubo Kingdom, built it. 17th-century rulers built it again.

Sutton Hoo Ship Burial

Vikings buried leaders in ships.

Dome of the Rock

Abdul Malik ibn Marwan, eighth caliph, and Abd al-Malik, ninth caliph, built it.

Dravida style

Dravida temples in south India were pyramids and had stories.

Nagara style

Nagara temples in Khajuraho region in north India were Hindu curvilinear tower sikhara temples in cross shape.

sikhara

After 700, main temple-architecture styles are Nagara in north India, Dravida in south India, and Vesara on Deccan peninsula. Hindu curvilinear tower temples {sikhara} were in cross shape and were in Khajuraho region in north India. Dravida temples were pyramids and had stories. Vesara temples had northern and southern influences.

Silpasastras

They are scriptural texts about art.

Vesara style

Deccan-peninsula Vesara temples had northern and southern influences.

Damascus Great Mosque

It is on a Roman-temple platform {temenos}.

Mont-Saint-Michel abbey

One mile offshore in English Channel, a village has a high stone wall and a Benedictine Abbey with a spire. An earthquake and tidal wave [725] washed surrounding plains away and created a tidal marsh, with 13-meter tides. France built a stone causeway to French coast for the 250 inhabitants [1875].

Khirbat al-Mafjar Palace

Khirbat al-Mafjar Palace is near Jericho.

Mshatta Palace

Mshatta Palace is southeast of Amman.

Kailasanatha Temple

Hindu and Buddhist sculptures are in 34 cave temples. Ellora is Elura.

Ukhaydir Palace

Ukhaydir Palace is south of Karbala.

Cordoba Mosque

It is now La Mezquita cathedral. Cordoba is in Andalucia in south Spain.

St. Riquier

Medieval basilicas have westworks, with two round towers, vaulted narthex, and tower over transept and nave crossing. Square choir space separates apse and transept. Centula is near Abbéville.

Palatine Chapel Aachen

Later Medieval chapels had a tall monumental westwork entrance, with two towers.

Chichen Itza

Mayans also built other buildings nearby.

Shiva Temple Java

Path has 72 bell-shaped reliquary stupa niches. Java restored temple in early 20th century. It is near Jogyakarta.

Angkor Wat

It has many sacred seven-headed cobra images.

Mayan pyramids

Mayans and Toltecs built steep, stepped, symmetrical, stone pyramids, with a temple on top.

Qayrawan Great Mosque

Qayrawan Great Mosque is by Aghlabids.

Mutawakkil

He lived 821 to 861, was Abbasid ruler [847 to 861], and built many palaces. Samarra is north of Baghdad on Tigris River.

Pranbanan Temple

Pranbanan Temple is near Jogyakarta.

Corvey Abbey Church

Imperial Abbey of Corvey is east of Paderborn in Westphalia.

Ibn Tulun mosque

Ibn Tulun, Tulunid-Dynasty founder, built it, on Mount Yashkur [868 to 905].

Jaina Temple Palitana

Palitana is in Gujarat.

St. Pantaleon Abbey

It replaced a Benedictine abbey.

Samanid Mausoleum

Samanid Mausoleum was for Ismail Samani [? to 999], founder of Samanids, and contains other Samanid ruler remains.

El Oued

In driest part of Sahara Desert, an Islamic town has many domes.

St. Michael's church

Ottonian churches had two transepts, large choir, small apse, and high walls. Walls went up to clerestory above roof level. Crypt under the choir stored the dead.

Gunbad-i Qabus Mausoleum

Shams al-Ma'ali 'Abd al-Hasan Qabus of Gurgan and Tabaristan built it.

al-Hakim mosque

Fatimid dynasty built it.

Hosios Loukas Monastery

It is on Mt. Helikon in Boeotia. Greek crosses can have four equal arms.

Imperial Cathedral

Conrad II of Salic emperors began Imperial Cathedral.

Vimala Sha temple

Vimala Sha is for the 22nd Jainist saint.

Westminster Abbey

It is where Britain crowns monarchs and is near Houses of Parliament.

Cluniac style

Romanesque reliefs used primary colors, swirling clothes, body twists, and many people, with sharp and deep cutting {Cluniac style}.

Romanesque architecture

Romanesque architecture depended on Roman architecture, with Byzantine and Islamic ornamentation. Romanesque churches had Romanesque arches. Vaulted roofs used stone masonry. Early Romanesque church vaults had groined cross vaults. Later Romanesque churches used ribbed groin vaults, to make wider and higher vaults. Vaults had solid, heavy walls. Exteriors had carvings and decorations. Church shapes were Latin crosses, with entrance facade, long nave, single transept, choir, and apse.

Florence Baptistry

North Doors are by Ghiberti. South Doors are by Pisano.

St. Mark's Cathedral

St. Mark's Cathedral is in Piazza San Marco (St. Mark's Plaza).

Pisa Cathedral

It is near Pisa Campanile [1174] and Baptistry. Pisa is in Tuscany.

Saint Etienne church

Étienne is Stephen.

St. Sernin

Toulouse is in Midi-Pyrénées in south France.

Canterbury Cathedral

Canterbury Cathedral is on site of original cathedral built by St. Augustine [597] and destroyed by fire [1067].

St. Savin-sur-Gartempe

Gartempe is in Vienne department of former province of Poitou in west France.

Gloucester Cathedral

English Late Gothic cathedrals had steeply curved vaults with ribs passing through clerestory, in Perpendicular style.

Isfahan Great Mosque

Seljuk Turks built it.

Durham Cathedral

Cathedral Church of Christ, Blessed Mary the Virgin, and St. Cuthbert of Durham is in northeast England.

Sainte Foy at Conques

Conques is in Midi Pyrénées province in southwest France.

St. Pierre church

St. Pierre church is in southwest France.

Notre-Dame-la-Grande

It was Benedictine abbey before. Poitiers is in west-central France.

Saint Martin of Tours

Tours is in northwest France.

Mudejar style

Islamic architecture style {Mudejar style} used brick and glazed tiles.

Autun Cathedral

Autun Cathedral is near Bourgogne.

Tintern Abbey

Tintern Abbey is in southeast Wales.

Tournai Cathedral

Largest church in Belgium is 134 meters long.

French Gothic cathedrals

Gothic cathedrals in France were for the Virgin Mary, envisioned as young girl, rather than matron as before. Gothic cathedrals had ribbed groin vaults, Gothic pointed arches, flying buttresses, slender inner columns, triforia, choir, and niches around apse. Column clusters flowed smoothly into pointed arch and across vault. Large colored-glass-piece windows {stained glass window} often had rose shape {rose window}.

hallenkirche

In most Gothic churches {hall church} {hallenkirche} in Germany, nave and side aisles were at same height.

Italian Gothic cathedrals

Most Gothic cathedrals in Italy were in Cistercian style.

Pisa Baptistry

It is near Pisa Campanile [1174] and Campo Santo [1278 to 1283]. Pisa is in Tuscany.

Le Mans Cathedral

First it was Cathedral of St. Julian of Mans. Le Mans is in northwest France.

de Sully M

He lived 1120 to 1196.

Leaning Tower of Pisa

Romanesque churches can have campaniles.

Guichard

Lyon is Lugdunum or Lyons.

Maestro Mateo

Church was north Spain destination for medieval Way of Saint James (Camino de Santiago) pilgrimage. Santiago is Saint James.

Chartres Cathedral

It has a floor labyrinth.

Koutoubia Minaret

Koutoubia Gardens are beside it. Marrakech is also Marrakesh.

Sully H

He lived 1103 to 1195 and was archbishop of Bourges [1183 to 1995].

Rouen Cathedral

Bishop Mellon built first one. Rouen is in northwest France.

Aztec pyramids

Aztecs built stepped, symmetrical, stone pyramids.

Meenakshi Sundareswarar

Temple is in capital of Tamil kingdom. King Tirumula built it. Madurai also has the name Mathurai. Meenakshi is consort of Sundareswarar, who is Shiva.

Fossanova Abbey Church

Fossanova is in Lazio, south of Rome, Italy.

Salisbury Cathedral

Early English Gothic cathedrals were lower than in Europe.

Luzarches Cormont

Luzarches lived ? to 1223. Thomas de Cormont lived ? to 1228.

Alaeddin mosque

Seljuk Turks built it.

Rheims Cathedral

French Gothic cathedrals had west facade with triangular-ended gable porches with pinnacle points.

Kubadabad Palace

It was summer palace of Sultan Alaeddin Keykubad, who reigned 1220 to 1236 over Seljuk Turks. Lake Beysehir is in central Turkey.

Alhambra Palace

Alcazaba is old Moorish section, with fountains, arcades, tiles, courtyards, Hall of Ambassadors, and Court of Myrtles. Palace of the Kings has central Court of Lions.

Strasbourg Cathedral

Strasbourg is in Alsace in east France.

Tejahapala Vastupala

Delwara Temple is in Gujarat. Tejahapala and Vastupala were brothers.

Cologne Cathedral

Domkirche St. Peter und Maria has Shrine of the Three Kings.

St. Mary Magdalene

Saint-Maximin is in Provence. Charles of Anjou sponsored it.

Dabhoi Temple

Dabhoi is in Vadodara district of Gujarat. Dabhoi is Darbhavati.

Purandar Fort

It was capital of Shivaji Marathas and Murar Baji. Purandar is in north India.

Santa Croce

Santa Croce was Franciscan and has Pazzi Chapel [1433 to 1461].

Florence Cathedral

Early-Renaissance central-plan churches had polygon shapes. Dome is by Filippo Brunelleschi.

Palazzo Publico

Palazzo Publico is in Piazza del Campo (Campo Plaza) beside Torre del Mangia or Mangia Tower [1348].

Cambio A

He lived 1245 to 1302. It was Piazza della Signoria or Leaders' Plaza. Signoria were leaders of Florence.

Oljeitu Mausoleum

Sultaniya is in south Azerbaijan in northwest Iran.

Gaddi T

He lived 1300 to 1366 [rebuilt 1564].

Kerman Friday Mosque

Kerman is on Lut-Desert (Kavir-e lut) edge in south-central Iran. Kerman also has Ganj-Ali-Khan bazaar, bath, and caravanserai.

Inca Rope Bridge

Apurimac River is northwest of Cuzco.

Sultan Hasan Madrasah

Buildings used open square with four rectangular vaulted side halls. Domes can be over open squares. Mausoleums can attach. Original one was from 757 to 762. Qalawun ruled after Babar and built Sharia al-Muiz [1284 to 1285]. His son Khalil ruled [1290]. His brother Sultan Muhammad al-Hasir ruled Egypt [1310 to 1341], dug canal between Alexandria and Nile [1311], and had son, Sultan Hassan bin Mohammad bin Qala'oun.

Kremlin

Ivan III ordered Kremlin built. Triangular wall surrounds it. Inside is white Palace of Facets. Spasskaya Tower is gate tower. The Great Bell Tower is 90 meters tall, with gold onion-shaped dome. The King of Bells weighs 216 tons, is seven meters high, rang for only three years [1733 to 1736], and now is on ground. World's largest cannon is also in Kremlin, but they never fired it. Largest building is Grand Palace, built in 19th century.

Kremlin is next to Red Square, Cathedral of St. Basil, and black marble Tomb of Lenin. Cathedral of St. Basil was built in late 16th century.

Orsenigo Bonaventura

Guinforte Solari lived 1465 to 1481. Amadeo lived 1447 to 1522. Pellegrini lived 1527 to 1596.

Ghiberti L

He lived 1378 to 1455.

Gur-i Amir Mausoleum

It was for Muhammad Sultan, Timur's grandson, and includes Timur and his sons and grandsons.

Forbidden City

Ming Dynasty built Forbidden City.

GoharShad mosque

Goharshad, wife of Shahrokh, funded Timurid mosque [1405 to 1447].

Green Mosque

Mehmet I was Ottoman sultan.

Bon B

He lived 1421 to 1464.

Brunelleschi Fi

He lived 1377 to 1446 and invented Florentine style.

Brunelleschi Fancelli

Brunelleschi lived 1377 to 1446. Fancelli lived 1430 to 1494. Bartolomeo Ammannati changed it from 1558 to 1570.

Topkapi Palace

Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror built it. Ottoman sultans lived there until Abdulmecid I [1839 to 1860].

Laurana L

He lived 1420 to 1479.

Trinita dei Monti

Trinita dei Monti is at top of Spanish Steps, according to Papal town plan. It has the Descent from the Cross fresco by Daniele da Volterra.

Qaitbay Mausoleum

al-Ashraf Qaitbay was sultan of Mamelukes [1468 to 1496] and who lived 1423 to 1496.

Inca Tunnel

Inca tunnel goes 250 meters through cliff.

Henry VII chapel

Henry VII lived 1491 to 1547.

Bramante D

He lived 1444 to 1514.

Bramante Michelangelo

Michelangelo succeeded Bramante in 1547. Michelangelo lived 1475 to 1564.

Peruzzi B

He lived 1481 to 1536.

Sangallo Michelangelo Port

Porta lived 1533 to 1602 and completed collaborations with Sangallo and Michelangelo. Sangallo the Younger lived 1484 to 1546. Sangallo the Elder lived 1455 to 1534.

Cortona D

He lived 1470 to 1549.

Primaticcio Serlio

Primaticcio lived 1504 to 1570. Serlio lived 1475 to 1554.

Lescot P

He lived 1510 to 1578.

Vasari G

He lived 1511 to 1574.

Yakovlev P

Cathedral has hipped roof with small arches in tiers. Ivan the Terrible had it built after he captured Kazan Khanate. St. Basil has chapel built by Czar Fedor Ivanovich [1588].

Borromeo C

He lived 1538 to 1584 and became Roman Catholic saint.

Palladio A

He lived 1518 to 1580.

Vignola G

He lived 1507 to 1573.

Sinan M

He lived 1489 to 1588. It was for Selim II.

Fathpur Sikri Mosque

Mogul emperor Akbar built Fathpur Sikri Mosque near Asra.

Fontana D

He lived 1543 to 1607. Cathedral began in 324 under Constantine at place according to Papal town plan.

Maderno C

He lived 1556 to 1629. Santo Ignacio has painting by Pozzo.

Sedefkar Mehmed Aga

He lived 1562 to 1622 and was Sinan's student. Ahmed I [1589 to 1617] was Ottoman sultan [1603 to 1617].

Jones I

He lived 1573 to 1652.

Lemercier J

He lived 1585 to 1654. Tuileries Garden is near Louvre, where Tuileries Palace was.

Jahan

He lived 1592 to 1666 and ruled as Shah [1628 to 1658]. Taj Mahal is at old capital and is tomb of his wife Mumtaz Mahal. It has a square marble platform 100 meters on sides, octagon 60 meters on longest side, walls 23 meters high, and bulb-shaped dome 80 meters high. It has four minarets, at corners, 45 meters high. A walled garden, with reflecting pools and walkways, surrounds it.

Maderno Bernini

Maderno lived 1556 to 1629. Bernini lived 1598 to 1680.

Mansart F

He lived 1598 to 1666.

Isfahan Friday Mosque

Shah Abbas of Safavid dynasty started final construction.

Borromini F

He lived 1599 to 1667.

Le Vau L

He lived 1614 to 1670 and worked for Louis XIV.

Hardouin-Mansart J

He lived 1646 to 1708. His great-uncle was François Mansart.

Guarini G

He lived 1624 to 1683.

Wren C

He lived 1632 to 1723. His clerk was Nicholas Hawksmoor.

Perrault Cl

He lived 1613 to 1688.

Erlach J

He lived 1656 to 1723. San Carlo Borromeo is St. Charles Borromaeus.

Charlottenburg Palace

Charlottenburg Palace was for Sophie Charlotte, wife of first Prussian king, Friedrich I. Johann Eosander von Goethe was architect as it expanded later. It added east wing [1740 to 1746].

Dietmayr B

He lived 1670 to 1739.

Vanbrugh J

He lived 1664 to 1726.

Asam Brothers

Egid Quirin Asam lived 1692 to 1750 and was architect. Cosmas Damian Asam lived 1686 to 1739 and was painter and architect.

Neumann B

He lived 1687 to 1753.

Poppelmann M

He lived 1662 to 1737.

Burlington

He lived 1694 to 1753.

Zimmermann D

He lived 1714 to 1786.

Cuvillies F

He lived 1695 to 1768.

Gregorini Passalacqua

Gregorini lived 1700 to 1777. First built in 325, the stone columns remain.

Pacassi N

He lived 1716 to 1790. Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach designed and built the Early Baroque original [1696 to 1699].

Gabriel J

He lived 1698 to 1782.

Soufflot Rondelet

Le Panthéon is in Latin Quarter. Soufflot lived 1713 to 1780.

Adam R

He lived 1728 to 1792.

Vignon P

He lived 1763 to 1828.

Emerald Buddha Temple

Temple is part of Wat Phia Kaeo, walled religious complex containing Royal Pantheon, which has life-sized bronzes of former kings and contains many yaks. At roof points are sky licks. Across Chaophraya River is Wat Arun or Temple of the Dawn.

Langhans K

He lived 1732 to 1808.

L'Enfant P

He lived 1754 to 1852 and designed Washington avenues and quadrants.

Jefferson T architect

He lived 1743 to 1826.

Chalgrin Blouet

Chalgrin lived 1739 to 1811. Blouet lived 1795 to 1853.

Nash John architecture

He lived 1752 to 1835.

Bulfinch C

He lived 1763 to 1844.

Telford T

He lived 1757 to 1834. It is in north Wales.

Brunel I

He lived 1806 to 1859.

Barry C

He lived 1795 to 1860.

Labrouste H

He lived 1801 to 1875.

Mills R

He lived 1781 to 1855.

Paxton J

He lived 1801 to 1865. Crystal Palace was at Great Exhibition, the first World's Fair. In 1854, it moved to Hyde Park until 1939. Sydenham is now in London.

Walter T

He lived 1804 to 1887.

Smith Willia architecture

He lived 1817 to 1891. It is near Aberdeen.

Lesseps Negrelli

Negrelli lived 1799 to 1858 and was from Austria. Lesseps lived 1805 to 1894 and was from France.

Garnier C

He lived 1857 to 1874.

Richardson H

He lived 1838 to 1886.

Roebling J

He lived 1806 to 1869 and patented wire rope, used in suspension bridges.

Bartholdi F

He lived 1834 to 1904. Eiffel built the frame. Liberty Island is part of New York City.

Winchester S

She lived 1837 to 1922.

Jenney W

He lived 1832 to 1907. Home Insurance had ten stories.

Eiffel A

He lived 1832 to 1923. Stephen Sauvestre [1874 to 1919] added design.

Sullivan L

He lived 1856 to 1924 and was father of modernism. He was of Chicago school and founded Prairie School of architecture.

Gaudi A

He lived 1852 to 1926.

Simplon Tunnel

It connects Brig with Domodossola.

Flagg E

He lived 1857 to 1947.

LeBrun N

He lived 1821 to 1901.

Wright Fr

He lived 1867 to 1959 and used Cubist ideas. Horizontal houses {prairie house} integrate with surroundings. Well-designed houses {Usonian house} can be affordable.

White McKim

White lived 1853 to 1906. McKim lived 1847 to 1909.

Gilbert C

He lived 1859 to 1934.

Goethals G

He lived 1858 to 1928.

Gropius W

He lived 1883 to 1969. Style {Bauhaus style} can unite art and craft, without distinction between worker and artist.

Le Corbusier

He lived 1887 to 1965 and designed "machines to be lived in" {machines à habiter}. He built curtain-wall buildings, with steel skeletons and glass sides.

Lamb W

He lived 1883 to 1958 and worked for Shreve, Lamb, and Harmon Company [1929], with Richmond Harold Shreve [1877 to 1946] and Arthur Loomis Harmon [1878 to 1958].

Hoover Dam built

Lake Mead formed behind it.

Moisseiff Ellis

Moisseiff lived 1872 to 1943. Ellis lived 1876 to 1949.

Fuller R

He lived 1895 to 1983.

Bergstrom G

He lived 1876 to 1955.

Rohe L

He lived 1886 to 1969.

Aalto A

He lived 1898 to 1976 and designed buildings and furniture.

Lake Pontchartrain Cause

It is not on I-10 and US-90 Pontchartrain Expressway in New Orleans. Lake Pontchartrain is in south Louisiana, northeast of New Orleans.

St. Lawrence Seaway

Now canals allow ocean traffic to go to Great Lakes.

Ammann O

He lived 1879 to 1965.

Moore Turney

Moore lived 1937 to 1998.

Chesapeake Bay Bridge

William Preston Lane, Jr., Memorial Bridge is on US 50 and 301.

Saarinen E

He lived 1910 to 1961.

Yamasaki M

He lived 1912 to 1986. Towers burned down in 2001.

Urbahn M

He lived 1912 to 1995.

Aswan High Dam built

Aswan High Dam is in upper Egypt.

Shayad Monument

Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi built it on west road to airport.

Graham Br

He lived 1925 to ?.

Alaska Pipeline

Alyeska Pipeline Service Company runs it.

Alexander C

Towns and buildings built in natural, intuitive, organic, and evolving way are best. People in society can share ideas {pattern language}. Pattern-language patterns solve problems of living in environments, from large regions down to room parts. Patterns depend on each other.

Larger patterns are about town or community. They have independent regions. They have town distributions, city-country fingers, agricultural valleys, country streets, country towns, and countryside. They have subcultures, scattered work, and local transport areas. They have community of 7000, subculture boundary, identifiable neighborhood, and neighborhood boundary. They have public transportation webs, ring roads, learning networks, shopping webs, and minibuses. They have four-story limit, nine-percent parking, parallel roads, sacred sites, access to water, life cycle accommodation, and men and women. They have eccentric nuclei, density rings, activity nodes, promenades, shopping streets, nightlife, and interchanges. They have household mix, public and private mix, house clusters, row houses, housing hills, and old people everywhere. They have work communities, industrial ribbons, marketplace universities, local town halls, community-project loops, large markets, health centers, and housing between. They have looped local roads, T-junctions, green streets, path and road networks, main gateways, road crossings, raised walks, bike paths and racks, and children. They have carnivals, quiet back areas, accessible greens, small public squares, high places, street dancing, pools and streams, birthplaces, and holy ground. They have common land, connected play, public outdoor rooms, grave sites, still water, local sports, adventure playgrounds, and animals. They have families and different-size houses. They have self-governing workshops and offices, small services without red tape, office connections, masters and apprentices, teenage society, shop-front schools, and homes. They have individually owned shops, street cafes, corner groceries, beer halls, traveler's inns, bus stops, and food stands.

Smaller patterns are for buildings. They have building complexes, several stories, shielded parking, circulation realms, main buildings, pedestrian paths, building thoroughfares, family entrances, and small parking lots. They have site repair, south-facing outdoor areas, outdoor spaces, light wings, connected buildings, and long thin houses. They have main entrances, half-hidden gardens, entrance transitions, car connections, open-space hierarchies, living courtyards, cascading roofs, sheltering roofs, and roof gardens. They have arcades, paths and goals, path shapes, building fronts, pedestrians not too crowded, activity pockets, and stair seats. They have intimacy gradient, indoor sunlight, common areas at heart, entrance rooms, flows through rooms, short passages, staircase stages, zen-style views, and light and dark tapestries. They have couple realms, children realms, sleeping to east, farmhouse kitchens, private terraces, own rooms, sitting spaces, bed clusters, bathing rooms, and bulk storage. They have flexible office space, communal eating, small work groups, reception areas, places to wait, small meeting rooms, and half-private offices. They have rooms to rent, teenager cottages, old-age cottages, settled workplaces, home workshops, and open stairs. They have light on two room sides, building edges, sunny places, north facing areas, outdoor rooms, street-level windows, openings to street, galleries, six-foot balconies, and connections to earth. They have terraced slopes, fruit trees, tree places, wild gardens, garden walls, trellised walks, greenhouses, garden seats, vegetable gardens, and compost. They have alcoves, window places, fireplaces, eating spots, workspace enclosures, cooking layouts, sitting circles, communal sleeping, marriage beds, bed alcoves, and dressing rooms. They have ceiling-height variety, indoor space shapes, large windows, half-open walls, interior windows, good staircase volume, and corner doors. They have thick walls, closets between rooms, sunny counters, open shelves, waist-high shelves, built-in seats, child caves, and secret places.

Building details have patterns. Buildings have structure that follows social spaces, efficient structure, good materials, and gradual stiffening. They have roof layouts, floor-and-ceiling layouts, outer wall thickenings, corner columns, and column distributions. They have root foundations, ground floor slab, box columns, perimeter beams, wall membranes, floor-ceiling vaults, and roof vaults. They have natural doors and windows, low sill, deep reveals, low doorway, and frames as thickened edges. They have column places, column connections, stair vaults, duct spaces, radiant heat, dormer windows, and roof caps. They have floor surfaces, lapped outside walls, soft inside walls, windows that open wide, solid doors with glass, filtered light, small panes, and half-inch trim. They have seat spots, front-door benches, sitting walls, canvas roofs, flower baskets, climbing plants, stone paving, tile, and brick. They have ornaments, warm colors, different chairs, light pools, and things from life.

Combining patterns gives deeper meaning.

2-Art-History-Art Styles

Paleolithic art style

It had cave painting.

Neolithic art style

It had pottery and carving.

Sumerian art style

Sumerian began after city-states arose near confluence of Tigris and Euphrates Rivers.

Egyptian Old Kingdom art

Egyptian Old Kingdom included Imhotep.

Cyclades art style

It started in early Bronze Age.

Akkadian art style

Akkadian began after King Sargon conquered south Sumer.

New Sumerian art style

New Sumerian began after kings of Ur conquered Akkadians.

Egyptian Middle Kingdom art

Egyptian Middle Kingdom included the 11th and 12th Dynasties.

Minoan art style

It used color.

Babylonian art style

Babylonian began with King Hammurabi.

Mycenaean art style

It had painted pottery.

Egyptian New Kingdom art

Egyptian New Kingdom included the 18th, 19th, and 20th Dynasties and had various styles.

Chinese art style

Chinese art began as cities formed.

Hittite art style

Hittite art became different than in Sumer and Babylon.

Assyrian art style

It became different from Babylonian style.

Pre-Columbian art style

Pre-Columbian art began as villages began.

Greek Geometric art

Oldest Greek style {Geometric Style} flourished when cities started. Pottery and small statues had human and animal figures, as well as ornamental triangles, checks, and concentric circles.

Greek Archaic art

Greek Archaic included Psiax and Douris.

Greek Orientalizing art

Second-oldest Greek style {Orientalizing Style} had a proto-Attic group in Athens and a proto-Corinthian group in Corinth. Near East and Egypt influenced it. Vases and amphora used narrative decoration with expressive figures.

Etruscan art style

It was in Etruria in Tuscany.

New Babylonian art style

New Babylonian began after Assyria lost to Medes and Scythians under Nebuchadnezzar.

Petran

Nabatean Arabs built in southwest Jordan.

Sri Lankan art style

It became different from Indian art.

Old Persian art style

Old Persian began after Cyrus the Great conquered Babylon.

Greek Classical art

Greek Classical began with rebuilding on the Acropolis, the sacred hill above Athens, and included Ictinus, Callicrates, Mnesicles, Polyclitus, Myron, and Phidias.

Hellenistic art style

Late Greek Classical or Hellenistic included Bryaxis, Scopas, Praxiteles, and Lysippus.

Roman Republic art style

It had engineering projects.

Roman Imperial art style

It had monumental buildings.

Early Christian art style

Early Christian and Byzantine art had few angels.

New Persian art style

New Persian began after Shapur I defeated Romans.

Constantine Style art

Constantine Style used unrelated images. Figures were immobile and large-headed, and depth was shallow with little perspective.

Viking art style

Viking metal arts used orderly arrangements of ornamental designs and animal figures.

Byzantine art style

Byzantine began with Emperor Justinian and included Andrei Rublev.

Early Medieval art

Early Medieval art had Christian art, Celtic art, and Pre-Romanesque art.

Arabic Calligraphy

Arabic Calligraphy included Ibn Muqla, Ibn al-Bawwab, Bihzad, Mir Ali, Sinan, Muhammadi, Sadiqi-Beg, Riza-i Abbasi, and Hafiz Osman. They used floriated and foliated embellishments in calligraphy.

Tibetan art style

It became different from Indian and Chinese art.

Javan art style

Borobudur in central Java had reliefs.

Medieval art style

Medieval began with Charlemagne, whose capital was at Aachen.

Cambodian art style

Khmer art began [800].

Ottonian art style

Ottonian Renaissance began when Otto and Adelaide married [951].

Romanesque art

Romanesque had romantic Cluniac style and classical Cistercian style and included Gislebertus, Benadetto Antelani, Revier of Huy, and Nicholas of Verdun.

Perpendicular art

English Late Gothic cathedrals had steeply curved vaults with ribs passing through clerestory {Perpendicular style}.

Gothic art

Gothic style began with Abbey Church of St. Denis rebuilding. St. Denis is patron saint of France. Abbey Church is French-king burial place. Gothic had Parisian and International styles and included Abbot Suger, Cimabue, Claus Sluter, Nicola Pisano, Giovanni Pisano, Lorenzo Ghiberti, Giotto, Duccio, Pietro Lorenzetti, and Limbourg Brothers. English architecture had English Early Gothic and English Late Gothic or Perpendicular style.

Gothic International art

Painting in north Europe and Italy had soft, modeled quality, using light, shadow, and detail {Gothic International Style}. Gothic statues had fuller body forms and individualistic figures.

Burmese art style

It began in Burma dry zone [-500] in early Bronze-Iron Age.

Early Renaissance art

Early Renaissance began as Italy revived classical ideas, compared Greek city-states to Italian city-states, and learned about linear perspective from al-Hazen's book. Early Renaissance painting was first to project scenes onto surfaces as they appeared to painters, using sightlines. Early Renaissance was humanistic and individualistic art and included Florentine style. Early Renaissance included Brunelleschi, Masaccio, and Donatello.

Late Gothic art

Late Gothic included Master of Flemalle or Robert Campin, Jan van Eyck, and Martin Schongeuer.

Thai art style

Kings commissioned Buddhist art.

High Renaissance art

High Renaissance was subjective and individualistic, with more drama and emotion, and included Raphael, Michelangelo, and Leonardo da Vinci.

Northern Renaissance art

Northern Renaissance featured strong color, colored light, and soft bodies. It included Matthias Grunewald.

Late Renaissance art

Late Renaissance presaged Baroque and included Tintoretto, El Greco, Vasari, and Coreggio.

Mannerism art

Mannerism showed inner thoughts, rather than realism or classical values.

Northern Italian Realism art

Northern Italian Realism included Veronese, Cellini, Bologna or Jean de Boulogne, and Palladio.

Baroque art

Baroque began in Rome, spread to Italy, went to Germany, and then got to France and England. Baroque painting, but not architecture nor sculpture, spread to Flanders, Holland, and Spain. Baroque is anti-classical, actively relates sculpture to setting, and features putti cherubs, concave and convex surfaces, and elastic forms.

Rococo art

Rococo featured flowery and colorful interior decoration.

Neoclassical art

Romanticism or Neoclassical Art revived Greek classical, Romanesque, and Gothic styles, to create intense emotional experience by removing present customs and social orders and returning to simpler, more natural time. It began with archeological discoveries of Greek antiquities and ruins at Pompeii and Herculaneum. Romanticism included Millet, Rousseau, Corot, and Daubigny. Romanticism included Barbizon School. Soufflot, Robert Adam, and Thomas Jefferson are Neoclassical.

Iron Architecture

Iron Architecture included Eiffel.

Barbizon School

Barbizon School of landscape painting included Millet, Rousseau, Corot, and Daubigny.

Impressionism

Impressionism showed features of reality as experienced personally by artist. Manet was the first Impressionist.

Realism art style

It showed everyday situations.

Post-Impressionism

Post-Impressionism included Cezanne, Gauguin, Soutime, and van Gogh.

Art Nouveau art

Art Nouveau was a decorative style based on curve patterns and nature and included Beardsley in England and Gaudí in Spain. Hector Guimard [1867 to 1942] designed Paris Metro subway entrances [1898 to 1901], such as at Porte Dauphine station. Art Nouveau in Germany was Jugendstil or Youth Style. Art Nouveau in Austria was Sezessionstil or Secession Style. Gustav Klimt painted [1862 to 1918]. Josef Hoffmann built furniture. Siegfried Bing started La Maison de l'Art Nouveau in Paris [1896].

Belle Epoque art

Belle Epoque was classical and traditional. Jewelry used diamonds, pearls, and platinum.

Edwardian art style

Edwardian depended on Georgian and was classical and traditional. Jewelry used diamonds, pearls, and platinum.

Expressionism

Expressionism expressed artist emotions toward world and human condition and included Matisse, Roualt, Soutime, and Die Brücke or Bridge School.

Fauvism

Fauvism included Kandinsky, Matisse, and Roualt.

Neo-plasticism

Neo-plasticism or De Stijl Movement used non-objective abstraction to achieve pure reality through balance of non-symmetrical parts.

Primevalism

Primevalism returned to primitive forms, and sculptors included Brancusi and Moore.

Abstractionism art style

Abstractionism was about art and reality form and structure.

Cubism

Cubism used shaded wedges and open spaces.

Fantasism

Fantasism was irrational, spontaneous, and imaginative and included Chirico, Chagall, Klee, and Duchamp. Duchamp started Dadaism.

Futurism

Futurism included Boccioni and Balla.

Art Deco art

Art Deco depended on geometric forms, common materials, and function. Erté or Romain de Tirtoff [1892 to 1990] was from Russia.

International Style

It was symmetrical, balanced, and unornamented. Richard Neutra started International Style in America.

Surrealism

Surrealism expressed thought unbounded by reason, aesthetics, or morals and included Ernst, Dali, and Miro.

Moderne art

Moderne extended Art Deco and used cheaper objects and materials.

2-Art-History-Painting

Altamira Cave paintings

Altamira Cave is in Monte Vispieres.

Addaura Cave

Addaura Cave is in Monte Pellegrino. Niscemi's Cave is nearby.

pictograph

Aborigines painted natural and abstract designs {pictograph}|, using red ochre on rocks.

Lascaux Cave painting

Lascaux Cave is in Dordogne region in southwest France.

La Magdelaine Cave

La Magdelaine Cave is in Tarn region.

Queen Puabi tomb paintings

Sumerian tomb paintings had overlapping figures and 3/4 views.

Octopus Vase

Minoan palaces had wall paintings of realistic scenes, with smooth lines and curves. Early Minoan art and Greek art filled all spaces.

Harvester Vase

It was in Hagia Triada palace with Chieftain Cup. Hagia Triada is in south-central Crete.

New Kingdom paintings

Egyptian New Kingdom tomb paintings and reliefs showed landscapes and everyday life.

Assyrian painting

Assyrian painting had nomadic style and featured animal paintings.

Etruscan tomb murals

Etruscan tombs had painted murals.

Greek Archaic vases

Greek Archaic vase painting had scenes from mythology and everyday life and used strong outlines filled with opaque flat colors.

Greek Archaic walls

Greek Archaic wall paintings {mural} had scenes from mythology and everyday life and used strong outlines filled with opaque flat colors.

Exekias

He decorated amphora.

Psiax

He painted black figures and then red figures.

Greek Classical painting

In Greek Classical painting, white backgrounds, body-part foreshortening, and thicker or thinner outlines {contour, Greek painting} caused appearance of depth and three dimensions. Lekythio oil jugs can have paintings.

Battle of Issus mosaic

Battle of Issus [-333] matched Alexander the Great and Darius III. Pompeii is near Naples in Campania.

Odyssey Landscapes

Roman wall paintings in Pompeii and Herculaneum had odd perspectives, diffuse lighting, and hazy atmosphere. Pompeii is near Naples in Campania.

codex

Thin bleached parchment replaced papyrus rolls. Books {codex}| had vellum sheets bound at one side.

Later Han Dynasty

Later Han-Dynasty painters used black ink on paper to paint scenery and landscapes.

Faiyum portraits

Roman painted portraits used encaustic.

Early Christian paintings

Early Christian paintings in Roman catacombs had aureole haloes around heads and Christian symbols.

Dura-Europus paintings

Dura-Europus was in desert near Palmyra.

Constantine-Style illuminated books

Constantine-Style painted books began.

Vatican Vergil Codex

It has Aeneid and Georgics.

St. George Basilica mosaic

Theodosius the Great commissioned it.

Beautiful Bodhisattva

Ajanta is in Maharashtra in north India.

Vienna Genesis Codex

Constantine Style painting sequences showed different time stages {continuous narration}.

Santa Maria Maggiore mosai

Pope Nicholas IV rebuilt it and restored mosaics [1671].

Justinian and Attendants

Byzantine mosaics in San Vitale (Saint Vitalis) church show tall, slim figures with small faces, narrow straight noses, and dark staring eyes, under curved brows with passive bodies.

Byzantine icons

Byzantine sacred pictures {icon painting} conformed to strict rules.

Islamic mosaics

Islamic mosaics used geometric and symmetric patterns.

Lindisfarne Gospels

Monks illustrated them. Lindisfarne Island is in Northumbria in northeast England.

Echternach Gospels

Monks at Lindisfarne Island, in Northumbria in northeast England, illustrated it. Monastery is at Echternach. Willibrord lived 658 to 739 and was missionary from Northumbria to Frisians in Netherlands.

Wang-wei

Zen Buddhist lived 698 to 759, in T'ang Dynasty. He affected later Southern school of Chinese landscape art.

Tao-tzu

Zen Buddhist lived 700 to 760, in T'ang Dynasty.

Kufic script

Islamic calligraphy began with Koran production.

aqlam al-sitta

Islamic cursive calligraphy had six hands or styles {aqlam al-sitta} used in Iran before ta'liq style: Naskh, Thuluth, Muhaqqaq, Rihani, Tauqi, and Riqa.

Naskh is regular and balanced. Seljuks in Iran used Naskh for correspondence and literature. Ibn Muqla [? to 939] of Shiraz applied rules to existing naskh. Letters fit into a circle whose vertical diameter represented the alef letter. Calligraphers measured lines by dots. Ahmad-i Nayrizi and Ibn al-Bawwab [? to 1022] wrote proportioned naskh scripts. Mirza Ahmad Nayrizi [1800 to 1850] used naskh.

Thuluth is an impressive script used mosque, monument, and plaque titles. Rounded letters can intersect above and below lines. Imamzadeh Mahruq used thuluth. The Safavid calligrapher Ali Reza Abbasi used thuluth in Isfahan and Mashhad mosques. Muhaqqaq is narrower than thuluth. Rihani is like muhaqqaq, but smaller. Riqa is a small script used in documents.

Ta'liq and nasta'liq appeared in Iran in 14th century and dominated in 15th and 16th centuries. Ta'liq has short thin verticals and broad horizontals. In 14th century, Mir Ali Tabrizi developed nasta'liq from ta'liq for poetry.

Sayyid Shafua of Herat changed nasta'liq to shikastah (broken script) in 17th century. Shikastah fills spaces between words and sentences.

Godescalc

Charlemagne commissioned it after he marched to meet Pope Adrian I.

Book of Kells

It has the four Gospels and Eusebian Canons, in which Eusebius cross-referenced the Gospels.

Sung Dynasty woodcut

During Sung Dynasty, landscape artists chiseled flat wood-block woodcuts, inked them, and pressed them to paper.

Carolingian alphabet

Monks copied many Latin texts.

Utrecht Psalter

Monks at Benedictine Abbey at Hautvillers, near Rheims in north France, illustrated it.

Ebbo Gospel Book

Monks illustrated it. A Benedictine abbey is at Hautvillers, near Rheims in north France. Monks there also illustrated the Utrecht Psalter. Ebbo was archbishop of Reims [816 to 835].

Lindau Gospels

Lindau is on east Lake Constance (Bodensee) in Bavaria in south Germany.

Muqla

He lived ? to 940 and perfected Naskh.

Paris Psalter

It has Greek style.

Eastern Kufic

Example is Piramouz Kufic Script.

Maghribi script

Islamic calligraphy developed the first cursive forms of Kufic.

Plaited Kufic script

Ibn Muqla lived ? to 940, was Vizier at Baghdad, and codified Plaited Kufic script.

Sung Dynasty painting

During Sung Dynasty, landscape paintings were silk painted with carbon black dissolved in water and other watercolors.

Vigilanus Codex

It has Arabic numerals.

Otto III Gospel Book

Reichenau monastery was on an island in Lake Constance in Bavaria in south Germany.

Khajuraho nymphs

Chandela dynasty ruled Bundelkhand [900 to 1500]. Khajuraho is in Madhya Pradesh state in central India.

Native American painting

Native-American painting on wood or human body used ornamental designs. American Indians drew all figure parts, by spreading the figure flat, looking from top, in split-style drawing.

sand painting

Navajo painted on flat sand {sand painting} by pouring powdered earth in abstract patterns. Hosteen Klah wove sandpainting images into rugs [1935].

Bawwab

He lived ? to 1022.

Romanesque paintings

Romanesque paintings were two-dimensional, patterned, outlined, and active, blending symbolic and ornamental styles.

St. Savin paintings

Charlemagne started the abbey. Gartempe is in Vienne department of former province of Poitou in west France.

St. Mark's mosaics

Domenico Contarini was Doge and commissioned it.

Christ Pantokrator

Byzantine mosaics began to use crucifixion theme.

Bayeux Tapestry

Bishop Odo commissioned it. Bayeux is in Normandy in north France.

Islamic style Egypt

Islamic style used geometric and floral arabesques.

St. Denis Banner

Flags and oriflamme banners had Gothic style.

Palatine Chapel Palermo

Palermo is port in northwest Sicily.

Virgin and Child paintings

Madonna paintings predominated as Roman Catholic church emphasized her role.

Nicholas of Verdun

He lived 1262 to 1316.

Ma Yuan

Zen Buddhist lived 1155 to 1235 in Sung Dynasty. He founded Ma-Hsia school of landscape painting, with Hsia Kuei.

Liang K'ai

Zen Buddhist lived in Sung Dynasty.

Ta'liq script

The later nasta'liq combines naskhi and ta'liq styles.

Xia Gui

Zen Buddhist lived 1180 to 1230 in Sung Dynasty. He founded Ma-Hsia school of landscape painting, with Ma Yuan.

Saint-Etienne windows

Bourges is in central France.

Mu-Ch'i

Zen Buddhist lived 1200 to 1274 in Sung Dynasty.

Cimabue G

He lived 1240 to 1302.

Giotto

He lived 1267 to 1337, used linear perspective, and painted with tempera.

Byzantine-Gothic painting

Italian painters, who put figures in architectural settings to give more depth to painting, combined Byzantine and Gothic styles.

Kokushi M

Zen Buddhist lived 1275 to 1351 and used fine brush style {sumi style, Kokushi}. He designed gardens.

Duccio

He lived 1260 to 1318.

Lorenzetti P

He lived 1280 to 1348.

Islamic style Near East

Islamic style paintings had high horizon.

Mir Ali

He lived ? to 1416 and painted miniatures.

Densu C

Zen Buddhist lived 1352 to 1431 and painted in sumi style.

Early Renaissance painting

Early-Renaissance artists painted frescoes and polyptychs.

Late Gothic painting

Late Gothic painting used color shading to achieve depth {atmospheric perspective} [Clark, 1969].

Rublev A

He lived 1360 to 1430.

Limbourg Brothers

Herman Limbourg lived 1370 to 1416. Paul Limbourg lived 1375 to 1416. Jean Limbourg lived 1380 to 1416.

Campin R

He lived 1378 to 1444 and dissolved pigments in oil {oil painting}. Oil allows more color tones and can be thick or thin. He was among the earliest portrait artists. His Late Gothic painting is realistic, with light, depth, continuity, and detail.

Masaccio

He lived 1401 to 1428, began Early-Renaissance painting, and used perspective and full-bodied figures.

van Eyck H

He lived 1370 to 1426 and first used atmospheric perspective.

van Eyck J

He lived 1390 to 1441, first used oil paint, and painted the first portraits.

van der Weyden R

He lived 1399 to 1464.

Lippi F

He lived 1406 to 1469 and was of Florentine school.

Shubun

Zen Buddhist lived 1414 to 1465 and painted in sumi style of Chinese ink painting of Muromachi period. He was Josetsu's student and taught Sesshu.

Santa Francesca Romana

St. Francesca Romana lived 1384 to 1440 in Rome and started Olivetan Oblates.

Mantegna A

He lived 1431 to 1506.

Fiesole

He lived 1302 to 1373.

Castagno A

He lived 1418 to 1457.

Munif Hamadullah

Munif originated it, and Hamadullah improved it.

Tughra script

Monogram of the Sultan used Tughra script.

Piero della Francesca

He lived 1420 to 1492.

Behzad K

He lived 1450 to 1520, was of Herat School [1467 to 1506], was later of Tabriz School [1506 to 1520], and used Safavid style. Herat is in northwest Afghanistan.

Jasoku S

Zen Buddhist lived ? to 1483, painted in Bummei-Period sumi style, and started Soga School.

Botticelli S

He lived 1444 to 1510.

Pacher M

He lived 1435 to 1498.

Bellini G

He lived 1430 to 1516.

Schongauer M

He lived 1450 to 1491 and used copper plates.

Leonardo da Vinci

He lived 1452 to 1519 and studied anatomy. Fossils are sea organisms that fell to bottom in layers, but land subsequently rose [1482 to 1499].

He used perspective and shadow. Figures were in chiaroscuro light and dark, with light coming from undefined source. Sfumat haze makes soft veiled atmosphere to suggest more depth. Brighter objects appear larger by irradiation. He mirror wrote, as can many left-handers. He used hydraulics in shows that he created for the duke.

Mogul miniatures

Akbar and later Mogul emperors commissioned nature and court-life paintings in north India and had workshops that combined Indian and Islamic styles.

Perugino P

He lived 1446 to 1523.

Sesshu

Zen Buddhist lived 1421 to 1506 and was master of Japanese suiboku ink painting.

Durer A

He lived 1471 to 1528.

Zen painting

Zen painting, other Zen arts, and classical Chinese poetry have four modes. Sabi is quiet and isolated or in the middle and so neither desired or rejected. Wabi is depressed, simple, ordinary, or common. Aware is nostalgic or regretful. Yugen is mysterious or deep.

Rajasthan style

Rajasthan state is in northwest India.

Bosch H

He lived 1450 to 1516.

Signorelli L

He lived 1450 to 1523.

Raphael

He lived 1483 to 1520.

Mozaffar Ali

Sultan Muhammad's son Mozaffar Ali Siyavash or Mosavar Mohammadi was miniature painter of Ghazvin School.

Sultan Muhammad

He was of Tabriz School of miniature painters, as was Behzad, and was Aqa Mirak of Isfahan's pupil. Mir Sayyid Ali, Mirza Ali, and Muzaffar Ali were also of Tabriz School.

Giorgione

He lived 1477 to 1510.

Grunewald M

He lived 1470 to 1528.

Titian painter

He lived 1485 to 1576.

Holbein the Younger

He lived 1497 to 1543.

Correggio

He lived 1489 to 1534.

Romano G

He lived 1499 to 1546 and started academic style.

Cranach L

He lived 1472 to 1553. Lucas Cranach the Younger lived 1515 to 1586.

Altdorfer A

He lived 1480 to 1538.

Mirak

He taught Sultan Muhammad.

Volterra D

Mannerist lived 1509 to 1566.

Sadiqi-Beg

He lived 1533 to 1610, wrote Arabic calligraphy, painted miniatures, and was of Ghazvin School.

Veronese P

He lived 1528 to 1588.

Muhammadi

He painted miniatures.

Bruegel the Elder

He lived 1525 to 1569.

Tintoretto

He lived 1518 to 1594.

Muzaffar 'Ali

He lived 1540 to 1576 and was miniature painter of Ghazvin School.

Husni I

Imad al-Husni lived 1554 to 1614 and was of Isfahan School.

El Greco

He lived 1541 to 1614, in Spain from 1577.

Caravaggio

He lived 1571 to 1610 and used naturalism. He used tenebrism high contrast between dark and light from one source.

Shikastah script

Sayyid Shafua of Herat invented it.

Musashi M

Zen Buddhist lived 1582 to 1645 and painted in sumi style.

Rubens P

He lived 1577 to 1640.

Valasquez D

He lived 1599 to 1660.

Abbasi R

He lived 1580 to 1530, wrote Safavid Arabic calligraphy, painted miniatures, and was of Isfahan School. Reza Abassi's pupil was Moin. Moin painted Reza Abassi. Muhammad Qasim, Mir Muhammad Ali, and Muhammad Yusuf continued Isfahan School style until 1700. Nadir Shah showed Mogul influences in 18th century.

Matabei I

He lived 1577 to 1650. He studied at Tosa School and then at Kano School, and then he founded Ukiyoye School or Popular School. Tosa School [1220] painted court scenes and battles. Kano School [1460] used Chinese-style painting for shoguns.

Guercino A

He lived 1591 to 1666.

Hals F

He lived 1582 to 1666.

van Dyck A

He lived 1599 to 1639.

Rembrandt

He lived 1606 to 1669.

Poussin N

He lived 1594 to 1665.

Cortona P

He lived 1596 to 1669.

Lorrain C

He lived 1602 to 1682.

Saenredam P

He lived 1597 to 1665 and built church interiors.

La Tour G

He lived 1593 to 1652.

Potter P

He lived 1625 to 1654.

Ruisdael J

He lived 1628 to 1682.

Cozza F

He lived 1605 to 1682.

Hooch P

He lived 1629 to 1684 and painted domestic scenes.

Steen J

He lived 1625 to 1679.

Vermeer J

He lived 1632 to 1675.

Moronobu H

He lived 1638 to 1714 and printed ukiyo-e from woodblocks.

Eizan

He lived 1787 to 1867 and printed India-ink woodblock prints {ukiyo-e}. Horishige, Hokusai, Utamaro, and Hishikawa Moronobu also printed them.

Osman H

He lived 1642 to 1698 and used words and phrases to depict bird or animal.

Berckheyde G

He lived 1638 to 1698 and painted town scenes.

Watteau A

He lived 1684 to 1721.

Matahei

He lived ? to 1725 and sketched scenes and demons {Otsu pictures} in Otso near Kyoto.

Harunobu S

He lived 1725 to 177 and printed woodblocks in colors {nishiki-e}.

Hogarth W

He lived 1697 to 1764. Feeling of beauty depends on bodily characteristics and sensations, as they identify themselves with art {empathy theory}.

Boucher F

He lived 1703 to 1770 and used Rococo style.

Chardin J

He lived 1699 to 1779.

Gainsborough T

He lived 1727 to 1788.

Tiepolo G

He lived 1696 to 1770.

Battersea enamel boxes

Company was Bilston & Battersea Enamels.

Fragonard J

He lived 1732 to 1806.

Wilson R

He lived 1713 to 1782 and painted landscapes.

Stubbs G

He lived 1724 to 1806.

Copley J

He lived 1738 to 1815.

Reynolds Jos

He lived 1723 to 1792. Beauty relates to central idea. The most-beautiful things are the most-representative class examples.

West B

He lived 1738 to 1820.

Wolf C

He lived 1735 to 1783.

Sengai

Zen Buddhist lived 1750 to 1837 and painted in sumi style.

Fuseli J

He lived 1741 to 1825.

David Ja

He lived 1748 to 1825.

Trumbull J

He lived 1756 to 1843.

Blake W painting

He lived 1757 to 1827.

Stuart G

He lived 1755 to 1828.

Turner Jos

He lived 1775 to 1851.

Goya F

He lived 1746 to 1828.

Raeburn H

He lived 1756 to 1823 and painted portraits.

Ingres J

He lived 1780 to 1867.

Friedrich C

He lived 1774 to 1840.

Constable J

He lived 1776 to 1837.

Gericault T

He lived 1791 to 1824.

Cruikshank G

He lived 1792 to 1878.

Delacroix E

He lived 1798 to 1863.

Corot J

He lived 1796 to 1875.

Katsushika H

He lived 1760 to 1849.

Catlin G

He lived 1796 to 1872 and painted Native Americans.

Hiroshige

He lived 1797 to 1858 and was of Ukiyo-e School of printmaking.

Audubon J

He lived 1785 to 1851 and painted birds.

Cole T

He lived 1801 to 1848 and founded Hudson River School of nature painting.

Hicks E

He lived 1780 to 1849.

Currier N

He lived 1813 to 1888.

Courbet G

He lived 1819 to 1877.

Millet F

He lived 1814 to 1875 and was of Barbizon School.

Brown Fo

He lived 1821 to 1893.

Dore P

He lived 1832 to 1883.

Manet E

He lived 1832 to 1883 and was the first Impressionist, for whom painting itself was reality.

Degas E

He lived 1834 to 1917.

Monet C

He lived 1840 to 1926.

Renoir A

He lived 1841 to 1919.

Whistler J

He lived 1834 to 1903.

Homer W

He lived 1836 to 1910.

Eakins T

He lived 1844 to 1916.

Cezanne P

He lived 1839 to 1906, was Post-Impressionist, and articulated foreground and background.

Ryder A

He lived 1847 to 1917.

Seurat G

He lived 1859 to 1891 and used color dots {Pointillism} {Divisionism}.

van Gogh V

He lived 1853 to 1890, was Post-Impressionist, and painted landscapes filled with emotion and bright colors.

Daumier H

He lived 1808 to 1879.

Gauguin P

He lived 1848 to 1903 and was Post-Impressionist. He used folk art, stained glass, and flat picture with strong colors, in pre-Renaissance style {synthetism, Gauguin}. His later work is his Tahitian period.

Munch E

He lived 1863 to 1944.

Beardsley A

He lived 1872 to 1898.

Toulouse-Lautrec H

He lived 1864 to 1901.

Rousseau H

He lived 1844 to 1910.

collage

Artists cut and pasted scraps onto background {collage}| or in three dimensions {constructivism, art}.

Prendergast M

He lived 1858 to 1924.

Sargeant J

He lived 1856 to 1925.

Picasso P art

He lived 1881 to 1973, had a Blue period, and then had a Rose period. He used shaded wedges and open spaces {Cubism} and pasted collages.

Parrish M

He lived 1870 to 1966 and was Art Nouveau.

Matisse H

He lived 1869 to 1954 and was Expressionist and Fauvist.

Modigliani A

He lived from 1884 to 1920.

Balla G

He lived 1871 to 1958, was Futurist, and used Cubist ideas.

Kandinsky W

He lived 1866 to 1944, led Die Brucke or the Bridge, and was the first non-objective or non-representational painter {non-representational art} {non-objective art, Kandinsky}. He was Fauvist. He, Franz Marc, and other German expressionists formed Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider) [1911 to 1014].

Chagall M

He lived 1887 to 1985.

Braque G

He lived 1882 to 1963.

Duchamp M

He lived 1887 to 1968 and superimposed movement phases.

Mondrian P

He lived 1872 to 1944 and used a non-objective style {Neo-Plasticism} {De Stijl} that balanced asymmetrical parts.

Chirico G

He lived 1888 to 1978 and was Fantasist.

Erte

He lived 1892 to 1990, designed stage and film clothes, and was of Art Deco.

Rockwell N

He lived 1894 to 1978 and painted Saturday Evening Post magazine covers [1916 to 1958].

Rivera D

He lived 1886 to 1957 and painted murals. Jose Clemente Orozco, David Alvaro Siquieros, and Rivera painted public-building frescos in Mexican Mural Renaissance [1921 to 1930].

Prendergast C

He lived 1863 to 1948.

Klee P

He lived 1879 to 1940 and used ideographic and simple shapes.

Soutine C

He lived 1893 to 1943, used color dots {Pointillism, Soutine} {Divisionism, Soutine}, and was Post-Impressionist.

Davis Stu

He lived 1894 to 1964.

Dufy R

He lived 1877 to 1953 and was Fauvist.

Ernst M

He lived 1891 to 1976, was Surrealist, and constructed frottages [1925] and decalomania.

Dali S

He lived 1904 to 1989, used psychoanalytic ideas, and was Surrealist.

Utrillo M

He lived 1883 to 1955 and painted Paris street scenes.

Rouault G

He lived 1871 to 1958.

Escher M

He lived 1898 to 1972 and etched lithographs and woodcuts with scenes impossible in three-dimensional space or with opposite-shape tilings. He used the 17 symmetries available in the plane {wallpaper group, Escher}. He also represented hyperbolic space by projection onto plane.

Hopper E

He lived 1882 to 1967.

Pollack J

He lived 1912 to 1956 and was Abstract Expressionist, who used poured or squirted paint in an active painting process {action painting}.

Wyeth A

He lived 1917 to ?.

De Kooning W

He lived 1904 to 1997.

Albers J

He lived 1888 to 1976 and used color squares to study color relations.

Warhol A

He lived 1928 to 1987.

Miro J

He lived 1934 to 1976, was Surrealist, and used only curved outlines {biomorphic abstraction, Miro}.

Shawn B

He lived 1898 to 1969.

Brunn I

He used thick oil.

2-Art-History-Sculpture

Venus of Willendorf

Upper Paleolithic Period [-30000 to -20000] carved many small nude female figures.

Cro-Magnon art

Les Eyzies is in Dordogne region.

plastered skulls

Plastered skulls with individual faces, pottery, and woven cloth were made.

Female Head

Inanna was main Sumer goddess and the sky god An's daughter. Uruk is Warka. Culture also cast bronze king heads.

King Narmer Palette

Egyptian Old Kingdom had abstract-picture hieroglyphs. Sculptural views were face on, profile, or from above. Menes is Greek name for Narmer.

Cyclades tombs

In Cyclades stone tombs, marble standing-female statues were naked or draped {nude}, had folded arms, had flattened bodies, had faces with noses only, and were probably motherhood and fertility goddesses.

Sphinx built

Sphinx is next to King Chefron's pyramid. Sculptors carved it at site.

Seated Scribe

Sculptors in Fourth dynasty carved it. Saqqara is west of Memphis and south of Cairo.

Indus sculptures

Indus Valley people carved sculptures with soft, full human forms, in the first communities in Pakistan and northwest India.

Old Kingdom tombs

In Egyptian Old Kingdom tombs, royal-household limestone busts {reserve head} were near burial chamber, and limestone walls had sculptures {relief}.

Akkadian head

Akkadian rulers commissioned busts.

Naran-Sin Stele

Akkadians cut upright stone slabs used as stele markers.

Gudea Statue

Gudea was prince of Lagash and ruler of New Sumerian Empire. Girsu is Tello in south Mesopotamia.

Sesotris III

Khakhaure Senusret III or Senwosret III or Sesostris III was pharaoh in middle of 12th Dynasty. Mentu was originally the main Theban god. Thebes is Luxor in north Egypt.

Hammurabi Law Code

Babylonians used deep-cut reliefs {high relief} and shallow reliefs {bas relief}. Statues had rounded eyes.

Colossi of Memnon

Amenhotep III of Egyptian New Kingdom erected them. Earthquake damaged them during reign of Septimus Severus, and they sang no more. Temple and statues do not exist now.

Three Deities

Mycenaeans molded small female terracotta statues.

Vaphio Cups

Vaphio is in Mycenae near Sparta.

Queen Nefertiti

Amenhotep IV is Akhenaten.

Tutankhamen Coffin Cover

Tomb was in Valley of the Kings near Thebes (Luxor).

Ramses II sculpture

Near Aswan, at Temple of Amon Re, four statues of Egyptian New Kingdom pharaoh Ramses II, sitting and looking east over Nile, are 23 meters high, in a cliff.

Kamakura Buddha

Kamakura Period [1185 to 1573] was in Yorimoto shogunate.

Olmec heads

Olmecs cut realistic sculptures.

Assyrian sculpture

Assyrian art had nomadic style and featured animal sculptures.

Etruscan urns

Etruscan urns had human shapes.

Greek Archaic sculptures

Early Greek Archaic sculptures can stand alone {freestanding statue}, had free arms and legs, had staring eyes, and were similar to Egyptian styles. Two forms were clothed maiden {kore} and nude young man {kouros}.

Chinese dragon sculptures

Dragons are luck and prosperity symbols.

Poseidon Soter

Artemisium is north of Euboea or Negropont or Negroponte Island in Aegean Sea near east central Greece.

Phaidimos

It was on Acropolis.

Smilis

Smilis was Daedalus' student. Perhaps, Isches of Ionia commissioned it. Samos is Pythagoreion in Asia Minor.

Rampin Head

It has Mesopotamian style.

Kroisos Kouros

Greek-Archaic statues had quiet tight Archaic smiles.

Kore

Chios is island in north Aegean Sea.

She-Wolf

It has mane.

Aphaea Temple Pediments

Aphaea was local goddess but later was same as Athena or Artemis.

Douris

Greek Archaics formed kylix drinking cups.

Herakles

Statues are freestanding, with natural forms and expressive faces, in East Pediment of Temple of Aphaia at Aegina.

Kritios

He taught Myron. Greek Classical statues typically put weight on one leg in counterpoise.

Greek Classical statues

Greek Classical statues used serious facial expressions {Severe Style}, rather than Archaic smiles.

Delphi Charioteer

Delphi is on Mount Parnassus in Phocis (Fokis) in central Greece.

Lapiths defeating the Centaurs

Lapiths were in Thessaly. Theseus aided the Lapiths.

Myron

Perhaps, he was Ageladas of Argos' student.

Polyclitus

His technique {canon of Polykleitos} {Polykleitos canon} balances shoulder-and-hip tension and relaxation in chiastic balance. He worked in bronze.

Dying Niobid

It is first female nude sculpture of Classical period.

Phidias

He worked with Callicrates and Ictinus on Parthenon.

Paeonius sculptor

Thrace is in northeast Greece, south Bulgaria, and northwest Turkey.

Heracleidas

Catana was first Greek colony in Sicily [-734].

Bryaxis

He worked with Scopas, Leochares, and Timotheus on Mausoleum.

Scopas

He lived -400 to -350 and came from Paros in Cyclades islands.

Demetrios

Alopeka is on Asia-Minor coast.

Praxiteles

He lived -400 to -340.

Lysippus

He led Argos and Sicyon school. Sicyon is between Corinth and Achaea.

Lysicrates Monument

Lysicrates was chorus leader {choragos} and play sponsor.

Lion Capital

King Asoka had giant sculptures made, which had Persian influences.

Dying Gaul

It copies bronze Greek statue commissioned [-220] by Attalos I of Pergamon, Asia Minor, in west Turkey. Galatia is Gaul.

Nike of Samothrace

Samothrace island is in north Aegean Sea.

Metellus

Tenine commissioned it.

Roman Head

Some portraits copied death masks.

Mysteries Villa frieze

Pompeii is near Naples in Campania.

Hagesandros Athenodoros

Rhodes is island near Crete.

Ara Pacis

Augustus commissioned it after he returned from Gallic and Spanish wars [-13].

Augustus of Primaporta

Tiberius commissioned it [15]. It was in Livia's villa at Prima Porta, just north of Rome.

Vespasian sculpture

Vespasian constructed Forum [75] and began Colosseum. His sin Titus finished the Colosseum [80].

Flavian Lady Portrait

.

Titus Arch

It is Pentelic marble arch southeast of Forum.

Early Indian Buddha

Buddha forbade statues of himself.

Farnese Atlas

It has Atlas holding globe with Greek constellations.

Apollodorus of Damascus

He lived 50 to 130.

Trajan Plutei

It has two balustrades of reliefs.

Gandhara School

Gandhara School of sculpture carved first Buddha statues. Gandhara is in northwest Pakistan.

Marcus Aurelius sculpture

It was first in Lateran Palace and then in Piazza del Campidoglio until recently moved inside and replaced by replica.

Bamiyan Buddha

Bamiyan is northwest of Kabul. Kushan Dynasty of 3rd century sculpted them.

New Persian reliefs

New Persian reliefs are in rocks near Persepolis.

New Persian weaving

New Persians wove silk and wool rugs with ornamental and animal designs.

Mochica pottery

Andes-Mountain Mochica and Quimbaya peoples shaped and baked clay {firing, pottery} to make pottery and created jewelry and gold sculptures.

Constantine the Great sculpture

Whole statue was 12 meters tall.

Constantine Style heads

.

Constantine Style tombs

Constantine Style marble sarcophagi were made.

Germanic metal arts

Germanic metal arts used orderly arrangements of ornamental designs and animal figures.

Shivalaya

Bhaja Caves are in Maharashtra in south India.

Islamic pottery

Islamic pottery used special shine {lustre}.

Shore Temple

Indian peoples started new foam and mist sculpting style.

Ting porcelain

First in Tingchow during the Five Dynasties [907 to 960] and later during the Sung Dynasty [960 to 1297], workers hardened translucent white non-porous clay to a smooth finish {porcelain, Ting}. Pai Ting (White Ting) is best. Tu Ting (Earth Ting) has cream-white glaze. Fen Ting (Flour Ting) is lowest. Nan Ting (Southern Ting) has same gradations. Kuan is royal porcelain. Yuan, Ming, Ching, and Sung porcelain are of equal value. Kiln gloss decreases over time.

Lothar Cross

Theophano was wife of Otto II and mother of Otto III and regent [973 to 991] and commissioned it.

Dancing Shiva

Tamil is most southern state of India.

Gero Crucifix

Archbishop Gero lived ? to 976 and commissioned it.

bonsai

Gardeners began growing miniature plants {bonsai}.

Jaina and Buddhist art

Jaina and Buddhist art mixed in north India.

Bishop Bernward Doors

Bernward was bishop [993 to 1022]. Hildesheim is in Lower Saxony, Germany in northwest Germany.

Nataraja

Nataraja was in south India. Chola period [860 to 1279] built many temples.

Parvati

Parvati is in south India. Body has head tilted to left, trunk tilted to right, and hips tilted to left in triple flexion. Male pelvic shape prevents this pose.

Renier of Huy

He molded Romanesque metal work.

Mission of the Apostles

Vézelay is in Burgundy or Bourgogne in central France.

Gislebertus

He lived ? to 1150.

Roger II Robe

The pope crowned Roger II of Sicily [1095 to 1154].

Chartres Royal Portals

Figures have symmetrical arrangement on door jambs.

St. Gilles-du-Gard Portal

Gard is in Provence in south France.

Bobrinski Bucket

Herat is in northwest Afghanistan.

Lion Monument

Brunswick is Braunschweig.

Antelami B

He lived 1150 to 1230 and was of Parma School.

minai

Islamic luster technique allowed many colors {minai}, because it applied metallic oxides after first glazing and then refired pottery at lower temperature. Such enamel tiles started in Seljuk regions of Iran, such as at Alaeddin Palace in Konya during reign of Kilic Arsalan II [1156 to 1192].

Seljuk barbotine technique used rosettes, animals, and foliates.

Sgraffiato technique [800 to 900] in Islamic and Christian art incises foliate, geometric, animal, and human designs onto clay, covers ceramic with yellow-brown, green, or polychrome transparent glaze, and refires.

Champleve technique engraves deep, wide grooves filled with dark brown or black colors with transparent colorless, green, brown, or polychrome glaze.

Early African heads

Early Africans shaped terracotta portrait heads. Artists worked wax into face, covered wax with earth, heated to bake earth and melt wax in the ciré-perdue process (lost-wax process), and then poured bronze into mold.

African masks

Africans carved symmetrical human and animal masks.

Native American masks

Native Americans carved realistic or geometric wood and shell masks.

Northwest Indian masks

North-American Indians carved asymmetrical and unreal wood and bark masks, sometimes about myths.

South Pacific masks

South-Pacific islanders carved asymmetrical and unreal wood and bark masks, sometimes about myths.

Chartres North Transept

Gothic statues have slender S-shaped bodies, small round faces, drapery folds, and strong smiles {Parisian style}.

Visitation Group Portals

Rheims is in north France.

Ekkehard and Uta

Naumburg is in northeast Germany.

Pisano N

He lived 1220 to 1284.

Pisano G

He lived 1250 to 1314.

Strasbourg Portals

Strasbourg is in Alsace in east France.

Virgin of Paris

It came from St. Aignan in Loire region.

Pisano A

He lived 1290 to 1349.

Sluter C

He lived 1350 to 1406.

Early Renaissance relief

Early Renaissance relief was very shallow {schiacciato, relief}, using light and shadow.

Donatello

He lived 1386 to 1466.

Alberti A

He lived 1404 to 1472.

Avignon Pieta

Avignon is in Provence and Camargue in southeast France.

Verrocchio A

He lived 1435 to 1488.

Unicorn Tapestries

They were in Flanders in south Belgium.

Michelangelo

He lived 1475 to 1564 and used mental force in calm body {action-in-repose, Michelangelo}.

Benin portrait heads

Benin-kingdom bronze portrait heads can have simple bodies.

Ardabil Carpet

Two are in Los Angeles County Museum of Art and Victoria and Albert Museum.

Notke B

He lived 1435 to 1509, was from Germany, carved wood, and painted.

Cellini B

He lived 1500 to 1571.

Pilon G

He lived 1535 to 1590.

moai

Early Pacific Islanders carved many long, giant, staring, chiseled faces {moai} from soft volcanic tufa stone. They connect to large carved and buried bodies, up to 10 meters deep, and peer out to sea. They used to have flat red rocks on head tops. Inhabitants also buried ash and bones with the statues. In Polynesian, it is Rapa Nui.

Baroque etchings

Baroque artists etched metal plates and printed on paper {etching}.

Bernini G

He lived 1598 to 1680.

Puget P

He lived 1622 to 1694.

Houdon J

He lived 1741 to 1828.

Falconet E

He lived 1741 to 1791.

Rude F

He lived 1784 to 1855.

Pradier J

He lived 1790 to 1852.

Pugin A

He lived 1812 to 1852.

Rodin A

He lived 1840 to 1917.

Maillol A

He lived 1861 to 1944.

Barlach E

He lived 1870 to 1938.

Epstein J

He lived 1880 to 1959 and was Expressionist.

Boccioni U

He lived 1882 to 1916, was Futurist, and used Cubist ideas.

Lehmbruck W

He lived 1881 to 1919.

kinetic sculpture

Artists built moving collages in three dimensions {kinetic sculpture}.

Brancusi C

He lived 1876 to 1957, was Primevalist, and used primitive influences. He sculpted in metal, marble, and wood.

Breuer M

He lived 1902 to 1981 and started International Style.

Borglum G

He lived 1867 to 1941.

Moore H

He lived 1898 to 1986 and was Primevalist.

Arp J

He lived 1886 to 1966 and founded a non-sensical irrational style {Dadaism}.

Calder A

He lived 1898 to 1976 and balanced movable pieces connected by wires {mobile sculpture} and stationary structures {stabile sculpture}.

Vigeland G

He lived 1869 to 1943.

Eames C

He lived 1907 to 1978 and molded plywood chairs.

Lipchitz J

He lived 1891 to 1973 and built transparent sculptures.

Reiback E

He lived 1936 to ? and was Thomas Wilfred's student. Laszlo Moholy-Nagy built Light-Space Modulator [1922 to 1930], with light bulbs, reflectors, and filters. Wilfred built Lumia, such as his Clavilux [1922 to 1925], with lenses, color filters, mirrors, prisms, and projectors.

Oldenburg C

He lived 1928 to ? and built gigantic works.

2-Art-History-Sculpture-Furniture

Egyptian furniture

It was heavy and angular.

Etruscan furniture

It used primitive and Tuscan themes.

Greek furniture

It was classical.

Roman furniture

It is classical.

Gothic furniture

Style derived from Gothic cathedrals and used carved and heavy pieces, sometimes with iron bands, such as chests and X-framed chairs.

Florentine furniture

It was classical style.

Italian furniture

It was baroque.

Spanish furniture

It is heavy and ornate.

Neoclassical furnitur 1500

It is classical.

Tudor furniture

It had carving or paneling. Chairs had high backs.

Elizabethan furniture 1500

Heavy, carved, and austere style began.

Jacobean furniture

King James I style [1603 to 1625] used upholstery and Italianate carving, especially arabesques on cupboards.

Baroque furniture

It was intricate and fluid.

Louis XIII furniture

It was angular and heavy, using Italian style plus Spain and Flanders.

Colonial furniture

It was classical.

Louis XIV furniture

Subdued Baroque style of Louis XIV [1643 to 1715] was formal and used carved or painted animals, mythological animals, fruit and flower garlands, and fleur-de-lis.

William and Mary furniture

King William III and Queen Mary II [1670 to 1690] style used Dutch influences, such as floral marquetry and oyster shell veneer.

Sheraton T

He lived 1751 to 1806. It was a light linear neoclassical style based on Adam and Hepplewhite. It used contrasting veneers, inlay, and painted decorations. Chair backs had urns, swags, or lyres.

Pennsylvanian furniture

It is simple and austere.

Rococo furniture

Hardwoods with scrollwork and curves derived from Régence and Baroque.

Chinese furniture

It used lacquer or bamboo.

Queen Anne furniture

Style differed from previous French style. Walnut veneer, gentle curves, cabriole legs, and serpentine arms were in secretaries and china cupboards.

Georgian furniture

Style derived from Queen Anne, but added decorations and ornaments, such as leaves, masks, and eagle and lion heads and claws.

Regence furniture

During regency from death of Louis XIV [1715] to ascension of Louis XV [1723], furniture moved from Baroque to rococo.

Louis XV furniture

Rococo style of Louis XV [1732 to 1774] was small and rounded, with ornaments. Veneers often had Oriental lacquer or porcelain plaques.

Neo-Gothic furniture 1700

Style used Gothic arches and tracery.

Neoclassical furnitur 1700

Style used Greek, Roman, and Egyptian designs of archaeological finds.

New England Windsor furni

It derived from Windsor style.

Adam Adam

Robert lived 1728 to 1792. James lived 1732 to 1794. It replaced Rococo and Palladian.

Chippendale T

He lived 1718 to 1779. It derived from late Baroque, Rococo, Louis XV, and Georgian. Chippendale Gothic and Chinese Chippendale derived from it.

Louis XVI furniture

Neoclassical style of Louis XVI [1774 to 1792] was geometric with architectural decoration.

Wedgwood J

He lived 1730 to 1792 and manufactured china.

Federal furniture

Style derived from Adam, Hepplewhite, and Sheraton.

Heppelwhite G

He lived ? to 1786 and drew furniture designs [1786]. Style derived from Adam and neoclassical but was lighter and more curved. Chairs can have Prince-of-Wales feathers on back.

Directoire

Style removed royal traits from Louis XVI.

Phyfe D

He lived 1768 to 1854 and defined Federal style. He used rectilinear style, with veneer, inlay, and brass feet.

Regency furniture

Prince of Wales [1811 to 1820] style derived from French Directoire and Empire styles and used Greek and Roman furniture designs, such as Klismos chair.

Biedermeier

Strong and simple style derived from French Empire. Biedermeier was a cartoon figure representing German country gentlemen.

Mediterranean furniture

It is light and functional.

Provincial furniture

Cheaper and simpler styles came from main styles.

Shaker furniture

Practical design used plain wood in smooth lines, such as in ladder-back chair.

Spanish Credenza furniture

It is heavy and ornate.

Empire furniture

Neoclassical, Egyptian, and Roman imperial style used decorated woods and metals, featuring bees, crowns, laurels, mythological figures, and letter N.

Hitchcock L

He lived 1795 to 1852. First mass produced furniture in USA.

Elizabethan furniture 1800

It was heavy, carved, and austere.

Neo-Gothic furniture 1800

Style mixed Gothic and Neoclassical.

Thonet M

He lived 1796 to 1871.

Victorian furniture

Queen Victoria [1837 to 1901] style derived from rococo and Louis XV, using curves, horsehair upholstery, and carving.

Art Nouveau furniture

It used floral designs and curves.

Morris William

William Morris lived 1834 to 1896 and led Arts and Crafts movement.

Morris Ruskin Stickley

Morris lived 1834 to 1896. Ruskin lived 1819 to 1900. Stickley lived 1858 to 1942. They started a craft style {Arts and Crafts movement}.

Stickley G

He lived 1858 to 1942. Oak furniture design derived from English Arts and Crafts. Gustav Stickley and Roycroft Community were in upstate New York State. Craftsman Magazine [1901] featured its designs.

International furniture

German Bauhaus designers, such as Walter Gropius, Marcel Breuer, and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, used simple lines with no decoration and used chrome and glass. It allowed factory production.

Danish Modern

It used molded wood and plywood.

Art Deco furniture

It used plastic and metal in architecture, interior design, and industrial design.

Moderne furniture

Style derived from Art Deco and International. It was asymmetric or contrasted curves and straight lines, used polished surfaces and plastic, and used skyscraper designs.

2-Art-History-Sculpture-Jewelry

Lalique R

He lived 1860 to 1945 and was jewelry maker instrumental in Art Nouveau and Art Deco. He worked in glass, enamel, and stones.

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Date Modified: 2022.0225