Saturday, November 29, 2008

Definition of Art and Types of Art

Roses
Rose is love.
It blooms like a heart,
So soft and delicate.
It needs a gentle touch.
It has red, pink, yellow, and white.
They're beautiful colors.
Rose is shaped like a heart
which is filled with love.
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Definition of Art
Art, the product of creative human activity in which materials are shaped or selected to convey an idea, emotion, or visually interesting form. The word art can refer to the visual arts, including painting, sculpture, architecture, photography, decorative arts, crafts, and other visual works that combine materials or forms. We also use the word art in a more general sense to encompass other forms of creative activity, such as dance, drama, and music or even to describe skill in almost any activity, such as “the art of bread making” or “the art of travel.” In this article art refers to the visual arts.
Types of Art

We categorize art for the sake of understanding and interpretation: It is easiest to compare and make connections between works that are similar in fundamental ways. Painting, sculpture, and architecture are the arts most commonly discussed in textbooks as “the fine arts,” and they are sometimes grouped together with music and poetry. The wording fine arts, however, suggests that these art forms in some way rank higher than other art forms generally categorized as decorative arts or crafts. There are various justifications for this distinction: The fine arts use the human figure as their subject (although this is a difficult rationale when applied to architecture); they can convey ideas or moral values; they are interpreted or discussed in theoretical writings; and they can be appreciated for their own sake, without regard to their usefulness. The idea of fine arts traces back to the French Academy of Fine Arts of the 17th century, however, and since then artists have on many occasions actively worked to tear down this division.

We might instead think of painting, sculpture, and architecture as corresponding roughly to two-dimensional art, three-dimensional art, and arts that enclose or define space. Some of the newer art forms that add motion—for example, film and video art—are sometimes referred to as time-based media. Decorative arts, such as jewelry and textiles, and crafts, such as woodworking and basketry, are defined primarily by their practical use: for example, in fashion, furniture, or household items.

A.
Painting and Two-Dimensional Art
Painting involves applying a pigment (coloring substance, often a mineral) on a surface. The pigment is suspended in a medium such as oil, water, or egg yolk, which helps the pigment adhere to the surface or gives it other qualities such as transparency or sheen. Among the most common types of painting are fresco painting, in which a water-soluble paint is applied to wet plaster; oil painting, in which pigment is suspended in slow-drying oil; tempera painting in which pigment is suspended in egg yolk; and watercolor, in which pigment is suspended in water. The surface on which the paint is applied is called the ground; some commonly used grounds include wood panels, plaster, canvas, and paper.

Other two-dimensional media include vase painting, mosaics, stained glass, illuminated, manuscripts, sand painting, ink painting, and all forms of drawing and printmaking. These other media share visual qualities with painting—for example, color arrangements, light and dark contrasts, or the illusion of space—and so are often compared to each other in art textbooks.

Drawing and printmaking are often grouped together as the graphic arts; they are generally done on paper, and line is usually used to create form in each of them. Since the 1960s, however, the term graphic art has been more often applied to art made for commercial purposes, such as advertising. Today, graphic artists use photography and digital media (images transformed or altered by computer) as often as drawing.

B.
Sculpture
Sculpture, a broad category, comprises three-dimensional objects, whether freestanding (without other structures for support) or attached to a background and called relief sculpture. Sculptors can make their objects by modeling a soft material such as clay or wax; by carving hard materials, such as stone or wood; or by assembling different sorts of materials. Works modeled in a soft material are often cast in a more durable material such as plaster or bronze. Traditionally, we have thought of sculpture as objects without movement that are isolated from the viewer on a pedestal. Since the mid-20th century, however, sculptors have created objects that move, that share space with the viewer, or that create whole environments in which people can move.

C.
Architecture
Architecture is the art of creating structures in which we can live, work, worship, and play. Architects, more than painters and sculptors, are concerned with the function of their buildings as well as with the visual appearance, structural solidity, and way in which a building fits into the landscape. Landscape architecture and garden design use plants and the land itself as materials to create outdoor spaces and interesting visual effects. Urban planners use architecture and landscape design at a larger scale, to shape the communities in which we live. A designer—someone who imagines and works with the ideas—is common to all of these fields. Although many people with specialized skills work to make the projects a reality, the person considered the artist is the one who creates the design.
D.
Photography and New Media
Photography, video art, film, and digital art all use sophisticated technology to create images, which then can usually be reproduced in multiple copies. Photography may most closely resemble painting and the graphic arts because most photographs are stable, two-dimensional objects. The photographer’s role, however, is different from the painter’s. Photographers select their subject matter, but light, rather than the artist’s hand, makes the image. Photographers make many creative decisions about film development, printing, or digital adjustments, and they can even add drawing or color by hand. However, the primary process is mechanical and chemical.

Video artists and filmmakers also use photography to record images, and they often combine visual effects with dramatic action, narrative, and music. Some video artists, such as Korean-born Nam June Paik, incorporate their work into sculptures or environments, blurring the line between new and traditional media. Digital art, another new artistic medium, uses the computer to create works of art. Digital art can use video, photography, or traditional methods of drawing. The works may be printed out and displayed like other drawings or photographs, or they may exist only in virtual form, to be viewed on computer screens.

E
Decorative Arts
Decorative arts furnish or embellish the spaces in which we live, or adorn our bodies. Among the decorative arts are textile and furniture design, metalwork, glass, ceramics (see pottery), and fashion design. The categories of decorative arts and crafts overlap a great deal, although we generally think of crafts as handmade objects of simple materials, such as clay ceramics or woven cloth. Generally decorative arts and crafts are useful and lack narrative or symbolic content. But the separation between the decorative and fine arts is not always clear. Painters can make works that avoid subject matter entirely, and architects often design the furnishings for their buildings. In many non-Western cultures, household items, such as painted Chinese screens and African carved doors, can have highly symbolic subject matter.

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Wildlife Animals

. Uncovered, naked: bare / bear
Pronunciation: \ˈber\ Function: noun Inflected Form(s): plural bears Etymology: Middle English bere, from Old English bera; akin to Old English br큰n brown — more at brownDate:before 12th century 1or plural bear : any of a family (Ursidae of the order Carnivora) of large heavy mammals of America and Eurasia that have long shaggy hair, rudimentary tails, and plantigrade feet and feed largely on fruit, plant matter, and insects as well as on flesh— bear쨌like \-ˌl카k\ adjective
Very expensive, beloved: dear / deer
Main Entry: deer Pronunciation: \ˈdir\ Function: noun Inflected Form(s): plural deer also deers Etymology: Middle English, deer, animal, from Old English dēor beast; akin to Old High German tior wild animal, Lithuanian dvasia breath, spirit Date: before 12th century 1archaic : animal: especially : a small mammal2: any of numerous slender-legged ruminant mammals (family Cervidae, the deer family) having usually brownish fur and antlers borne by the males of nearly all and by the females of a few forms— deer쨌like \-ˌl카k\ adjective

Squirrel



Second person pronoun: you / ewe
Pronunciation: \ˈy체, in rural dials also ˈyō\ Function: noun Etymology: Middle English, from Old English ēowu; akin to Old High German ouwi ewe, Latin ovis sheep, Greek ois Date: before 12th century : the female of the sheep especially when mature; also : the female of various related animals


Pulled: towed / toad
Main Entry: toad Pronunciation: \ˈtōd\ Function: noun Etymology: Middle English tode, from Old English tāde, tādige Date: before 12th century 1 : any of numerous anuran amphibians (especially family Bufonidae) that are distinguished from the related frogs by being more terrestrial in habit though returning to water to lay their eggs, by having a build that is squatter and shorter with weaker and shorter hind limbs, and by having skin that is rough, dry, and warty rather than smooth and moist




To whimper; to make crying sounds: mewl / mule

Pronunciation: \ˈmy체l\ Function: noun Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French mul, from Latin mulus Date: 13th century 1 a: a hybrid between a horse and a donkey; especially : the offspring of a male donkey and a mare [a mature female horse] b: a self-sterile plant whether hybrid or not c: a usually sterile hybrid2: a very stubborn person3: a machine for simultaneously drawing and twisting fiber into yarn or thread and winding it into cops4slang : a person who smuggles or delivers illicit substances (as drugs)





. What grows out of the scalp: hair / hare
Pronunciation: \ˈher\ Function: noun Inflected Form(s): plural hare or hares Etymology: Middle English, from Old English hara; akin to Old High German haso hare, Sanskrit śaśa, Old English hasu gray Date: before 12th century : any of various swift long-eared lagomorph mammals (family Leporidae and especially genus Lepus) that are usually solitary or sometimes live in pairs and have the young open-eyed and furred at birth 窶箱a mammal related to and resembling the rabbit.






Bread batter: dough / doe
Pronunciation: \ˈdō\ Function: noun Inflected Form(s): plural does or doe Etymology: Middle English do, from Old English dā; akin to German dialect tē doe Date: before 12th century : the adult female of various mammals (as a deer, rabbit, or kangaroo) of which the male is called buck







Moose (America) or Elk (Europe)

A chilled dessert made with whipped cream and gelatin: mousse / moose
Pronunciation: \ˈm체s\ Function: noun Inflected Form(s): plural moose Etymology: of Algonquian origin; akin to Massachusett moos moose Date: 1603 1: a ruminant mammal (Alces alces) with humped shoulders, long legs, and broadly palmated antlers that is the largest existing member of the deer family and inhabits forested areas of Canada, the northern United States, Europe, and Asia2capitalized [Loyal Order of Moose] : a member of a major benevolent and fraternal order

Section of a chain: links / lynx

Pronunciation:\ˈliŋ(k)s\ Function: noun Inflected Form(s): plural lynx or lynx쨌es Etymology: Middle English, from Latin, from Greek; akin to Old English lox lynx and probably to Greek leukos white — Date: 14th century : any of several wildcats with relatively long legs, a short stubby tail, mottled coat, and often tufted ears that are thought to comprise a distinct genus (Lynx) of the cat family or to be part of a genus (Felis) that includes the domestic cat and cougar as a: a lynx (L. lynx) of northern Europe and Asia b: bobcat c: a North American lynx (L. canadensis) distinguished from the bobcat by its larger size, longer tufted ears, and wholly black tail tip —called also Canadian lynx

A thin candle: taper / tapir
Pronunciation: \ˈtā-pər also ˈtā-ˌpir or tə-ˈpir\ Function: nounInflected Form(s): plural tapirs also tapir Etymology: Portuguese tapir, tapira, from Tupi tapiʔ챠ra Date: 1774 : any of a genus (Tapirus) of herbivorous chiefly nocturnal perissodactyl mammals of tropical America and southeastern Asia from Myanmar to Sumatra that have a heavy sparsely hairy body and the snout and upper lip prolonged into a short flexible proboscis ; it's a hoglike mammal of tropical America and the Malay Peninsula.


Having a rough voice: hoarse / horse
Pronunciation: \ˈhȯrs\ Function: noun Inflected Form(s): plural hors쨌es also horse Etymology: Middle English hors, from Old English; akin to Old High German hros horse Date: before 12th century (1): a large solid-hoofed herbivorous ungulate mammal (Equus caballus, family Equidae, the horse family) domesticated since prehistoric times and used as a beast of burden, a draft animal, or for riding (2): racehorse horses> b: a male horse; especially : stallion c: a recent or extinct animal (as a zebra, ass, or onager) of the horse family


Not old: new / gnu
Pronunciation: \ˈn체 also ˈny체\ Function: noun Inflected Form(s): plural gnu or gnus Etymology: Khoikhoi t'gnu Date: 1777 : Synonym: wildebeest Pronunciation: \ˈwil-də-ˌbēst\ Function: noun Inflected Form(s): plural wildebeests also wildebeest Etymology: Afrikaans wildebees, from wilde wild + bees ox Date: circa 1824 : either of two large African antelopes (Connochaetes gnou and C. taurinus) with a head like that of an ox, short mane, long tail, and horns in both sexes that curve downward and outward —called also gnu



To make a hole: bore / boar
Pronunciation: ˈbȯr\ Function: noun Etymology: Middle English bor, from Old English bār; akin to Old High German & Old Saxon bēr boar Date: before 12th century 1 a: an uncastrated male swine b: the male of any of several mammals (as a guinea pig)2: wild boar— boar쨌ish \-ish\ adjective

Moose

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