

- #FOCALPOINT DEFINITION IN ART REGISTRATION#
- #FOCALPOINT DEFINITION IN ART CODE#
- #FOCALPOINT DEFINITION IN ART SERIES#
The dimensions, or scale, of the various parts of an image or object, in relation to each other and to the object as a whole. Red, yellow and blue (primary colours can't be mixed from other colours).Ĭoating material, usually white, applied to a support to prepare it for painting. How deep or shallow the picture looks ? window to infinity.įrench for "open air" meaning paintings done outside directly from the subject. Atmospheric perspective blurs lines that are further away. One point, or linear, perspective is based around receding parallel lines that appear to meet at a vanishing point on the horizon or eye level. The area in a picture that is not the subject or the space around/behind objects. Small units of variously coloured materials (glass, tile, stone) set in a mortar. In drawing and painting this refers to the use of different media in the same picture. The liquid in which pigments are suspended. The actual colour of an object or surface such as green for grass (not purple). Long/short, hard/soft, jagged/smooth, continuous/broken, straight/curved etc. The direction from which the light is coming (may be single or multiple light sources).

Placed side by side or alongside each other ? often to create contrast. Some parts of the picture being more dominant and/or important than others.Ī style of painting characterized by thick, juicy colour application.
#FOCALPOINT DEFINITION IN ART SERIES#
The surface a work is made on, such as paper, canvas, board, hessian.Ĭlose series of parallel lines that indicate tone and form. Thin transparent layer of coloured paint used to tint the object/colours underneath.

The main part of the picture that draws the viewer's attention.Īn object which has, or appears to have, three dimensional volume and solidity.Ī description of, textures, colours, composition, size and style.Ī white ground material (chalk, white pigment, and glue) for preparing rigid supports for painting. The front of the picture plane (usually at the bottom of the picture). Line running through a composition that represents the artist's viewpoint. Strong colours and/or vigorous application of media. Parallel lines that crisscross each other at angles, to model and indicate tone.Ī medium that uses hot wax to bind the pigment. These may include balance/imbalance, repetition/singularity, movement/static, vertical/horizontal, simple/complex, symmetry/asymmetry, contrast/similarity, and/or harmony/discord. The arrangement of elements in the painting or drawing. May be natural, high key, monochrome, cold, warm, psychedelic, etc. Using materials other than the traditional paint, such as cut paper, wood, sand, and so on. Smoothing edges of colours together so that they have a smooth gradation where they meet.Ĭlosely woven cloth used as a support for paintings. Where an artist uses objects or images taken from another artist, culture or context. May include but is not limited to the following Offshore use of qualifications and programmes.
#FOCALPOINT DEFINITION IN ART CODE#
#FOCALPOINT DEFINITION IN ART REGISTRATION#
Approval, accreditation and registration.NZQA's quality assurance system for tertiary education organisations.Te Hono o Te Kahurangi quality assurance.Mātauranga Māori qualifications and assessment standards.Field Māori programme development support.Field Māori Assessment Support Materials.Developing qualifications at Levels 1-6 on the NZQF.
