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| Sculptural relief where the surface is slightly raised and/or carved away. |
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| Method of working in sculpture where parts are added to an armature to create a complete work of art. |
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| Method of working in sculpture where parts are taken away from the medium to create a complete work of art. |
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| Process pottery goes through when heated to extremely high temperatures in a kiln. |
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| Method use to join two pieces of clay together. First clay is scored (hatched with a fork), then slip (very wet clay) is added to glue the pieces together. |
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| A clay work that has yet to be fired. |
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| A term used to describe clay that is still plastic but not dry or overly wet. |
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| Completely dried out clay, no moisture present at all. |
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| Pottery that has gone through the firing process once and is ready to be painted or glazed. |
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| clay preparation, where a lump of clay is rolled in upon itself, while stretching and pulling to get out the air bubbles. |
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| putting the clay into a workable, smooth state, by kneading or by repeatedly cutting and slamming together lumps of moist clay. |
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| An abstract sculpture that has movable parts similar to a mobile, but that is attached to a solid, unmovable base rather than suspended. |
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| Sculpture that is capable of movement. |
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| a three-dimensional representation usually of a person, animal, or mythical being that is produced by sculpturing, modeling, or casting |
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| A person who arranges words and pictures on a page/screen in a manner that is appealing and consistent with the publication’s image. |
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| Artist who creates pottery for a living. |
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| The analogous color scheme uses colors that are adjacent (next) to each other on the color wheel. |
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| split-complementary scheme |
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| The split complementary scheme is a variation of the standard complementary scheme. It uses a color and the two colors adjacent to its complement. |
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| The triadic color scheme uses three colors equally spaced around the color wheel. |
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| Form refers to an element of art that is three-dimensional (height, width, and depth) and encloses volume. |
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| An element of art, it is an enclosed space defined and determined by other art elements such as line, color, value, and texture. |
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| An element of art that refers to the distance or area between, around, above, below, or within things. It can be described as two-dimensional or three-dimensional; as flat, shallow, or deep; as open or closed; as positive or negative; and as actual, ambiguous, or illusory. |
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| A large difference between two things; for example, hot and cold, green and red, light and shadow. |
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