CPAR

Cards (45)

  • the art that springs out of the present-day events is called contemporary art.
  • A subject is any person, animal, thing, or issue that is described or represented in a work. It usually generates the question, “What is it?”
  • Abstract expressionism - It is a painting style in which the artist applies paint in a manner that expresses emotions and feelings in a spontaneous way.
  • Kinetic art - It is a sculpture that moves with the wind or with the help of a machine or electricity
  • c. Op art - It uses lines or images repeatedly to create an optical illusion.
  • Performance art - Consist of a variety of media and human body to execute an artistic theatrical expression before a live audience.
  • Environment art - Involves artistic creation and manipulation of space such as landscape or architectural design that may enclose its audience.
  • Feminist art - It tackles issues of identity, sexuality, gender roles, equality, and the ways in which the female is treated in society.
  • Minimalism - It shows a stripped-down, pre-fabricated look, free of details, and often with flat surface but expresses a specific content or statement.
  • Video art - It consists of images that are recorded through a video and viewed through television, computer, or projection screen.
  • Graffiti art - It is a drawing, inscription or sketch done hastily on a wall or other surface made to be seen by the public.
  • Postmodern art - It carries modern styles to extreme practices, often expressing an idea through a mix of materials such as found objects welded together.
  • Body art - It is an art form that uses body as the medium or main material. It can be painted or clothed and used to perform artistic act in public. Tattooing and piercing are also examples of body art.
  • Digital art - It is done with the aid of computer to create an image or design composed of bits and bytes. The image can be printed on paper, tarpaulin, or other mediums.
  • Collage - a piece of art made by sticking various materials such as photographs and pieces of paper or fabric onto a backing
  • Decalcomania - the art or process of transferring pictures and designs from specially prepared paper (as to glass)
  • Decoupage - the art of decorating surfaces by applying cutouts (as of paper) and then coating with usually several layers of finish (such as lacquer or varnish)
  • Frottage - the technique of creating a design by rubbing (as with a pencil) over an object placed underneath the paper
  • Montage - the production of a rapid succession of images in a motion picture to illustrate an association of ideas
  • Trapunto - a decorative quilted design in high relief worked through at least two (2) layers of cloth by outlining the design in running stitch and padding it from the underside
  • Digital applications - any application software that can be used by a computer, mobile device, or tablet to make and/or display a work of art
  • Juan F. Nakpil - he was known as the “Dean of Filipino Architects.”
  • Ildefonso P. Santos - “Father of Philippine Landscape Architecture.”
  • Fernando Amorsolo - the “Grand Old Man of Philippine Art”
  • Cesar Legaspi - A pioneer “Neo-Realist” of the country
  • Jose T. Joya - He pioneered abstract expressionism in the Philippines.
  • Francisco Coching - Coching was acknowledged as the “King of Komiks” and “Dean of Filipino Illustrators.”
  • Guillermo Tolentino - , he is hailed as the “Father of Philippine Arts.” His famous works include the Bonifacio Monument in Caloocan, and the UP Oblation in Diliman, Quezon City
  • Vicente Manansala - His paintings are described as “visions of reality teetering on the edge of abstraction.”
  • Carlos “Botong” Francisco - A poet from Angono, Botong single-handedly revived the forgotten art of mural and was best known for his historical pieces
  • Jose Garcia Villa - He is considered as one of the finest contemporary poets. He introduced reversed consonance rhyme scheme, including the comma poems that made full use of the punctuation mark in an innovative, poetic way
  • Levi Celerio - National Artist for Literature and Music Born in Tondo, Manila
  • Bahay Kubo or Nipa Hut - Also known as kamalig, it serves as an icon to Filipino lowland and rural culture
  • Bale or Ifugao House - It is a one-room house with an attic for storage. Located at the contour of the rice terraces, the exterior of the house looks like a pyramid
  • Ivatan House in Batanes - Most of the Ivatan houses are built with limestone walls, and cogon roofs, strong enough to withstand the typhoons and earthquakes that visit the province.
  • Torogan or Maranao House - Literally means “a place for sleeping,” torogan is a stately house for the elite members of the Maranao
  • Badjao’s Stilt Houses and Houseboats
    Badjao, the sea gypsies of the Philippines, cruise along the islands of Sulu. Their unique ecological setting and fishing economy compel the Badjao to adjust to the limited space of their lepa or floating homes
    1. Wooden Banca
    The outrigger canoe is a small wooden boat used for transport in daily activities by people near the coast. It is sometimes highly decorated
  • Vinta
    It is a traditional boat made by Sama-Bajau (Badjao) and Moros living in the Sulu Archipelago, Zamboanga peninsula, and southern Mindanao.
  • Piña fabric
    Piña weaving is the oldest industry of Aklan. Piña cloth is soft and looks delicate but it is durable and long-lasting. It is often used to our national costumes, the baro’t saya and barong.