List of visual arts techniques

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In this list, techniques of the fine arts are summarized in meaningful groups. An alphabetical collection of artistic techniques is accessed via the category: Artistic Technique .

In addition to the techniques in the narrower sense, there are also art-historical technical terms that can be assigned to them (e.g. panel painting is not a technique, but a form of representation of the picture that can be assigned to painting ).

Art historical epochs and styles , on the other hand, are broken down in terms of content in the portal: Art and sorted alphabetically in the category: Art style .

painting

materials

Tool

techniques

Technical terms

Sculpture , plastic

materials

Tools

  • Various irons for stone processing (hammers, sculptor's mallets, mallets, corrugated hammers, prellexes, pointed irons, tooth irons, hinge irons, flat irons, two-tooth irons, quarter irons, etc.), (the stone carver's tool), but also jackhammers, drilling tools, lifting tools
  • different irons for woodworking, u. a. Carving knives, but also chainsaws and other electrical devices, everything similar to a wood or. Carpentry workshop
  • hammer
  • chisel
  • Hallmark
  • Grindstone
  • Gouge
  • Burin
  • different woods for modeling for clay processing
  • spatula
  • Rasps for marble, plaster and wood
  • Polishing tools

Technical terms

Graphics and drawing

materials

Paper / carrier material

Pigment / drawing material

Tools

Printmaking

drawing

techniques

drawing

High pressure

Gravure

Flat printing

Other

Technical terms

Craft techniques

material

Tools

technology

photography

new media

Conceptual overlaps and multiple mentions

Overlapping in the allocation of the generic terms is inevitable in this list. The watercolor painting z. B. is often assigned to the drawing because of the carrier material (paper) and the often deliberately used pencil template. In the field of art studies there are in addition drawn sketches and pictorial (with the brush executed) oil sketches on cardboard or next to the ink painting and (embodied with pins) ink drawings on paper. Above all, the term mixed technique - originally understood as a variant of oil painting - has been used since the second half of the 20th century to refer to a multitude of different, composite or successive techniques (oil glazes over acrylic, overpainted photographs or collages, assemblages, etc.). A typical example of the problem of an ambiguous technical assignment is the installation (art) , which can develop both from painting and from sculpture.

Multiple answers are often possible for the syntactic sub-terms materials or tools : Spatula z. B. can be used in different ways by painters, graphic artists and sculptors, glass can be shaped by glass artists or painted by glass painters.