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Surrealism Art Test Study Guide
THEORY OF COLOUR Primary Colours
• Red
• Yellow
• Blue
Tip to Remember: Roses are Red, Violets are Blue, what makes them grow? Yellow
Secondary Colours
• Red + Yellow = Orange
• Blue + Red = Violet
• Yellow + Blue = Green
Tertiary Colours
• Yellow + Green = Yellow-Green
• Blue + Green = Blue-Green
• Yellow + Orange = Yellow-Orange
• Red + Orange = Red-Orange
• Blue + Violet = Blue-Violet
• Red + Violet = Red-Violet
Tip to Remember: Primary colour name is first followed by the secondary colour
Complementary Colour
• Red ~ Green
• Violet ~ Yellow
• Blue ~ Orange
Tip to Remember: Relate the pairs!
o Red ~ Green = Christmas o Violet ~ Yellow = Easter o Blue ~ Orange = Sun and Sky
Tint, Tone and Shade
• Tint = Colour + White
• Tone = Colour + Grey
• Shade = Colour + Black
• Monochromatic = Using a tint, tone or shade of a colour o Ex. OOOOOO

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Colour Spectrum
• Warm Colours = Reds, Oranges and Yellows
• Cool Colours = Blues, Greens and Purples
Tip to Remember: Warm Colours = Fire, Cool Colours =Water
Colour Qualities
• Colour = Is defined by having 3 qualities – Hue, Value and Saturation o Hue = Name for a colour you cannot make
▪ Ex. Red, Yellow, Blue, Cyan, Magenta ▪ All hues are colours but not all colours are hues
o Value = The darkness or lightness of a colour ▪ Ex. OOOOOOOOO ▪ Value 1 = Black ▪ Value 10 = White
o Saturation = How bright or dull a colour is (How much pigment there is in a colour) ▪ Ex. OO,OO,OO ▪ High Saturation = Brighter ▪ Low Saturation = Duller
Colours that Cannot be Made
• Magenta
• Cyan Blue
• White
• Red
• Yellow
• Blue
Mixing Colours
• Red + Brown = Crimson
• Orange + Brown = Sienna Brown
• Red + Yellow + Brown = Ochre Yellow
• Red + White = Pink or Magenta + White = Pink
• Blue + Brown = Black
• Red + Yellow + Blue = Brown
THEORY OF LIGHT
Peak Highlight
Value: 10
Form Shadow
Value: 9-7
Core
Shadow
Value: 4-1
Reflective Light
Value: 7
Cast Shadow
Value: 1

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ART SUPPLIES Paintbrushes
Flat Paintbrush Fan Paintbrush Liner Paintbrush Flat-Fan Paintbrush
Other Supplies
Artistic Knives Paint Thinner Linseed Oil
Palette Canvas
Easel

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Drawing Supplies
Soft Eraser Blending Stump Eraser
• Sketching Pencil = HB
• Shading Pencil = 9B
• Darkest Pencil = 9B
• Lightest Pencil = 6H
ELEMENTS OF ART 1. Line/Direction A path or point moving through space
a. This refers to the direction of an object, line or path that moves throughout the painting.
EX.
2. Shape/Form Shape has depth, length, width and resides in space
a. This means that everything is made up from shapes and with their help we get the correct
proportions.
EX.

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3. Colour Hue, value and saturation
a. These are the characteristics of a colour
i. Hue = Name for a colour you cannot make ii. Saturation = How bright or dull a colour is.
EX.
4. Value Value refers to the relative lightness and darkness of a colour
a. Value = The darkness or lightness of a colour i. Ex. OOOOOOOOO
ii. Value 1 = Black iii. Value 10 = White
EX.
Colour: Blue-Green
High Saturation
Colour: Pink
High Saturation
Hue: Cyan Blue
Low Saturation
White is the
absence of colour
Value: 10
Green Value Scale
Value: 1

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5. Texture Texture refers to the tactile quality of a surface a. There are both Oil and Acrylic textures
i. Oil Textures 1. Knife Techniques 2. Fan Paintbrush Techniques 3. Wax with Oil
ii. Acrylic Textures 1. Mixed Media Techniques (Sawdust, Gesso, Modelling Paste)
iii. Implied Techniques 1. Techniques created through blending in various ways.
EX. 6. Perspective Representing a 3D object on a 2D surface
a. In order to get 3D objects on a 2D surface we need to use shapes and VP
EX.
7. Space The area in which art is organised
a. Positive Space The area closest to you/ Foreground
b. Negative Space The area furthest from you/ Background
Oil Textures
Fan Paintbrush
Techniques Implied Texture
Blending in
circles for the
sky
Oil Texture
Knife
Techniques
Vanishing Point
Negative Space
Positive Space
Positive Space

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MIXED MEDIA TECHNIQUES • Gesso (Acrylic Texture)
o A primer with a low density and high viscosity
• Modelling Paste (Acrylic Texture)
o A texturing paste with a high density and low viscosity
• Media
o Base of all acrylic colours
o Used in most mixed media techniques
o Low density and very high viscosity
o Transparent, can be glossy or matte
• Sawdust (Acrylic Texture)
o Sawdust + Media
• Glitter (Acrylic Texture)
o Glitter + Media
• Tissue Paper/ News Paper (Acrylic Texture)
o Tissue Paper / News Paper + Media
• Cheese Cloth (Acrylic Texture)
o Cheese Cloth + Media
• Sand (Acrylic Texture)
o Sand + Media
• Aluminium Foil (Watercolour Texture)
o Aluminium + Light tint of water colour
• Saran Wrap Lift (Watercolour + Acrylic Techniques)
o A watered down acrylic or watercolour with saran wrap placed on top
until dry or semi-dry. Saran Wrap is the removed creating a grouping flat
texture.
• Stencilling + Stamping (Acrylic + Watercolour Texture)
o Stencilling Using an object as a stencil or tracer
o Stamping Using an object to imprint or transfer the shape of image
• Alcohol with Acrylic (Acrylic + Watercolour Texture)
o Painting an acrylic base, you add some dots of alcohol which creates a
separation in the paint
• Wax with Oil (Oil Texture)
o Mix wax and oil paint together to make a chunkier oil texture.

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ART MOVEMENTS
• Realism
o Realism was an artistic movement that began in France in the 1850s.
This movement is said to mimic that of a picture as it is the real and
accurate portrayal of a person or scenery.
Mona Lisa – Leonardo Da Vinci American Gothic – Grant Wood The Gleaners – Jean-François Millet
• Impressionism o A style or movement of painting originating in France in the 1860s. This
movement is characterized with depicting the feeling or experience rather
than to achieve an accurate depiction. This is done by capturing the effects
of light through small, obvious brushstrokes.
Bridge over a Pond of Lilies – Claude Monet The Ballet Class – Edgar Degas

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• Post-Impressionism o Post-Impressionism is a movement that began in the early 1900’s. Although
they took inspiration from impressionism they rejected its limitations. They
continued using real-life subject matter, with vivid colours and thick paint.
However, they added other ideas like using geometric forms that would
distort objects for its effect.
Starry Night – Vincent Van Gogh At the Moulin Rouge - Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
• Expressionism o Expressionism is an artistic movement from the early 1910’s. It is an
artistic style in which the artist attempts to show not reality but rather
the personal emotions and responses that objects and events make
them feel. This is accomplished through distortion, exaggeration, and
fantasy and through the vivid, violent, or dynamic application of paint.
The Scream – Edvard Munch Lady in a Green Jacket – August Macke

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• Cubism o Cubism is a style of art which aims to show all of the possible viewpoints
of a person or an object all at once. It is called Cubism because the items
represented in the artworks look like they are made out of cubes and
other geometrical shapes.
Houses at La Estaque – Georges Braque The Mandolin – Pablo Picasso
• Surrealism o Surrealism is a movement that began in the early 1920’s. This movement
is a realistic portrayal of an image or scenery with a twist that is
unnatural or not possible in real life.
Melting Clocks – Salvador Dali The Son of Man – Rene Magritte

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• Pop Art o Pop art began in the 1950’s. This was the first movement to brings things
from popular art such as comic books, celebrities, or advertisements.
These paintings often used ben-day dots and were painted with an
element of irony.
M-Maybe – Roy Lichtenstein Shot Marilyn’s by Andy Warhol
• Abstract o Abstract is a movement of art that emerged in the 1940’s. This is a type
of art that does not attempt to represent external reality, but seeks to
achieve its effect using shapes, forms, colours, and textures.
Composition in Red, Blue and Yellow – Piet Mondrain Abstract – Mirza Zupljanin
COLOUR COMBINATIONS
• Analogous o Analogous colour schemes use colours that are next to each
other on the colour wheel. They usually match well and create
comfortable designs.

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• Complimentary o Colours that are opposite each other on the colour wheel
are complementary colours. The high contrast of
complementary colours creates a vibrant
• Monochromatic o Using the Tint, Tone, Shade of a
single Hue.
• Triad o A triadic colour scheme uses colours that are evenly spaced
around the colour wheel. Triadic colour harmonies tend to be
quite vibrant, even if you use pale or unsaturated versions of
your hues.
• Split-Complementary
o The split-complementary colour scheme is a variation of the
complementary colour scheme. In addition to the base colour,
it uses the two colours that are beside its complement. This
colour scheme has the same strong visual contrast as the
complementary colour scheme but has less tension.
• Tetrad o The rectangle or tetradic colour scheme uses four colours
arranged into two complementary pairs.