| A | B |
| Atmospheic/Aerial perspective suggests that object in the background are | Paler |
| When colors are more intense in atmospheic perspective the result is | Objects that appear closer |
| The more detail an object has | would make it appear to Be closer |
| If you placed an object higher on the picture plane than another object | this would make it appear to be Farther away |
| You can identify an angle of an object by using a | Protractor |
| When a person creates an illusion of depth | on a picture plane the most distant space is called the Background |
| A system that creates the illusion of depth by lines on a two dimensional surface is called | Linear perspective |
| The general surface that an artist paints draws or chalks on is called | Picture plane |
| When perspective lines recede | they appear to meet on an imaginary line called The horizon |
| When an artist is drawing in perspective | the eye-level of the artist corresponds with the Horizon line |
| When a set of receding lines meet on the horizon | what is that point called Vanishing point |
| When painting an object in the distance lighter in value and cooler in color to create depth | they are using Aerial/atmospheric perspective |
| In the foreground of a drawing | objects appear Large |
| The surface of an object that faces the light source are: | Light in Value |
| What is the use of value in a work of art commonly called: | Shading |
| Where an object blocks the light rays from reaching the other side a shadow on the surface is called: | Cast shadow |
| What is the range of value? | Black to white with all the greys in between. |
| What does the value key of a work of art refer to: | Overall lightness of darkness |
| A round flat shape | close to the horizon line becomes an Oval or (obleck) |