GLOSSARY

Acuity
See Visual acuity.
Additive mixture
Color seen as a result of light alone.
Additive primaries
The three wavelengths of light that must be present to yield white light: red, green, and blue.
Admixture
An artist's technique in which a single color is mixed into all (or most) colors in a composition.
Aerial perspective
See Atmospheric perspective.
Afterimage
A “ghost” image that follows stimulation of the eye by a single color when its complement is not present in the field of vision.
Analogous colors
Colors adjacent on a color spectrum, sometimes defined as hues limited to the range between a primary and secondary. A group of colors including any two primaries but never the third.
Aniline dyes
A family of alcohol- and coal tar–based dyes discovered in the 1830s; capable of producing brilliant colors but not as colorfast as the azo dyes that succeeded them.
Applied art
Artwork created to enhance a functional object.
Artists' media
A family of subtractive media that selectively absorb and reflect light; artists' media are composed of a liquid, paste, viscous, solid, or other base into which pigments or dyes have been introduced to form a transferable colorant, such as paint, dye, crayon or chalk.
Artists' primaries
The simplest colors of subtractive media, from which all other colors are derived: red, yellow, and blue.
Artists' spectrum
The full range of visible hues as organized by Goethe: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet; expandable to include ...

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