• Barajar
    Activar
    Desactivar
  • Alphabetizar
    Activar
    Desactivar
  • Frente Primero
    Activar
    Desactivar
  • Ambos lados
    Activar
    Desactivar
  • Leer
    Activar
    Desactivar
Leyendo...
Frente

Cómo estudiar sus tarjetas

Teclas de Derecha/Izquierda: Navegar entre tarjetas.tecla derechatecla izquierda

Teclas Arriba/Abajo: Colvea la carta entre frente y dorso.tecla abajotecla arriba

Tecla H: Muestra pista (3er lado).tecla h

Tecla N: Lea el texto en voz.tecla n

image

Boton play

image

Boton play

image

Progreso

1/10

Click para voltear

10 Cartas en este set

  • Frente
  • Atrás
Baroque
Is an artistic style that arose in the 17th century characterised by novelty, movement, contrasts, a taste for theatrical, as well as a desire to provoke emotional responses.
Counter Reformation
The period of Catholic resurgence that was initiated in response to the Protestant Reformation.
Reformation
A movement within Western Christianity in 16th-century Europe that posed a religious and political challenge to the Roman Catholic Church and papal authority in particular.
Council of Trent
It was the 19th ecumenical council of the Catholic Church.
Vanitas
A type of still-life painting that flourished in the Netherlands from about 1620 to 1650, conveying a religious message and characterized by objects symbolic of mortality and the meaninglessness of worldly pleasures.
Tenebrism
A style of painting using profoundly pronounced chiaroscuro, where there are violent contrasts of light and dark, and where darkness becomes a dominating feature of the image.
Chiaroscuro
A particular technique for making a woodcut print in which effects of light and shade are produced by printing each tone from a different wood block.
Obelisk
Is an upright 4-sided usually monolithic pillar that gradually tapers as it rises and terminates in a pyramid.
Salomonic column
A helical column, characterized by a spiraling twisting shaft like a corkscrew
Transparente
A Baroque altarpiece in the ambulatory of the Cathedral of Toledo. Its name refers to the unique illumination provided by a large skylight cut very high up into the thick wall across the ambulatory, and another hole cut into the back of the altarpiece itself to allow shafts of sunlight to strike the tabernacle.