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Artist of the month - Alok Roy
Glossary


 Glossary of Auction Terms
 
Absentee Bid
Bidding by ECA on behalf of a client who is unable to attend the Auction in Accordance to the instructions of the client.
 
Absentee Bidder
The client on whose behalf ECA is making the bid.
 
Bidder
The registered client making a bid.
 
Bid
An irrevocable offer made by a registered client to ECA to purchase a Lot.
 
Bidding
Making a bid on the Property.
 
Buyer's Premium
The premium over the Hammer price the successful bidder pays to the Auction House.
 
Catalogue
The book printed by ECA giving photographs with all relevant details pf each Property and terms and conditions applicable to the sale.
 
Client
A bidder who registers for participating in the Auction.
 
Consigner
The person on whose behalf ECA is Auctioning the Property.
 
Credit Limit
The credit limit of a client approved in the registration by ECA.
 
ECA
Emami Chisel Art Pvt. Ltd.
 
Estimates
The price range listed against each Property that the works may fetch at the Auction.
 
Hammer Price
The last and successful recorded price which shall be the final bid.
 
Lot
A number of a Property for sale in the catalogue.
 
Property
The works of art that is available for Auction.
 
Provenance
The history of the ownership of the Property.

Reserved Price
The confidential minimum price for a Property agreed upon between the consigner and ECA.
 
Successful Bidder
The last bidder making the hammer Price.
 
Taxes
All duties and taxes levied as per applicable by law.
 
 
 
 

 Glossary of Art Terms  

 
Abstract Art
Art which does not represent reality as we see it. Rather, it takes its inspiration from the real world but uses patterns for expression. For the onlooker, these patterns represent independent relationships with no reference to the original source of inspiration.

Acrylic paint
This paint uses a synthetic medium rather than a natural one. Artists commonly use this as a substitute for oil since it dries quickly.
 
Archival Reproduction
Comprise of digitally and photographically reproduced art prints. Each image is printed with archival inks on archival photo paper, art paper, or canvas.
 
Archival Inks
Are those inks that are light fast, water resistant, and are resin coated, thus giving a high quality result and longer life to the work when printed.
 
Artist's Profile
A brief synopsis of the artist's biography and some of his works.
 
Artist's Proof
This may be a precursor of a series being done by the artist or only one from a series of experiments.
 
Etching
Etching involves the use of an acid for creating a design on a metal plate. The way it works is that with the help of a needle the design is scratched through a coating which resists acid. The metal beneath is exposed in these scratched parts. Such a plate is then immersed in an acid bath. The acid affects only these scratched parts creating the required designs. The depth of the lines is directly proportional to the duration of time for which the plate remains immersed in the acid. If a certain part of the design needs to be emphasized, the process can be repeated for those parts. The rest of the parts which are to be protected from the acid are coated with varnish.

This term also represents the designs created by employing the method stated above.
 
Figurative art/ Painting
An art form which is inspired by the visible world. It takes visible objects as its base and then distorts or changes them to convey its message. The human from is the most common base for these paintings.
 
Gallery
    a. A place reserved for the display of paintings and other works of art.
    b. A narrow passage attached to a large room with openings into it.
    c. An exterior corridor, especially in churches and secular buildings which communicates with the
        open air through an arcade. 
 
Glass
A brittle , hard and non-crystalline substance. It is made by fusing silica and an alkali such as potash or soda.
 
Gouache
A type of painting using opaque watercolors. The filler used in this case is most often opaque white which gives a chalky look to the painting. The pigments are bound by gum.
 
Ground
The surface that has been especially prepared for the purpose of painting. The support on which a painting is made such as canvas or paper.
 
Landscape format/ Painting
This refers to the physical size of the painting where the width is greater than the height. It owes its name to the various representations of landscape which typically have such proportions.
 
Lithograph
A greasy material is used to make a drawing on a zinc plate or limestone block. The plate is then wet and a greasy ink is applied to it. The ink sticks only to the lines that have been drawn. A moist paper is applied to the plate and a special press is used to rub the paper all over to make a print or a lithograph.

Medium
During painting, the pigment that is being used to get the required color has to be suspended in some liquid. This liquid is called the medium. For example, an oil painting would mean when linseed oil is used as the medium Medium also refers to the substance used by an artist for giving expression to his art. Like, a sculptor uses stone as his medium of expression.
 
Mixed media
    a. A 20th century art form in which different types of physical materials are combined together
    b. An art which represents a combination of various media into one production akin to modern day 
        multimedia.
 
Oil Paint
This represents a class of paints in which drying oils are used for binding together the pigments.
 
Palette
    a. A flat tray on which an artist spreads out and mixes his colors while painting.
    b. This term has also come to be used as an adjective for describing a particular artist's choice of 
        colors.
 
Pastel
It comes in a stick form and consists of dry pigment that is bound with gum.
 
Pencil
    a. It used to mean an artist's brush.
    b. In the present day context, it represents a drawing or writing instrument made by encasing a stick
        of graphite in wood or metal.
 
Plaster of Paris
A kind of plaster that is popularly used for carving and making casts. It is made up of dehydrated gypsum and is mixed with water.
 
Portfolio
A collection of works.
 
Portrait formats/ Painting
This refers to the physical size of the painting where the height is greater than the width. The upper torso of the human form is the most common subject for these paintings.
 
Pottery
It represents the various articles made of fired clay.
 
Print
This represents an image of which multiple copies could be made available. The image is typically taken from a silk screen, a woodblock, a lithograph, an etching or from the negative of a photograph.
 
Profile
    a. The side-wise appearance of a person's face
    b. The outline of a building or an object.
 
Property
The works of art that is available for Auction.
 
Provenance
The history of the ownership of the Property.

Realism
    a. Art which aims at producing an exact replication of reality
    b. It also represents a particular phase of art in 19th century France. During this phase, the French 
        artists like Courbet chose to draw inspiration from what they saw and experienced in their
        immediate surroundings and expressed them as it is without romanticizing their experience. The 
        impact of photography was responsible for the advent of this art form.
 
Sculpture
Any three-dimensional work of art.

Seascape/ Marine Painting
A type of painting which represents the sea and all that goes with it, ships included. Typical representations include depiction of a battle at sea or some such historical event. This form became a genre by itself in Holland during the 17th century.
 
Serigraphy
A method of making print that has its base in stenciling. A screen made of silk is used for this purpose. The ink or paint that is to be used is brushed through this screen to obtain the design.
 

 


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