Prompt questions may be generic or specially designed for a specific art work.
They may include but are not limited to the following:
Composition
- What is the main point of focus? Which part of the work draws your eye the most?
- Is it complex or simple?
- Asymmetrical or symmetrical?
- How is it arranged? Vertical/horizontal, vertical/diagonal, or does it use a grid?
- Is it balanced? Has the artist used the Golden Section? Are there mathematical relationships?
Colour
- Describe the colours - primary, monochrome, hot, cold, contrasting, realistic?
- What colours are dominant?
- Do the colours create an emotional response?
- Do the colours flatten the picture space, or do they establish depth?
- Could there be a cultural or symbolic reason for the choice of colours?
On this page
Paint application
- How has the paint been applied? Smooth/rough, thin/thick, gestural/mechanical?
- Is there evidence of the layer of media?
- What techniques are used - glazing, blending, scumbling?
- What media is used - oil, acrylic, enamel, watercolour, mixed?
- How has the paint been applied - brush, stick, roller, rags, palette knife?
- Has the artist used the application of media to reinforce the meaning of the artwork? How?
Tone
- Describe the tonal values of the work - light, dark, contrasting?
- Is there a full range of tone?
- Is tone use to guide the viewer to any parts of the painting?
- Is tone used to create an emotional effect - dark, dramatic, gentle, peaceful, mysterious?
- Describe the quality of light - shadow, soft, dark, non-existent, dramatic, atmospheric, musty, diffused, dull, chiaroscuro, contrasting, strong, harsh, or subtle.
- Where is the light coming from? Is it consistent? Is it a single light source? What effect does this have?
Form
- Describe figures and forms.
- Are the forms/objects naturalistic, distorted, simplified, exaggerated, proportional, graceful, monumental, formal dramatic, idealised?
- Do the forms look solid and show volume, or are they flattened? How is this achieved?
- Are the forms geometric, organic, mechanical, simple, complex, and/or imaginary?
- Has perspective, and/or foreshortening been used to create realistic forms
- Do the forms have solidity, mass, transparency? How is this created?
- Are the forms static or do they convey movement? How?
- Do the forms convey an emotional content - anger, sadness, excitement, calm etc?
Shape
- What is the relationship between the object (positive shapes) and surrounding spaces (negative shapes)?
- How do the shapes relate to the edge of the picture and the shape of the picture plane?
- Do the shapes create repetition, rhythm, movement, patterns etc? How is this created?
- What natures are the shapes - geometric, organic, simple, complex, fragile, solid, etc?
- Do the shapes have symbolic connotations - cross, circle, dove etc?
Space
- Is the picture space deep or shallow? How has this been created?
- Are perspective devices used - linear perspective, aerial perspective, overlapping, placement?
- Is there a vanishing point? Where is it placed? Why is it placed there?
- What effect does the depth of the picture have on the viewers' response?
Line
- Describe the quality of line (the edges of shapes and forms) in this work - long/short, hard/soft, jagged/smooth, continuous/broken, straight/curved etc.
- What effect does the use of line create - diagonals/curves for movement, horizontals for calm, opposing lines for tension/violence?
- What emotional effect do the lines create? Vigorous and animated or controlled and technical?
- Are the lines used to guide the viewer to particular parts of the picture?
Surface
- How are the surfaces of objects treated - generalised or very specific detail
- How naturalistic are the surface textures like fur, glass, stone, wood? How have these effects been created?
- Has attention been given to creating patterns and/or textures? How? Why?
- Is detail used to guide the viewer (more detail on the important parts of the picture)?
- Are the textures differentiated (to separate parts of the picture) or mostly the same (to unify the picture)?
Pictoral proposition
- What is the intention of the artist? What are they trying to communicate?
- Why have they chosen a particular theme, subject?
- Why have the chosen to include particular objects? What do these objects mean?
- Is there a social message they artist is trying to communicate? What?
A wider context
- How has this work been affected by the artist's personal background, beliefs, experience?
- Has the age, gender, ethnicity, or religious beliefs of the artist influenced this work?
- How has the artist been influenced by social, cultural, historical, political or environmental events?
- How does this work relate to other work by the same artist? What is similar and/or different?
- How does this work relate to the work of other artists? What is similar and/or different?
- Where/who did this artist get their ideas from?
- Has this work influenced the work of later artists? Who and how?
Symbolism
- What do the objects in this picture mean?
- Where do the objects come from (appropriated)? Which culture, time period, location?
- Are the symbols personal, culturally specific or universal?
- What are the relationships between symbols - clashing, harmonious, sympathetic, contrasting?
Personal response
- How do you respond to this picture? Do you like it? How does it make you feel?
- What do other people you know think about this picture?
- Does society think this is an important art work? How do you know this?
- What aspects of this work would you like to use in your own work?