Brushwork is the visible technique and style of applying paint with a brush, ranging from smooth, invisible blending to loose, expressive, gestural marks; in AP Art History it serves as formal evidence for how an artist's process shapes a work's meaning (Topic 10.1, MPT-1.A).
Brushwork is how the paint got onto the surface, and whether you can see it happening. Smooth, blended brushwork hides the artist's hand and makes a painting look polished, almost photographic. Loose, gestural brushwork does the opposite. It leaves drips, strokes, and texture that record the artist's movement and energy, so the process itself becomes part of the meaning.
In the AP Art History CED, brushwork lives under Topic 10.1 (Materials, Processes, and Techniques in Global Contemporary Art) because contemporary artists deliberately use it to challenge old hierarchies of skill and style (MPT-1.A.35). When Basquiat slashes acrylic and oilstick across Horn Players, the raw marks aren't sloppiness. They're a choice that rejects academic polish and channels graffiti, jazz improvisation, and street culture. Brushwork is one of the clearest ways an artist's technique directly affects what the art communicates.
Brushwork supports learning objective 10.1.A, which asks you to explain how materials, processes, and techniques affect art and art making. The essential knowledge behind it (MPT-1.A.35) says contemporary art challenges hierarchies of materials, training, and style. Visible, untrained-looking, or aggressively expressive brushwork is exactly how painters like Basquiat and Julie Mehretu stage that challenge. But brushwork isn't trapped in Unit 10. It's a universal formal-analysis tool you can deploy on any painting in the 250, from Renaissance panels to Abstract Expressionist canvases. When an essay asks you to describe a work and connect form to meaning, brushwork is one of the most concrete pieces of visual evidence you can name.
Keep studying AP® Art History Unit 10
Abstract Expressionism (Unit 4)
Abstract Expressionists made brushwork the whole point. The gesture itself, the drip, the slash, carried the meaning. Knowing this tradition lets you explain what contemporary artists are reacting to. A practice question on Basquiat's Horn Players asks exactly this, which element breaks from Abstract Expressionist tradition. His answer is combining expressive marks with words, faces, and pop-culture references, things AbEx purists banned.
Jean-Michel Basquiat (Unit 10)
Basquiat is the exam's go-to example of brushwork as rebellion. His acrylic-and-oilstick technique in Horn Players looks fast, raw, and graffiti-trained rather than academy-trained, which directly illustrates MPT-1.A.35's point that hierarchies of artistic training and style get challenged in contemporary art.
color palette (Units 1-10)
Brushwork and color palette are the two formal-analysis terms you'll reach for most often when describing any painting. Palette tells you what colors the artist chose; brushwork tells you how the paint was handled. Pairing them turns a vague description into real visual evidence.
contour lines (Units 1-10)
Contour lines define edges and shapes; brushwork describes the paint's surface and application. An artist can have crisp contour lines with smooth brushwork (a Renaissance portrait) or no clear contours at all with wild brushwork (a Pollock). Keeping these separate sharpens your formal vocabulary.
Brushwork shows up mainly as evidence you generate, not as a term you define. Long essay questions regularly hand you a painting (or ask you to choose one) and require you to describe its visual characteristics before connecting them to meaning. The 2022 LEQ on self-portraits and the 2025 LEQ on paintings of human activity in landscapes are exactly this format, and describing brushwork (smooth and idealizing? loose and emotional?) is the kind of specific visual evidence that earns points. In multiple choice, technique questions are common, like identifying what process defines a work such as Mehretu's Stadia II, where layered, gestural mark-making is the signature. The move you must make every time is the same. Don't just say the brushwork is expressive. Say what that expressiveness does for the work's meaning or context.
Both are formal-analysis terms, but they describe different things. Contour lines are the drawn or implied outlines that define a figure's edges and shape. Brushwork is the texture and character of the paint application itself. A painting can have strong contours and invisible brushwork, or visible, churning brushwork with no clear contours anywhere. If you're talking about edges and outlines, say contour lines. If you're talking about the surface and how the paint was handled, say brushwork.
Brushwork is the visible style of paint application, ranging from smooth and blended (the artist's hand disappears) to loose and gestural (the artist's hand is the point).
In Topic 10.1, expressive or untrained-looking brushwork illustrates MPT-1.A.35, the idea that contemporary art challenges traditional hierarchies of skill, training, and style.
Basquiat's Horn Players uses raw acrylic-and-oilstick brushwork, but his break from Abstract Expressionism is combining those gestural marks with words and recognizable imagery.
Brushwork is universal formal-analysis evidence; you can describe it for any painting on the LEQ, from a Renaissance self-portrait to a contemporary canvas.
On essays, never stop at describing brushwork. Always connect it to meaning, like how loose marks convey emotion, speed, improvisation, or rejection of academic polish.
Brushwork is the visible technique and style of applying paint with a brush, from smooth and blended to varied and expressive. On the AP exam it functions as formal evidence for how an artist's process affects a work's meaning, especially in Topic 10.1 on contemporary materials and techniques.
No. The CED places it in Topic 10.1 because contemporary artists use it to challenge style hierarchies, but brushwork is a formal-analysis term you can apply to any painting in the 250 image set, including Unit 4 works and earlier.
Brushwork describes the paint's surface and how it was applied; contour lines describe the outlines defining a figure's edges. A painting can have sharp contours with invisible brushwork, or expressive brushwork with no clear contours at all.
In Horn Players (acrylic and oilstick on three panels), Basquiat keeps the gestural, energetic mark-making of Abstract Expressionism but adds words, faces, and references to jazz musicians like Charlie Parker. AbEx avoided recognizable imagery, so mixing expressive marks with text and figures is the break.
No, and assuming that costs you points. Visible, raw brushwork in contemporary art is a deliberate choice that questions who counts as trained and what counts as good painting, which is exactly the point of essential knowledge MPT-1.A.35.
Connect this key term to the AP exam workflow: review the course, practice questions, and check related study tools.
Review units, study guides, and course resources.
Check this vocabulary in multiple-choice context.
Apply key concepts in written AP responses.
Estimate the exam score you are working toward.
Review the highest-yield facts before practice.
Put the full course together before test day.