Yes Tempera is a painting term
Yes
Its true. It is because the word "tempera" means, a process of painting in which an albuminous. Such as an egg yolk.
yes, it was mainly used in the renaissance time.
Zoltan L. Sepeshy has written: 'Tempera painting' -- subject(s): Tempera painting
Daniel Varney Thompson has written: 'The materials and techniques of medieval painting' -- subject(s): Medieval Painting, Painting, Painting, Medieval, Pigments, Technique 'The practice of tempera painting' -- subject(s): Tempera painting
egg
Acrylics and temperas are water-soluble paints.
tempera paint
Richard Baehr has written: 'Architectural rendering in tempera' -- subject(s): Architectural rendering, Tempera painting
secco
I suppose if you were doing a faux fresco you could use tempera paint, but this wouldn't be done using plaster but on paper in the same style. On plaster I don't think the tempera would work.
Gino Piva has written: 'Tecnica pittorica' -- subject(s): Technique, Tempera painting, Watercolor painting
He was famous for his tempera painting of Christina's World. Which depicted his neighbor laying on her lawn in front of her house.