| POPLARS | Deciduous trees, the wood of which was used for panel paintings such as the Mona Lisa (7) |
| OIL | Artwork such as the Mona Lisa (3) |
| ASSEGAI | Southern African tree, the wood of which is used for making spears (7) |
| DELACROIX | Leading exponent of Romanticism whose paintings such as The Massacre at Chios, The Death of Sardanap |
| GOYAS | Paintings such as "The Clothed Maja" |
| YEW | Dark-leaved coniferous tree the wood of which is used for cabinet making |
| TEAK | Asian tree, the wood of which is used for shipbuilding (4) |
| LANDSCAPE | Painting such as The Hay Wain (9) |
| BUTTERY | Large cellar room in a monastery which was used for storing food and drink (7) |
| COLLIER | Dutch artist noted for his trompe l'oeil and vanitas paintings such as Letter Rack and Still Life with a Volume of Wither's 'Emblemes' (7) |
| TYLOSIS | A bubble-like formation in the cavity of tracheids or vessels in the wood of trees. (7) |
| HOUSMAN | Classical scholar whose melancholic Loveliest of trees, the cherry now forms part of his celebrated cycle of 63 poems A Shropshire Lad (7) |
| TITIANS | Renaissance paintings such as Equestrian Portrait of Charles V |
| CAMPHOR | Aromatic substance obtained from the wood of an East Asian evergreen tree, used in medicines and mothballs (7) |
| ABSALOM | Self-declared king of Israel, killed at the wood of Ephraim |
| STEEN | Dutch artist noted for his depictions of everyday 17th-century life in paintings such as Rhetoricians at a Window, Beware of Luxury, The Effects of Intemperance, The Dancing Couple and The Merry Famil |
| SHEOAKS | Native Australian trees the man found planted in marshy places (3-4) |
| RETABLE | Ornamental setting for panels behind altar (7) |
| PORTRAITS | General word for paintings such as Lady with an Ermine, the Mona Lisa and Girl with a Pear Earring (9) |
| SAPELE | African tree, Entandrophragma cylindricum, the wood of which is used to make musical instruments (6) |