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The Impressionist Palette

This new intensive study of colour brought about a new pal­ette and a new technique. For centuries all painting had been based on three primary colours: red, blue and yellow, but sci­ence now taught the painters that though these might be prima­ry colours in pigment, they were not primary colours in light. The spectroscope and the new science of spectrum-analysis made them familiar with the fact that white light is composed of all the colours of the rainbow, which is the spectrum of sunlight. They learnt that the primary colours of light were green, orange-red, blue-violet, and that yellow — though a primary in paint was a secondary in light, because a yellow light can be produced by blending a green light with an orange-red light. On the other hand green, a secondary in paint because it can be produced by mixing yellow with blue pigment, is a primary in light. These discoveries revolutionised their ideas about colour, and the Im­pressionist painters concluded they could only hope to paint the true colour of sunlight by employing pigments which match­ed the colours of which sunlight was composed, that is to say, the tints of the rainbow. They discarded black altogether, for, modified by atmosphere arid light, they held that a true black did not exist in nature, the darkest colour was indigo, dark green, or a deep violet. They would not use a brown, but set their pal­ette with indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange, red, and violet, the nearest colours they could obtain to the seven of the solar spectrum.

 

The Impressionist Technique

Further, they used these colours with as little mixing as possible. Every amateur in water-colour knows that the more he mixes his paints, the more they lose in brilliancy. The same is true of oil paints. By being juxtaposed rather than blended, the colours achieved a scintillating fresh range of tones — the high-keyed radiance of daylight rather than the calculated chiaroscuro of the studio. And the transmission of light from the canvas is greatly increased. The Impressionists refrained, therefore, as much as possible from mixing colours on their palettes, and ap­plied them pure in minute touches to the canvas. If they wanted to render secondary or tertiary colours, instead of mixing two or three pigments on the palette, they would secure the desired ef­fect by juxtaposed touches of pure colours which, at a certain dis­tance, fused in the eye of the beholder and produced the effect of the tint desired. This device is known as optical mixture, because the mixing is done in the spectator's eye. Thus, whereas red and green pigment mixed on a palette will give a dull grey, the Im­pressionists produced a brilliant luminous grey by speckling a sky; say, with little points of yellow and mauve which at a dis­tance gave the effect of a pearly grey. Similarly the effect of a brilliant brown was given by the juxtaposition of a series of min­ute touches of green, red, and yellow; and this association of minute touches of three pure colours set up a quivering vibra­tion which had greater luminosity than any streak of brown pig­ment. It was an endeavour to use paints as if they were coloured light.



Various names have been given to this technique. It has been called Divisionism, because by it the tones of secondary and ter­tiary colours were divided into their constituent elements. It has been called Pointillism, because the colour was applied to the canvas in points instead of in sweeping brush strokes. It has been called Luminism, because the aim of the process is prima­rily to express the colour of light with all its sparkle and vibra­tion. This last is the best name of all, because it serves to empha­sise the new outlook of the new painters. The tendency before the Impressionists was to regard colour from the standpoint of black and white. Thus, in considering a grey, it would have been asked is it a dark grey or a light grey, does it approach black or white? The Impressionists took quite a different atti­tude and asked whether it was a bluish grey or a greenish grey or a purplish grey, or a reddish grey: in a word, not whether it was light or dark, but which colour in the solar spectrum it came closest to.

To the Impressionists shadow was not an absence of light, but light of a different quality and of different value. In their ex­haustive research into the true colours of shadows in nature, they conquered the last unknown territory in the domain of Re­alist Painting.

To sum up, then, it may be said that Impressionist Paint­ing is based on two great principles:

1. The substitution of a Simultaneous Vision that sees a scene as a whole in place of Consecutive Vision that sees nature piece by piece.

2. The substitution of a Chiaroscuro based on the colours of the solar spectrum for a Chiaroscuro based on Black and White.

This new technique, with all the research and experiment which it implies, was not the invention of one man but the out­come of the life studies of a whole group of men. Most prominent among those who brought Impressionist painting to perfection in theory and practice were Camille Pissarro, Claude Monet, and Auguste Renoir.

 

ART INSTITUTE

A: Monet, Gauging, Cézanne, Degas, they’re all here.

B: Yes. Renoir, Van Gogh… They have quite a collection.

A: I love the Impressionists. They had a really fresh lively colorful way of painting.

B: I like all sorts of paintings, belonging to all the movements. Even the very old ones.

A: So do I really. They all have their appeal. But I think the Impressionists are my favourite painters.

B: You can get a bit too much of them though. Just about every office has a reproduction of a Van Gogh or Cezanne.

A: Or of Monet’s ‘Waterlilies’ for example.

B: Yes, I think the original of that is at the national Gallery in London.

A: Well, especially for an office you can’t really go wrong with the Impressionists. They are mostly pleasant, with lots of light and no naked bodies to distract you while you’re working!

B: Except some of Renoir’s works of course.

A: It’s funny that the Art Institute of Chicago should have so many nice paintings.

B: In my opinion, it’s good to have famous works of art dispersed all over the world. Like that, all the major museums have some to display and people everywhere can admire them.

A: There is more to see in Chicago itself. Works by Picasso or Chagall.

B: There’s a mosaic by Chagall called “The Four Seasons”.

A: Yes, you have to go to the square in font of the First National Bank building.

B: Did you know there was so much art to see in this city? Anyway, I’ve seen enough paintings here now. You can’t take in too much in one go.

A: All right, let’s go and have a bite to eat somewhere.

B: And sit down and rest our legs. We’ve been walking around the city and the museum non-stop for four hours.

 

WHO IS IT BY?

1. The painting of the blue period are Monet

2. The paintings with waterlilies are Picasso

3. The painting with sunflowers is BY Rubens

4. The paintings with floppy clocks are Van Gogh

5. The paintings with mounds with naked flesh are Dali



Date: 2015-01-02; view: 1276


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