Renaissance Paints - How they made pigments
76Colors of the Earth
If you look at any masterpieces of the great Renaissance painters, they have a quality that seems linked directly to the landscape. This would have something to do with how their pigments were made . Unlike today, they couldn't just walk into the nearest art suppliers and buy a tube of paint, they were experts in blending, grinding and brewing their pallet.
Paint requires two compounds, a pigment, the basic element that makes the colour and a binder, a liquid that holds it all together. Binders from that age where normally from two sources, either tree gum, the cherry tree was one popular source but a particular favourite, as today, was the sap of the Acacia tree - Gum Arabic. The others were derived from eggs, in the form of tempere (egg yolk) or glair (whisked egg white).
Then came the colours themselves. It is ever likely that the landscape; even today, from Florence southwards and Perugia north has a renaissance feel to it. Endless blue sky, light fluffy white clouds with a hint of pale yellow and lots of greens and browns. This is the region where the artists Michaelangelo, Leonardo, Perugino, Paolo Ucello, Piero della Francesca and Luca Signorelli all came from.
Pigments come from one of four sources:
- Minerals, naturally occurring rocks like Lapis Lazuli, ground to a fine powder.
- Earths, the baked and ground clays and earths of an area give rise to particluar colours,
- Dyes, boiling natural plant or animal matter which releases pigment, Saffron make a yellow, ripe buckthorn berries produce green.
- Chemical process,with alchemical expertise artists produced chemical reactions that gave rise to colors, whether oxidisation, evaporation, baking or burning their raw material.
So when the great masters mixed and ground their paints they would often use the materials closest to hand. The rich brown earth of Umbria, or Siena's softer golden brown earth permeate their masterpieces. The plants, bones and woods of the area would have been boiled or burnt to make sap green and lamp black. Lead and iron, oxidized or cooked, a dangerous and noxious but producing flake white, red lead, mars black and lead yellow.
The most lethal color was Orpiment as it contained arsenic sulphide, whilst verdigris had to smell the worst, copper suspended over urine (although you could use wine or vinegar too). The apprentice’s most hated colour was madder red, the longer is was ground the brighter the red became. However to produce blue from Lapis or Azurite and Malachite's green hues by reducing a piece of rock to fine powder was hard, laborious work and time consuming.
Despite the effort required these recipes left us with a wonderfully delicious record of what the colors of the renaissance would have really been like if we were there to feel the sun on our skin and the cool northern breeze in our hair. By just walking through the gorgeous wooded valleys of Umbria or climbing the ochre hills around Siena is to experience the master’s world at first hand. Add a medieval tournament, a religious festival or local feast and you are there in the middle of the fifteenth century.
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Comments
Thanks Gypsy Willow, I love that film. Part of the reason I researched the blog. I tried making verdigris but ended up with a nasty smelling jar. I lived in Canton, Roath and Culver until I moved to Italy.
This was really interesting, thank you! I would love to live in Italy. I think we are here for the duration though (whatever the duration may be!) Welcome to hub pages! It's friendly here, mostly. I think you will like it. :)
great hub :) I'm writing about paitings too :) see my hub on the renaissance :)
great hub :) I'm writing about paitings too :) see my hub on the renaissance :)
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Renaissance guide
- ART HISTORY RESOURCES ON THE WEB: Renaissance Art in Italy
Information about the painters and the era.
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Gypsy Willow says:
7 months ago
Wonderful hub. Did you see the film "the Girl with the Pearl Earing"? You would love it. I used to live in St Mellons. Welcome to hubpages.