Black is the darkest color, the result of
the absence or complete absorption of visible light. It is an achromatic color,
literally a color without hue, like white (its opposite) and gray. It is often
used symbolically or figuratively to represent darkness, while white represents
light.
Black ink is the most common color used for
printing books, newspapers and documents, because it has the highest contrast
with white paper and is the easiest to read. For the same reason, black text on
a white screen is the most common format used on computer screens. In color
printing it is used along with the subtractive primaries cyan, yellow, and
magenta, in order to help produce the darkest shades.
Black and white have often been used to
describe opposites; particularly truth and ignorance, good and evil, the
"Dark Ages" versus Age of Enlightenment. Since the Middle Ages black
has been the symbolic color of solemnity and authority, and for this reason is
still commonly worn by judges and magistrates.
Black was one of the first colors used by
artists in neolithic cave paintings. In the 14th century, it began to be worn
by royalty, the clergy, judges and government officials in much of Europe . It became the color worn by English romantic
poets, businessmen and statesmen in the 19th century, and a high fashion color
in the 20th century.
In the Roman Empire ,
it became the color of mourning, and over the centuries it was frequently
associated with death, evil, witches and magic. According to surveys in Europe
and North America , it is the color most
commonly associated with mourning, the end, secrets, magic, force, violence,
evil, and elegance.
History and art
Prehistoric history
Black was one of the first colors used in
art. The Lascaux Cave
in France
contains drawings of bulls and other animals drawn by paleolithic artists
between 18,000 and 17,000 years ago. They began by using charcoal, and then
made more vivid black pigments by burning bones or grinding a powder of
manganese oxide.
Ancient history
For the ancient Egyptians, black had
positive associations; being the color of fertility and the rich black soil
flooded by the Nile . It was the color of
Anubis, the god of the underworld, who took the form of a black jackal, and
offered protection against evil to the dead.
For the ancient Greeks, black was also the
color of the underworld, separated from the world of the living by the river
Acheron, whose water was black. Those who had committed the worst sins were
sent to Tartarus, the deepest and darkest level. In the center was the palace of Hades , the king of the underworld, where
he was seated upon a black ebony throne.
Black was one of the most important colors
used by ancient Greek artists. In the 6th century BC, they began making
black-figure pottery and later red figure pottery, using a highly original
technique. In black-figure pottery, the artist would paint figures with a
glossy clay slip on a red clay pot. When the pot was fired, the figures painted
with the slip would turn black, against a red background. Later they reversed
the process, painting the spaces between the figures with slip. This created
magnificent red figures against a glossy black background.
In the social hierarchy of ancient Rome , purple was the
color reserved for the Emperor; red was the color worn by soldiers (red cloaks
for the officers, red tunics for the soldiers); white the color worn by the
priests, and black was worn by craftsmen and artisans. The black they wore was
not deep and rich; the vegetable dyes used to make black were not solid or
lasting, so the blacks often turned out faded gray or brown.
In Latin, the word for black, ater and to
darken, atere, were associated with cruelty, brutality and evil. They were the
root of the English words "atrocious" and "atrocity".
Black was also the Roman color of death and
mourning. In the 2nd century BC Roman magistrates began to wear a dark toga,
called a toga pulla, to funeral ceremonies. Later, under the Empire, the family
of the deceased also wore dark colors for a long period; then, after a banquet
to mark the end of mourning, exchanged the black for a white toga. In Roman
poetry, death was called the hora nigra, the black hour.
The German and Scandinavian peoples
worshipped their own goddess of the night, Nótt, who crossed the sky in a
chariot drawn by a black horse. They also feared Hel, the goddess of the
kingdom of the dead, whose skin was black on one side and red on the other.
They also held sacred the raven. They believed that Odin, the king of the
Nordic pantheon, had two black ravens, Huginn and Muninn, who served as his
agents, traveling the world for him, watching and listening.
Postclassical history
In the early Middle Ages, black was
commonly associated with darkness and evil. In Medieval paintings, the devil
was usually depicted as having human form, but with wings and black skin or
hair.
In the 12th and 13th centuries
In fashion, black did not have the prestige
of red, the color of the nobility. It was worn by Benedictine monks as a sign
of humility and penitence. In the 12th century a famous theological dispute
broke out between the Cistercian monks, who wore white, and the Benedictines,
who wore black. A Benedictine abbot, Pierre the Venerable, accused the
Cistercians of excessive pride in wearing white instead of black. Saint Bernard
of Clairvaux, the founder of the Cistercians responded that black was the color
of the devil, hell, "of death and sin," while white represented
"purity, innocence and all the virtues".
Black symbolized both power and secrecy in
the medieval world. The emblem of the Holy Roman Empire of Germany was a black
eagle. The black knight in the poetry of the Middle Ages was an enigmatic
figure, hiding his identity, usually wrapped in secrecy.
Black ink, invented in Ancient China and India , was
traditionally used in the Middle Ages for writing, for the simple reason that
black was the darkest color and therefore provided the greatest contrast with
white paper or parchment, making it the easiest color to read. It became even
more important in the 15th century, with the invention of printing. A new kind
of ink, printer's ink, was created out of soot, turpentine and walnut oil. The
new ink made it possible to spread ideas to a mass audience through printed
books, and to popularize art through black and white engravings and prints.
Because of its contrast and clarity, black ink on white paper continued to be
the standard for printing books, newspapers and documents; and for the same
reason black text on a white background is the most common format used on
computer screens.
In the 14th and 15th centuries
In the early Middle Ages, princes, nobles
and the wealthy usually wore bright colors, particularly scarlet cloaks from Italy . Black
was rarely part of the wardrobe of a noble family. The one exception was the
fur of the sable. This glossy black fur, from an animal of the marten family,
was the finest and most expensive fur in Europe .
It was imported from Russia
and Poland
and used to trim the robes and gowns of royalty.
In the 14th century, the status of black
began to change. First, high-quality black dyes began to arrive on the market,
allowing garments of a deep, rich black. Magistrates and government officials
began to wear black robes, as a sign of the importance and seriousness of their
positions. A third reason was the passage of sumptuary laws in some parts of Europe which prohibited the wearing of costly clothes and
certain colors by anyone except members of the nobility. The famous bright
scarlet cloaks from Venice and the peacock blue
fabrics from Florence
were restricted to the nobility. The wealthy bankers and merchants of northern Italy
responded by changing to black robes and gowns, made with the most expensive
fabrics.
The change to the more austere but elegant
black was quickly picked up by the kings and nobility. It began in northern Italy , where the Duke of Milan and the Count of
Savoy and the rulers of Mantua , Ferrara ,
Rimini and
Urbino began to dress in black. It then spread to France ,
led by Louis I, Duke of Orleans, younger brother of King Charles VI of France . It
moved to England
at the end of the reign of King Richard II (1377–1399), where all the court
began to wear black. In 1419–20, black became the color of the powerful Duke of
Burgundy, Philip the Good. It moved to Spain ,
where it became the color of the Spanish Habsburgs, of Charles V and of his
son, Philip II of Spain
(1527–1598). European rulers saw it as the color of power, dignity, humility
and temperance. By the end of the 16th century, it was the color worn by almost
all the monarchs of Europe and their courts.
Modern history
In the 16th and 17th centuries
While black was the color worn by the Catholic
rulers of Europe, it was also the emblematic color of the Protestant
Reformation in Europe and the Puritans in England
and America .
John Calvin, Philip Melanchthon and other Protestant theologians denounced the
richly colored and decorated interiors of Roman Catholic churches. They saw the
color red, worn by the Pope and his Cardinals, as the color of luxury, sin, and
human folly. In some northern European cities, mobs attacked churches and
cathedrals, smashed the stained glass windows and defaced the statues and
decoration. In Protestant doctrine, clothing was required to be sober, simple
and discreet. Bright colors were banished and replaced by blacks, browns and
grays; women and children were recommended to wear white.
In the Protestant Netherlands, Rembrandt
used this sober new palette of blacks and browns to create portraits whose
faces emerged from the shadows expressing the deepest human emotions. The
Catholic painters of the Counter-Reformation, like Rubens, went in the opposite
direction; they filled their paintings with bright and rich colors. The new
Baroque churches of the Counter-Reformation were usually shining white inside
and filled with statues, frescoes, marble, gold and colorful paintings, to
appeal to the public. But European Catholics of all classes, like Protestants,
eventually adopted a sober wardrobe that was mostly black, brown and gray.
In the second part of the 17th century,
Europe and America
experienced an epidemic of fear of witchcraft. People widely believed that the
devil appeared at midnight in a ceremony called a Black Mass or black sabbath,
usually in the form of a black animal, often a goat, a dog, a wolf, a bear, a
deer or a rooster, accompanied by their familiar spirits, black cats, serpents
and other black creatures. This was the origin of the widespread superstition
about black cats and other black animals. In medieval Flanders ,
in a ceremony called Kattenstoet, black cats were thrown from the belfry of the
Cloth Hall of Ypres to ward off witchcraft.
Witch trials were common in both Europe and
America
during this period. During the notorious Salem witch trials in New England in
1692–93, one of those on trial was accused of being able turn into a
"black thing with a blue cap," and others of having familiars in the
form of a black dog, a black cat and a black bird. Nineteen women and men were
hanged as witches.
In the 18th and 19th centuries
In the 18th century, during the European
Age of Enlightenment, black receded as a fashion color. Paris became the fashion capital, and
pastels, blues, greens, yellow and white became the colors of the nobility and
upper classes. But after the French Revolution, black again became the dominant
color.
Black was the color of the industrial
revolution, largely fueled by coal, and later by oil. Thanks to coal smoke, the
buildings of the large cities of Europe and America gradually turned black. By
1846 the industrial area of the West Midlands of England
was "commonly called 'the Black Country '”.
Charles Dickens and other writers described the dark streets and smoky skies of
London , and
they were vividly illustrated in the engravings of French artist Gustave Doré.
A different kind of black was an important
part of the romantic movement in literature. Black was the color of melancholy,
the dominant theme of romanticism. The novels of the period were filled with
castles, ruins, dungeons, storms, and meetings at midnight. The leading poets
of the movement were usually portrayed dressed in black, usually with a white
shirt and open collar, and a scarf carelessly over their shoulder, Percy Bysshe
Shelley and Lord Byron helped create the enduring stereotype of the romantic
poet.
The invention of new, inexpensive synthetic
black dyes and the industrialization of the textile industry meant that
good-quality black clothes were available for the first time to the general
population. In the 19th century gradually black became the most popular color
of business dress of the upper and middle classes in England ,
the Continent, and America .
Black dominated literature and fashion in
the 19th century, and played a large role in painting. James McNeil Whistler
made the color the subject of his most famous painting, Arrangement in grey and
black number one (1871), better known as Whistler's Mother.
Some 19th-century French painters had a low
opinion of black: "Reject black," Paul Gauguin said, "and that
mix of black and white they call gray. Nothing is black, nothing is gray."
But Édouard Manet used blacks for their strength and dramatic effect. Manet's
portrait of painter Berthe Morisot was a study in black which perfectly
captured her spirit of independence. The black gave the painting power and
immediacy; he even changed her eyes, which were green, to black to strengthen
the effect. Henri Matisse quoted the French impressionist Pissarro telling him,
"Manet is stronger than us all – he made light with black."
Pierre-Auguste Renoir used luminous blacks,
especially in his portraits. When someone told him that black was not a color,
Renoir replied: "What makes you think that? Black is the queen of colors.
I always detested Prussian blue. I tried to replace black with a mixture of red
and blue, I tried using cobalt blue or ultramarine, but I always came back to
ivory black."
Vincent van Gogh used black lines to
outline many of the objects in his paintings, such as the bed in the famous
painting of his bedroom. making them stand apart. His painting of black crows
over a cornfield, painted shortly before he died, was particularly agitated and
haunting.
In the late 19th century, black also became
the color of anarchism.
In the 20th and 21st centuries
In the 20th century, black was the color of
Italian and German fascism.
In art, black regained some of the
territory that it had lost during the 19th century. The Russian painter Kasimir
Malevich, a member of the Suprematist movement, created the Black Square in 1915, is widely
considered the first purely abstract painting. He wrote, "The painted work
is no longer simply the imitation of reality, but is this very reality ... It
is not a demonstration of ability, but the materialization of an idea."
Black was also appreciated by Henri
Matisse. "When I didn't know what color to put down, I put down
black," he said in 1945. "Black is a force: I used black as ballast
to simplify the construction ... Since the impressionists it seems to have made
continuous progress, taking a more and more important part in color
orchestration, comparable to that of the double bass as a solo
instrument."
In the 1950s, black came to be a symbol of
individuality and intellectual and social rebellion, the color of those who
didn't accept established norms and values. In Paris ,
it was worn by Left-Bank intellectuals and performers such as Juliette Greco,
and by some members of the Beat Movement in New York
and San Francisco .
Black leather jackets were worn by motorcycle gangs such as the Hells Angels
and street gangs on the fringes of society in the United States . Black as a color of
rebellion was celebrated in such films as The Wild One, with Marlon Brando. By
the end of the 20th century, black was the emblematic color of the punk
subculture punk fashion, and the goth subculture. Goth fashion, which emerged
in England
in the 1980s, was inspired by Victorian era mourning dress.
In men's fashion, black gradually ceded its
dominance to navy blue, particularly in business suits. Black evening dress and
formal dress in general were worn less and less. In 1960, John F. Kennedy was
the last American President to be inaugurated wearing formal dress; President
Lyndon Johnson and all his successors were inaugurated wearing business suits.
Women's fashion was revolutionized and
simplified in 1926 by the French designer Coco Chanel, who published a drawing
of a simple black dress in Vogue magazine. She famously said, "A woman
needs just three things; a black dress, a black sweater, and, on her arm, a man
she loves." Other designers contributed to the trend of the little black
dress. The Italian designer Gianni Versace said, "Black is the
quintessence of simplicity and elegance," and French designer Yves Saint
Laurent said, "black is the liaison which connects art and fashion. One of
the most famous black dresses of the century was designed by Hubert de Givenchy
and was worn by Audrey Hepburn in the 1961 film Breakfast at Tiffany's.
The American civil rights movement in the
1950s was a struggle for the political equality of African Americans. It
developed into the Black Power movement in the late 1960s and 1970s, and
popularized the slogan "Black is Beautiful".
In the 1990s, the Black Standard became the
banner of several Islamic extremist, jihadist groups.
Source From Wikipedia
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