Blue is one of the three primary colours of
pigments in painting and traditional colour theory, as well as in the RGB
colour model. It lies between violet and green on the spectrum of visible
light. The eye perceives blue when observing light with a dominant wavelength
between approximately 450 and 495 nanometres. Most blues contain a slight
mixture of other colors; azure contains some green, while ultramarine contains
some violet. The clear daytime sky and the deep sea appear blue because of an
optical effect known as Rayleigh scattering. An optical effect called Tyndall
scattering explains blue eyes. Distant objects appear more blue because of
another optical effect called atmospheric perspective.
Blue has been an important colour in art
and decoration since ancient times. The semi-precious stone lapis lazuli was
used in ancient Egypt
for jewellery and ornament and later, in the Renaissance, to make the pigment
ultramarine, the most expensive of all pigments. In the eighth century Chinese
artists used cobalt blue to colour fine blue and white porcelain. In the Middle
Ages, European artists used it in the windows of Cathedrals. Europeans wore
clothing coloured with the vegetable dye woad until it was replaced by the
finer indigo from America .
In the 19th century, synthetic blue dyes and pigments gradually replaced
mineral pigments and synthetic dyes. Dark blue became a common colour for
military uniforms and later, in the late 20th century, for business suits.
Because blue has commonly been associated with harmony, it was chosen as the
colour of the flags of the United Nations and the European Union.
Surveys in the US and Europe show that blue
is the colour most commonly associated with harmony, faithfulness, confidence,
distance, infinity, the imagination, cold, and sometimes with sadness. In US
and European public opinion polls it is the most popular colour, chosen by
almost half of both men and women as their favourite colour. The same surveys
also showed that blue was the colour most associated with the masculine, just
ahead of black, and was also the colour most associated with intelligence,
knowledge, calm and concentration.
In the ancient world
Blue was a latecomer among colours used in
art and decoration, as well as language and literature. Reds, blacks, browns,
and ochres are found in cave paintings from the Upper Paleolithic period, but
not blue. Blue was also not used for dyeing fabric until long after red, ochre,
pink and purple. This is probably due to the perennial difficulty of making
good blue dyes and pigments. The earliest known blue dyes were made from plants
– woad in Europe, indigo in Asia and Africa ,
while blue pigments were made from minerals, usually either lapis lazuli or
azurite.
Lapis lazuli, a semi-precious stone, has
been mined in Afghanistan
for more than three thousand years, and was exported to all parts of the
ancient world. In Iran and Mesopotamia, it was used to make jewellery and
vessels. In Egypt ,
it was used for the eyebrows on the funeral mask of King Tutankhamun (1341–1323
BC). Importing lapis lazuli by caravan across the desert from Afghanistan to Egypt was very expensive. Beginning
in about 2500 BC, the ancient Egyptians began to produce their own blue pigment
known as Egyptian blue by grinding silica, lime, copper, and alkalai, and
heating it to 800 or 900 °C (1,470 or 1,650 °F). This is considered the first
synthetic pigment. Egyptian blue was used to paint wood, papyrus and canvas,
and was used to colour a glaze to make faience beads, inlays, and pots. It was
particularly used in funeral statuary and figurines and in tomb paintings. Blue
was considered a beneficial colour which would protect the dead against evil in
the afterlife. Blue dye was also used to colour the cloth in which mummies were
wrapped.
In Egypt blue was associated with the
sky and with divinity. The Egyptian god Amun could make his skin blue so that
he could fly, invisible, across the sky. Blue could also protect against evil;
many people around the Mediterranean still
wear a blue amulet, representing the eye of God, to protect them from
misfortune. Blue glass was manufactured in Mesopotamia and Egypt as early
as 2500 BC, using the same copper ingredients as Egyptian blue pigment. They
also added cobalt, which produced a deeper blue, the same blue produced in the
Middle Ages in the stained glass windows of the cathedrals of Saint-Denis
and Chartres .
The Ishtar Gate of ancient Babylon
(604–562 BC) was decorated with deep blue glazed bricks used as a background for
pictures of lions, dragons and aurochs.
The ancient Greeks classified colours by
whether they were light or dark, rather than by their hue. The Greek word for
dark blue, kyaneos, could also mean dark green, violet, black or brown. The
ancient Greek word for a light blue, glaukos, also could mean light green,
grey, or yellow. The Greeks imported indigo dye from India , calling it indikon. They
used Egyptian blue in the wall paintings of Knossos ,
in Crete , (2100 BC). It was not one of the
four primary colours for Greek painting described by Pliny the Elder (red,
yellow, black, and white), but nonetheless it was used as a background colour
behind the friezes on Greek temples and to colour the beards of Greek statues.
The Romans also imported indigo dye, but
blue was the colour of working class clothing; the nobles and rich wore white,
black, red or violet. Blue was considered the colour of mourning, and the
colour of barbarians. Julius Caesar reported that the Celts and Germans dyed
their faces blue to frighten their enemies, and tinted their hair blue when
they grew old. Nonetheless, the Romans made extensive use of blue for
decoration. According to Vitruvius, they made dark blue pigment from indigo,
and imported Egyptian blue pigment. The walls of Roman villas in Pompeii had frescoes of
brilliant blue skies, and blue pigments were found in the shops of colour
merchants. The Romans had many different words for varieties of blue, including
caeruleus, caesius, glaucus, cyaneus, lividus, venetus, aerius, and ferreus,
but two words, both of foreign origin, became the most enduring; blavus, from
the Germanic word blau, which eventually became bleu or blue; and azureus, from
the Arabic word
In the Byzantine
Empire and the Islamic World
Dark blue was widely used in the decoration
of churches in the Byzantine Empire . In
Byzantine art Christ and the Virgin Mary usually wore dark blue or purple. Blue
was used as a background colour representing the sky in the magnificent mosaics
which decorated Byzantine churches.
In the Islamic world, blue was of secondary
importance to green, believed to be the favourite colour of the Prophet
Mohammed. At certain times in Moorish Spain and other parts of the Islamic
world, blue was the colour worn by Christians and Jews, because only Muslims
were allowed to wear white and green. Dark blue and turquoise decorative tiles
were widely used to decorate the facades and interiors of mosques and palaces
from Spain to Central Asia. Lapis lazuli pigment was also used to create the
rich blues in Persian miniatures.
During the Middle Ages
In the art and life of Europe
during the early Middle Ages, blue played a minor role. The nobility wore red
or purple, while only the poor wore blue clothing, coloured with poor-quality
dyes made from the woad plant. Blue played no part in the rich costumes of the
clergy or the architecture or decoration of churches. This changed dramatically
between 1130 and 1140 in Paris ,
when the Abbe Suger rebuilt the Saint Denis Basilica. He installed stained
glass windows coloured with cobalt, which, combined with the light from the red
glass, filled the church with a bluish violet light. The church became the
marvel of the Christian world, and the colour became known as the "bleu de
Saint-Denis ".
In the years that followed even more elegant blue stained glass windows were
installed in other churches, including at Chartres Cathedral and
Sainte-Chapelle in Paris .
Another important factor in the increased
prestige of the colour blue in the 12th century was the veneration of the
Virgin Mary, and a change in the colours used to depict her clothing. In
earlier centuries her robes had usually been painted in sombre black, grey,
violet, dark green or dark blue. In the 12th century the Roma Catholic Church
dictated that painters in Italy
(and the rest of Europe consequently) to paint the Virgin Mary with the new
most expensive pigment imported from Asia ;
ultramarine. Blue became associated with holiness, humility and virtue.
Ultramarine was made from lapis lazuli,
from the mines of Badakshan, in the mountains of Afghanistan ,
near the source of the Oxus
River . The mines were
visited by Marco Polo in about 1271; he reported, "here is found a high
mountain from which they extract the finest and most beautiful of blues."
Ground lapis was used in Byzantine manuscripts as early as the 6th century, but
it was impure and varied greatly in colour. Ultramarine refined out the
impurities through a long and difficult process, creating a rich and deep blue.
It was called bleu outremer in French and blu oltremare in Italian, since it
came from the other side of the sea. It cost far more than any other colour,
and it became the luxury colour for the Kings and Princes of Europe .
King Louis IX of France ,
better known as Saint Louis (1214–1270), became
the first king of France
to regularly dress in blue. This was copied by other nobles. Paintings of the
mythical King Arthur began to show him dressed in blue. The coat of arms of the
kings of France
became an azure or light blue shield, sprinkled with golden fleur-de-lis or
lilies. Blue had come from obscurity to become the royal colour.
Once blue became the colour of the king, it
also became the colour of the wealthy and powerful in Europe .
In the Middle Ages in France
and to some extent in Italy ,
the dyeing of blue cloth was subject to license from the crown or state. In Italy , the
dyeing of blue was assigned to a specific guild, the tintori di guado, and
could not be done by anyone else without severe penalty. The wearing of blue
implied some dignity and some wealth.
Besides ultramarine, several other blues
were widely used in the Middle Ages and later in the Renaissance. Azurite, a
form of copper carbonate, was often used as a substitute for ultramarine. The
Romans used it under the name lapis armenius, or Armenian stone. The British
called it azure of Amayne, or German azure. The Germans themselves called it
bergblau, or mountain stone. It was mined in France ,
Hungary , Spain and Germany , and it made a pale blue
with a hint of green, which was ideal for painting skies. It was a favourite
background colour of the German painter Albrecht Dürer.
Another blue often used in the Middle Ages
was called tournesol or folium. It was made from the plant Crozophora
tinctoria, which grew in the south of France . It made a fine transparent
blue valued in medieval manuscripts.
Another common blue pigment was smalt,
which was made by grinding blue cobalt glass into a fine powder. It made a deep
violet blue similar to ultramarine, and was vivid in frescoes, but it lost some
of its brilliance in oil paintings. It became especially popular in the 17th
century, when ultramarine was difficult to obtain. It was employed at times by Titian,
Tintoretto, Veronese, El Greco, Van Dyck, Rubens and Rembrandt.
In the European Renaissance
In the Renaissance, a revolution occurred
in painting; artists began to paint the world as it was actually seen, with
perspective, depth, shadows, and light from a single source. Artists had to
adapt their use of blue to the new rules. In medieval paintings, blue was used
to attract the attention of the viewer to the Virgin Mary, and identify her. In
Renaissance paintings, artists tried to create harmonies between blue and red,
lightening the blue with lead white paint and adding shadows and highlights.
Raphael was a master of this technique, carefully balancing the reds and the
blues so no one colour dominated the picture.
Ultramarine was the most prestigious blue
of the Renaissance, and patrons sometimes specified that it be used in
paintings they commissioned. The contract for the Madone des Harpies by Andrea
del Sarto (1514) required that the robe of the Virgin Mary be coloured with
ultramarine costing "at least five good florins an ounce." Good
ultramarine was more expensive than gold; in 1508 the German painter Albrecht
Dürer reported in a letter that he had paid twelve ducats – the equivalent of
forty-one grams of gold – for just thirty grams of ultramarine.
Often painters or clients saved money by
using less expensive blues, such as azurite smalt, or pigments made with
indigo, but this sometimes caused problems. Pigments made from azurite were
less expensive, but tended to turn dark and green with time. An example is the
robe of the Virgin Mary in The Madonna Enthroned with Saints by Raphael in the Metropolitan Museum
in New York .
The Virgin Mary's azurite blue robe has degraded into a greenish-black.
The introduction of oil painting changed
the way colours looked and how they were used. Ultramarine pigment, for
instance, was much darker when used in oil painting than when used in tempera
painting, in frescoes. To balance their colours, Renaissance artists like
Raphael added white to lighten the ultramarine. The sombre dark blue robe of
the Virgin Mary became a brilliant sky blue. Titian created his rich blues by
using many thin glazes of paint of different blues and violets which allowed
the light to pass through, which made a complex and luminous colour, like
stained glass. He also used layers of finely ground or coarsely ground
ultramarine, which gave subtle variations to the blue.
Blue and white porcelain
In about the 9th century, Chinese artisans
abandoned the Han blue colour they had used for centuries, and began to use
cobalt blue, made with cobalt salts of alumina, to manufacture fine blue and
white porcelain, The plates and vases were shaped, dried, the paint applied
with a brush, covered with a clear glaze, then fired at a high temperature.
Beginning in the 14th century, this type of porcelain was exported in large
quantity to Europe where it inspired a whole
style of art, called Chinoiserie. European courts tried for many years to
imitate Chinese blue and white porcelain, but only succeeded in the 18th
century after a missionary brought the secret back from China .
Other famous white and blue patterns
appeared in Delft , Meissen ,
Staffordshire, and Saint Petersburg ,
Russia .
War of the blues – indigo versus woad
While blue was an expensive and prestigious
colour in European painting, it became a common colour for clothing during the
Renaissance. The rise of the colour blue in fashion in the 12th and 13th
centuries led to a blue dye industry in several cities, notably Amiens , Toulouse , and Erfurt . They made a dye
called pastel from woad, a plant common in Europe ,
which had been used to make blue dye by the Celts and German tribes. Blue
became a colour worn by domestics and artisans, not just nobles. In 1570, when
Pope Pius V listed the colours that could be used for ecclesiastical dress and
for altar decoration, he excluded blue, because he considered it too common.
The process of making blue with woad was
long and noxious – it involved soaking the leaves of the plant for from three
days to a week in human urine, ideally urine from men who had been drinking a
great deal of alcohol, which was said to improve the colour. The fabric was
then soaked for a day in the resulting mixture, then put out in the sun, where
as it dried it turned blue.
The pastel industry was threatened in the
15th century by the arrival from India
of the same dye (indigo), obtained from a shrub widely grown in Asia . The Asian indigo dye precursors is more readily
obtained. In 1498, Vasco de Gama opened a trade route to import indigo from India to Europe .
In India , the indigo leaves
were soaked in water, fermented, pressed into cakes, dried into bricks, then
carried to the ports London , Marseille, Genoa , and Bruges .
Later, in the 17th century, the British, Spanish, and Dutch established indigo
plantations in Jamaica , South Carolina , the Virgin Islands and South America, and
began to import American indigo to Europe .
The countries with large and prosperous
pastel industries tried to block the use of indigo. The German government
outlawed the use of indigo in 1577, describing it as a "pernicious,
deceitful and corrosive substance, the Devil's dye." In France , Henry
IV, in an edict of 1609, forbade under pain of death the use of "the false
and pernicious Indian drug". It was forbidden in England until 1611, when British traders
established their own indigo industry in India
and began to import it into Europe .
The efforts to block indigo were in vain;
the quality of indigo blue was too high and the price too low for pastel made
from woad to compete. In 1737 both the French and German governments finally
allowed the use of indigo. This ruined the dye industries in Toulouse
and the other cities that produced pastel, but created a thriving new indigo
commerce to seaports such as Bordeaux , Nantes and Marseille.
Another war of the blues took place at the
end of the 19th century, between indigo and synthetic indigo, discovered in
1868 by the German chemist Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf von Baeyer. The
German chemical firm BASF put the new dye on the market in 1897, in direct
competition with the British-run indigo industry in India , which produced most of the
world's indigo. In 1897 Britain
sold ten thousand tons of natural indigo on the world market, while BASF sold
six hundred tons of synthetic indigo. The British industry cut prices and
reduced the salaries of its workers, but it was unable to compete; the
synthetic indigo was more pure, made a more lasting blue, and was not dependent
upon good or bad harvests. In 1911, India sold only 660 tons of natural
indigo, while BASF sold 22,000 tons of synthetic indigo. In 2002, more than
38,000 tons of synthetic indigo was produced, often for the production of blue
jeans.
Impressionist painters
The invention of new synthetic pigments in
the 18th and 19th centuries considerably brightened and expanded the palette of
painters. J.M.W. Turner experimented with the new cobalt blue, and of the
twenty colours most used by the Impressionists, twelve were new and synthetic colours,
including cobalt blue, ultramarine and cerulean blue.
Another important influence on painting in
the 19th century was the theory of complementary colours, developed by the
French chemist Michel Eugene Chevreul in 1828 and published in 1839. He
demonstrated that placing complementary colours, such as blue and yellow-orange
or ultramarine and yellow, next to each other heightened the intensity of each
colour "to the apogee of their tonality." In 1879 an American
physicist, Ogden Rood, published a book charting the complementary colours of
each colour in the spectrum. This principle of painting was used by Claude
Monet in his Impression – Sunrise – Fog (1872), where he put a vivid blue next
to a bright orange sun, (1872) and in Régate à Argenteuil (1872), where he
painted an orange sun against blue water. The colours brighten each other.
Renoir used the same contrast of cobalt blue water and an orange sun in
Canotage sur la Seine (1879–1880). Both Monet
and Renoir liked to use pure colours, without any blending.
Monet and the impressionists were among the
first to observe that shadows were full of colour. In his La Gare Saint-Lazare,
the grey smoke, vapour and dark shadows are actually composed of mixtures of
bright pigment, including cobalt blue, cerulean blue, synthetic ultramarine,
emerald green, Guillet green, chrome yellow, vermilion and ecarlate red. Blue
was a favourite colour of the impressionist painters, who used it not just to
depict nature but to create moods, feelings and atmospheres. Cobalt blue, a
pigment of cobalt oxide-aluminium oxide, was a favourite of Auguste Renoir and
Vincent van Gogh. It was similar to smalt, a pigment used for centuries to make
blue glass, but it was much improved by the French chemist Louis Jacques
Thénard, who introduced it in 1802. It was very stable but extremely expensive.
Van Gogh wrote to his brother Theo, "'Cobalt [blue] is a divine colour and
there is nothing so beautiful for putting atmosphere around things ..."
Van Gogh described to his brother Theo how
he composed a sky: "The dark blue sky is spotted with clouds of an even
darker blue than the fundamental blue of intense cobalt, and others of a
lighter blue, like the bluish white of the Milky Way ... the sea was very dark
ultramarine, the shore a sort of violet and of light red as I see it, and on
the dunes, a few bushes of prussian blue."
In the 20th and 21st century
At the beginning of the 20th century, many
artists recognised the emotional power of blue, and made it the central element
of paintings. During his Blue Period (1901–1904) Pablo Picasso used blue and
green, with hardly any warm colours, to create a melancholy mood. In Russia , the
symbolist painter Pavel Kuznetsov and the Blue Rose art group (1906–1908) used
blue to create a fantastic and exotic atmosphere. In Germany , Wassily Kandinsky and
other Russian émigrés formed the art group called Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue
Rider), and used blue to symbolise spirituality and eternity. Henri Matisse used
intense blues to express the emotions he wanted viewers to feel. Matisse wrote,
"A certain blue penetrates your soul."
In the art of the second half of the 20th
century, painters of the abstract expressionist movement began to use blue and
other colours in pure form, without any attempt to represent anything, to
inspire ideas and emotions. Painter Mark Rothko observed that colour was
"only an instrument;" his interest was "in expressing human
emotions tragedy, ecstasy, doom, and so on."
In fashion blue, particularly dark blue,
was seen as a colour which was serious but not grim. In the mid-20th century,
blue passed black as the most common colour of men's business suits, the
costume usually worn by political and business leaders. Public opinion polls in
the United States and Europe showed that blue was the favourite colour of over
fifty per cent of respondents. Green was far behind with twenty per cent, while
white and red received about eight per cent each.
In 1873 a German immigrant in San Francisco , Levi
Strauss, invented a sturdy kind of work trousers, made of denim fabric and
coloured with indigo dye, called blue jeans. In 1935, they were raised to the
level of high fashion by Vogue magazine. Beginning in the 1950s, they became an
essential part of uniform of young people in the United
States , Europe , and
around the world.
Blue was also seen as a colour which was
authoritative without being threatening. Following the Second World War, blue
was adopted as the colour of important international organisations, including
the United Nations, the Council of Europe, UNESCO, the European Union, and
NATO. United Nations peacekeepers wear blue helmets to stress their
peacekeeping role. Blue is used by the NATO Military Symbols for Land Based
Systems to denote friendly forces, hence the term "blue on blue" for
friendly fire, and Blue Force Tracking for location of friendly units. The
People's Liberation Army of China (formerly known as the "Red Army")
uses the term "Blue Army" to refer to hostile forces during
exercises.
The 20th century saw the invention of new
ways of creating blue, such as chemiluminescence, making blue light through a
chemical reaction.
In the 20th century, it also became
possible to own your own colour of blue. The French artist Yves Klein, with the
help of a French paint dealer, created a specific blue called International
Klein blue, which he patented. It was made of ultramarine combined with a resin
called Rhodopa, which gave it a particularly brilliant colour. The baseball
team the Los Angeles Dodgers developed its own blue, called Dodger blue, and
several American universities invented new blues for their colours.
With the dawn of the World Wide Web, blue
has become the standard colour for hyperlinks in graphic browsers (though in
most browsers links turn purple if you visit their target), to make their
presence within text obvious to readers.
Source From Wikipedia
没有评论:
发表评论