Watercolor is a painting method in which
the paints are made of pigments suspended in a water-based solution. Watercolor
refers to both the medium and the resulting artwork. Aquarelles painted with
water-soluble colored ink instead of modern water colors are called
"aquarellum atramento" (Latin for "aquarelle made with
ink") by experts. However, this term has been more and more passing out of
use.
The traditional and most common
support—material to which the paint is applied—for watercolor paintings is
paper. Other supports include papyrus, bark papers, plastics, vellum, leather,
fabric, wood and canvas. Watercolor paper is often made entirely or partially
with cotton, which gives a good texture and minimizes distortion when wet.
Watercolors are usually translucent, and appear luminous because the pigments
are laid down in a pure form with few fillers obscuring the pigment colors.
Watercolors can also be made opaque by adding Chinese white.
In East Asia ,
watercolor painting with inks is referred to as brush painting or scroll
painting. In Chinese, Korean and Japanese painting it has been the dominant
medium, often in monochrome black or browns.[clarification needed] India,
Ethiopia and other countries have long watercolor painting traditions as well.
Fingerpainting with watercolor paints originated in mainland China .
History
Watercolor painting is extremely old,
dating perhaps to the cave paintings of paleolithic Europe ,
and has been used for manuscript illustration since at least Egyptian times but
especially in the European Middle Ages. However, its continuous history as an
art medium begins with the Renaissance. The German Northern Renaissance artist
Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528), who painted several fine botanical, wildlife, and
landscape watercolors, is generally considered among the earliest exponents of
watercolor. An important school of watercolor painting in Germany was led
by Hans Bol (1534–1593) as part of the Dürer Renaissance.
Despite this early start, watercolors were
generally used by Baroque easel painters only for sketches, copies or cartoons
(full-scale design drawings). Notable early practitioners of watercolor
painting were Van Dyck (during his stay in England ), Claude Lorrain, Giovanni
Benedetto Castiglione, and many Dutch and Flemish artists. However, botanical
illustration and wildlife illustration perhaps form the oldest and most
important traditions in watercolor painting. Botanical illustrations became
popular during the Renaissance, both as hand-tinted woodblock illustrations in
books or broadsheets and as tinted ink drawings on vellum or paper. Botanical
artists have traditionally been some of the most exacting and accomplished
watercolor painters, and even today, watercolors—with their unique ability to
summarize, clarify, and idealize in full color—are used to illustrate
scientific and museum publications. Wildlife illustration reached its peak in
the 19th century with artists such as John James Audubon, and today many
naturalist field guides are still illustrated with watercolor paintings.
English school
Several factors contributed to the spread
of watercolor painting during the 18th century, particularly in England . Among
the elite and aristocratic classes, watercolor painting was one of the
incidental adornments of a good education; mapmakers, military officers, and
engineers used it for its usefulness in depicting properties, terrain,
fortifications, field geology, and for illustrating public works or
commissioned projects. Watercolor artists were commonly brought with the
geological or archaeological expeditions, funded by the Society of Dilettanti
(founded in 1733), to document discoveries in the Mediterranean, Asia, and the New World . These expeditions stimulated the demand for
topographical painters, who churned out memento paintings of famous sites (and
sights) along the Grand Tour to Italy
that was undertaken by every fashionable young man of the time.
In the late 18th century, the English
cleric William Gilpin wrote a series of hugely popular books describing his
picturesque journeys throughout rural England , and illustrated them with
self-made sentimentalized monochrome watercolors of river valleys, ancient
castles, and abandoned churches. This example popularized watercolors as a form
of personal tourist journal. The confluence of these cultural, engineering,
scientific, tourist, and amateur interests culminated in the celebration and
promotion of watercolor as a distinctly English "national art".
William Blake published several books of hand-tinted engraved poetry, provided
illustrations to Dante's Inferno, and he also experimented with large monotype
works in watercolor. Among the many other significant watercolorists of this
period were Thomas Gainsborough, John Robert Cozens, Francis Towne, Michael
Angelo Rooker, William Pars, Thomas Hearne, and John Warwick Smith.
From the late 18th century through the 19th
century, the market for printed books and domestic art contributed
substantially to the growth of the medium. Watercolors were used as the basic
document from which collectible landscape or tourist engravings were developed,
and hand-painted watercolor originals or copies of famous paintings contributed
to many upper class art portfolios. Satirical broadsides by Thomas Rowlandson,
many published by Rudolph Ackermann, were also extremely popular.
The three English artists credited with
establishing watercolor as an independent, mature painting medium are Paul
Sandby (1730–1809), often called the "father of the English
watercolor"; Thomas Girtin (1775–1802), who pioneered its use for large
format, romantic or picturesque landscape painting; and Joseph Mallord William
Turner (1775–1851), who brought watercolor painting to the highest pitch of
power and refinement, and created hundreds of superb historical, topographical,
architectural, and mythological watercolor paintings. His method of developing
the watercolor painting in stages, starting with large, vague color areas established
on wet paper, then refining the image through a sequence of washes and glazes,
permitted him to produce large numbers of paintings with "workshop
efficiency" and made him a multimillionaire, partly by sales from his
personal art gallery, the first of its kind. Among the important and highly
talented contemporaries of Turner and Girtin were John Varley, John Sell
Cotman, Anthony Copley Fielding, Samuel Palmer, William Havell, and Samuel
Prout. The Swiss painter Abraham-Louis-Rodolphe Ducros was also widely known
for his large format, romantic paintings in watercolor.
The confluence of amateur activity,
publishing markets, middle class art collecting, and 19th-century technique led
to the formation of English watercolor painting societies: the Society of
Painters in Water Colours (1804, now known as the Royal Watercolour Society)
and the New Water Colour Society (1832, now known as the Royal Institute of
Painters in Water Colours). (A Scottish Society of Painters in Water Colour was
founded in 1878, now known as the Royal Scottish Society of Painters in
Watercolour.) These societies provided annual exhibitions and buyer referrals
for many artists. They also engaged in petty status rivalries and aesthetic
debates, particularly between advocates of traditional
("transparent") watercolor and the early adopters of the denser color
possible with body color or gouache ("opaque" watercolor). The late
Georgian and Victorian periods produced the zenith of the British watercolor,
among the most impressive 19th-century works on paper, due to artists Turner,
Varley, Cotman, David Cox, Peter de Wint, William Henry Hunt, John Frederick
Lewis, Myles Birket Foster, Frederick Walker, Thomas Collier, Arthur Melville
and many others. In particular, the graceful, lapidary, and atmospheric
watercolors ("genre paintings") by Richard Parkes Bonington created
an international fad for watercolor painting, especially in England and France in the 1820s.
The popularity of watercolors stimulated
many innovations, including heavier and more sized wove papers, and brushes
(called "pencils") manufactured expressly for watercolor. Watercolor
tutorials were first published in this period by Varley, Cox, and others,
establishing the step-by-step painting instructions that still characterize the
genre today; The Elements of Drawing, a watercolor tutorial by English art
critic John Ruskin, has been out of print only once since it was first
published in 1857. Commercial brands of watercolor were marketed and paints
were packaged in metal tubes or as dry cakes that could be "rubbed
out" (dissolved) in studio porcelain or used in portable metal paint boxes
in the field. Contemporary breakthroughs in chemistry have made many new
pigments available, including prussian blue, ultramarine blue, cobalt blue,
viridian, cobalt violet, cadmium yellow, aureolin (potassium cobaltinitrite),
zinc white, and a wide range of carmine and madder lakes. These pigments, in
turn, stimulated a greater use of color with all painting media, but in English
watercolors, particularly by the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.
John Singer Sargent, White Ships. Brooklyn Museum
Watercolor painting also became popular in
the United States during the
19th century; outstanding early practitioners included John James Audubon, as
well as early Hudson River
School painters such as
William H. Bartlett and George Harvey. By mid-century, the influence of John
Ruskin led to increasing interest in watercolors, particularly the use of a
detailed "Ruskinian" style by such artists as John W. Hill Henry,
William Trost Richards, Roderick Newman, and Fidelia Bridges .
The American Society of Painters in Watercolor (now the American Watercolor
Society) was founded in 1866. Late-19th-century American exponents of the
medium included Thomas Moran, Thomas Eakins, John LaFarge, John Singer Sargent,
Childe Hassam, and, preeminently, Winslow Homer.
Watercolor was less popular in Continental
Europe. In the 18th century, gouache was an important medium for the Italian
artists Marco Ricci and Francesco Zuccarelli, whose landscape paintings were
widely collected. Gouache was used by a number of artists in France as well. In
the 19th century, the influence of the English school helped popularize
"transparent" watercolor in France , and it became an important
medium for Eugène Delacroix, François Marius Granet, Henri-Joseph Harpignies,
and the satirist Honoré Daumier. Other European painters who worked frequently
in watercolor were Adolph Menzel in Germany
and Stanisław Masłowski in Poland .
Unfortunately, the careless and excessive
adoption of brightly colored, petroleum-derived aniline dyes (and pigments
compounded from them), which all fade rapidly on exposure to light, and the
efforts to properly conserve the twenty thousand J. M. W. Turner paintings
inherited by the British Museum in 1857, led to an examination and negative
reevaluation of the permanence of pigments in watercolor. This caused a sharp
decline in their status and market value. Nevertheless, isolated practitioners
continued to prefer and develop the medium into the 20th century. Gorgeous
landscape and maritime watercolors were done by Paul Signac, and Paul Cézanne
developed a watercolor painting style consisting entirely of overlapping small
glazes of pure color.
20th and 21st centuries
Among the many 20th-century artists who
produced important works in watercolor, Wassily Kandinsky, Emil Nolde, Paul
Klee, Egon Schiele, and Raoul Dufy must be mentioned. In America , the
major exponents included Charles Burchfield, Edward Hopper, Georgia O'Keeffe,
Charles Demuth, and John Marin (80% of his total work is watercolor). In this period,
American watercolor painting often imitated European Impressionism and
Post-Impressionism, but significant individualism flourished in
"regional" styles of watercolor painting from the 1920s to 1940s. In
particular, the "Cleveland School " or "Ohio
School " of painters centered
around the Cleveland Museum of Art, and the California Scene painters were
often associated with Hollywood animation
studios or the Chouinard Art Institute (now California Institute of the Arts).
The California
painters exploited their state's varied geography, Mediterranean climate, and
"automobility" to reinvigorate the outdoor or "plein air"
tradition. The most influential among them were Phil Dike, Millard Sheets, Rex
Brandt, Dong Kingman, and Milford Zornes. The California Water Color Society,
founded in 1921 and later renamed the National Watercolor Society, sponsored
important exhibitions of their work.
Although the rise of abstract
expressionism, and the trivializing influence of amateur painters and
advertising- or workshop-influenced painting styles, led to a temporary decline
in the popularity of watercolor painting after c. 1950, watercolors continue to
be utilized by artists like Martha Burchfield, Joseph Raffael, Andrew Wyeth,
Philip Pearlstein, Eric Fischl, Gerhard Richter, Anselm Kiefer, and Francesco
Clemente. In Spain ,
Ceferí Olivé created an innovative style followed by his students, such as
Rafael Alonso López-Montero and Francesc Torné Gavaldà. In Mexico , the
major exponents are Ignacio Barrios, Edgardo Coghlan, Ángel Mauro, Vicente
Mendiola, and Pastor Velázquez. In the Canary Islands ,
where this pictorial technique has many followers, there are stand-out artists
such as Francisco Bonnín Guerín, José Comas Quesada, and Alberto Manrique.
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