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Watercolor
Painting
Watercolor
is a painting technique using paint made of colorants suspended
or dissolved in water. Although the grounds used in watercolor
painting vary, the most common is paper. Others include
papyrus, bark papers, plastics, leather, fabric, wood, and
canvas.
History Of Watercolor Painting
Watercolor
painting began with the invention of paper in China shortly
after 100 AD. In the 12th century the conquering Moors introduced
papermaking to Spain and the technology spread to Italy
decades later. Some of the oldest paper manufactures include
Fabriano, Italy, opened in 1276, and Arches, France, opened
in 1492.
The
forerunner of watercolor painting in Europe was buon fresco
painting - wall-painting using pigments in a water medium
on wet plaster. One well-known example of buon fresco is
the Sistine Chapel, begun in 1508 and completed in 1514.
The
earliest known use of European watercolor painting is by
Italian Renaissance painter Raffaello Santi (1483-1520),
who painted full-scale cartoons as precursors for tapestry
designs.
In
Germany, Albrecht D?rer (1471-1528) painted watercolors
in the 15th century. The first school of watercolor painting
in Europe was led by Hans Bol (1534-1593) and was much influenced
by D?rer's creations.
Other
famous artists have used watercolor painting to supplement
their work with oil paint, including van Dyck (1599-1641),
Thomas Gainsborough (1727-1788), and John Constable (1776-1837).
In
18th century Britain, Paul Sandby (1725-1809) was called
the father of British watercolor.
Watercolor Paint
Francis
Picabia, Ridens, (c. 1929), gouache and watercolor on cardboard,
104 x 74 cm, private collection.The broader term for water-based
painting media is watermedia. The term watercolor most often
to refers to traditional transparent watercolor or gouache
(an opaque form of the same paint).
Watercolor
paint is made of finely-ground pigment or dye mixed with
gum arabic for body, and glycerin or honey for viscosity
and to bond the colorant to the painting surface. Unpigmented
filler is added to gouache to lend opacity to the paint.
Oil of clove is used to prevent mold.
Techniques
Traditionally,
watercolor paint is applied with brushes, but it may be
applied with other implements in experimental approaches
or mixed with other materials (usually acrylic or collage).
The
paint is thinned before application to allow for lighter
areas within the painting. This transparency provides watercolor
its characteristics of brightness, sparkle, freshness, and
clarity of color since light has passed through the film
of paint and is reflected back to the viewer through the
film.
According
to a tradition, dating from at least the early 20th century,
the white of the paper is the only white used in transparent
watercolor. Opaque paint is seldom used for whites or to
overpaint.
Watercolor
techniques have the reputation of being quite demanding,
although they are actually no more demanding than those
used with other media. Maintaining a high quality of value
differences and color clarity are typically the most difficult
properties to achieve and maintain.
Carl
Larsson, The Christmas Eve, watercolor, (1904-1905).The
medium is effective in portraiture, figurative art, photorealism,
and abstract work, both objective and non-objective. (Kandinsky
produced the first non-objective abstract paintings in transparent
watercolor around 1913).
Watercolor
proponents prize it as a studio medium for its lack of odor
and ease of cleanup, and also as a plein air medium for
its portability and quick drying.
Fingerpainting
originated in China with watercolor paints.
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