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An Introduction to C O L O R T H E O R Y: Lecture Two. by Sarah Kaiser Fundamentals 102 AAA: The American Academy of Art. Topics. Color Temperature: Warm and Cool Hans Hoffmann’s theory of “Push and Pull” Viscosity Complements Neutralize Color Local Color
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An Introduction to COLOR THEORY: Lecture Two by Sarah Kaiser Fundamentals 102 AAA: The American Academy of Art
Topics Color Temperature: Warm and Cool Hans Hoffmann’s theory of “Push and Pull” Viscosity Complements Neutralize Color Local Color Color Harmonies: triadic, quadatic, split complements
Color Temperature • Warm colors: Reds, Yellows, and oranges (sunlight) • Cool colors: Blues, greens, violets (shadows) heavier • According to Hans Hoffmann, the warm colors PUSH FORWARD and the cool colors PULL BACK • Hoffmann’s Image: “Rising Moon, 1964.
Hans Hofmann • Artist, teacher, and master of Abstract Expressionism who created the Push/Pull Theory of Color. • Warm colors (red, orange, yellow) visually advance, while cool colors (blue and green) recede. • Tension---malleable---flexible. • Space like putty • Colors shift relative to their backgrounds: green looks more yellow on a blue background, but more blue on a yellow background. • See hanshofmann.net • Image: “Autumn Gold,” 1957
Temperature of pigment vs. Temperature of LIGHT • Pigment color is influenced significantly by the temperature of light • Incandescent light, sunlight, candle-light are all warm light sources. • Florescent light, UV light and Halogen are all cool light sources. • Cool light produces warm shadows • Warm light produces cool shadows
Light temperature produces harmony in a subject • Note the warm light from the sunrise influences even the traditionally “cool” colors ---- the blues greens and purples are also much warmer. Note how warm light produces cool shadow.
Evening sun in Italy ---- warm light filters out the blues --- “blue” sky can be perceived as violet or deep red. Image: “Promenade,” Richard Schmid
TERMS • Monochrome (meaning "one color") color harmonies include only one color. The value and intensity may vary. An example of a monochrome color scheme could include any color mixed with water, white or black. For example, navy and light blue are monochrome.
Split Complements • In this case, red’s split complements are the analogous colors ofgreen, its complementary color. Using split complementary colors can give you a design with a high degree of contrast, yet still not as extreme as a real complementary color. It also results in greater harmony than the use of the direct complementary. • More subtle
Triadic Color Scheme • Three hues equidistant from each other on the color wheel. When you want a design that is colorful and yet balanced, a triad color scheme is quite effective.
Viscosity • This describes how the paint slides across the canvas (or any other surface) . • Viscous = olive oil • Not so viscous = cream cheese/peanut butter (texture gels and modeling paste) • Liquid glaze makes the paint more viscous and more transparent. Plus, it extends the pigment. It also keeps the paint active (so it doesn’t dry as fast). • Gel makes the paint less viscous and more pasty (textural) • Modeling paste (opaque)
Impressionism • Originated in France in the late 19th century. • Painters wanted to capture the rapidly changing modern world and the fleeting moods of nature. • Relied on optical mixing to depict the fluctuations of light and consisted largely of views of everyday middle-class life in the city and countryside of France. • OPTICAL MIXING = MIXING THE COLORS ON THE CANVAS NOT ON THE PALETTE
Haystacks Series • Twenty-five paintings made in the period of one year (1890-91) • Thematic use of repetition to show differences in perception of light across various times of day, seasons, and types of weather • Intensely aware of and fascinated by the visual nuances of the region’s landscape and the variation in the seasons. • Image: Haystacks, End of Summer
Light and Seasons • Monet’s interest in the serial motif • First painter to paint such a large quantity of pictures of the same subject matter differentiated by light, weather, atmosphere and perspective • In order to work on many paintings virtually simultaneously, he would awake before dawn so as to begin at the earliest time of day • Image: Haystacks (Morning Sun)
Haystacks, Midday • Viewed always from the same angle, only the light would change, depending on the season, the weather and the time of day. • For thirty years he was able to concentrate almost exclusively on a few subjects: Haystacks, Poplars, Rouen Cathedral, the Houses of Parliament, the Water Lilies
Rouen Cathedral, Full Sunlight Monet painted over 30 canvases of the cathedral at various times of day, during different seasons. http://www.mcah.columbia.edu/monet/swf/
Complements yield beautiful low intensity colors (neutrals), but mixing all 3 primaries together results in buckets of mud.
1. Paste down pattern2. Trace with carbon paper.3. Divide into 6 regions: Region 1: Mix hues that match (replicate) original pattern Region 2: Use color wheel to find source color, and then mix complements that are the SAME value Region 3: Opposite values of original colors (b/w only) Region 4: Opposite intensities of original hues (pure colors) Region 5: Return to original colors
Resources • Use color wheels to determine exact: • Source Color • Value • Intensity (purity) of paint samples • Vocab: triadic and quadratic color harmonies, split complements, color temperature (push and pull), viscosity, optical mixing