The materiality of color : the production, circulation, and application of dyes and pigments, 1400-1800

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

The materiality of color : the production, circulation, and application of dyes and pigments, 1400-1800

edited by Andrea Feeser, Maureen Daly Goggin and Beth Fowkes Tobin

(The histories of material culture and collecting, 1700-1950)

Ashgate, c2012

  • : hbk

Available at  / 1 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Bibliography: p. 281-318

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Although much has been written on the aesthetic value of color, there are other values that adhere to it with economic and social values among them. Through case studies of particular colors and colored objects, this volume demonstrates just how complex the history of color is by focusing on the diverse social and cultural meanings of color; the trouble, pain, and suffering behind the production and application of these colors; the difficult technical processes for making and applying color; and the intricacy of commercial exchanges and knowledge transfers as commodities and techniques moved from one region to another. By emphasizing color's materiality, the way in which it was produced, exchanged, and used by artisans, artists, and craftspersons, contributors draw attention to the disjuncture between the beauty of color and the blood, sweat, and tears that went into its production, circulation, and application as well as to the complicated and varied social meanings attached to color within specific historical and social contexts. This book captures color's global history with chapters on indigo plantations in India and the American South, cochineal production in colonial Oaxaca, the taste for brightly colored Chinese objects in Europe, and the thriving trade in vermilion between Europeans and Native Americans. To underscore the complexity of the technical knowledge behind color production, there are chapters on the 'discovery' of Prussian blue, Brazilian feather techne, and wallpaper production. To sound the depths of color's capacity for social and cultural meaning-making, there are chapters that explore the significance of black ink in Shakespeare's sonnets, red threads in women's needlework samplers, blues in Mayan sacred statuary, and greens and yellows in colored glass bracelets that were traded across the Arabian desert in the late Middle Ages. The purpose of this book is to recover color's complex-and sometimes morally troubling-past, and in doing so, to restore a sense of wonder and appreciation for our colorful world. With its nuanced and complex depiction of how color operated within local contexts and moved across the globe, this book will appeal to art historians, social and cultural historians, museum curators, literary scholars, rhetoric scholars, and historians of science and technology.

Table of Contents

  • Contents: Introduction: the value of color, Andrea Feeser, Maureen Daly Goggin and Beth Fowkes Tobin
  • Part I Color's Social and Cultural Meanings: Colorizing New England's burying grounds, Jason D. LaFountain
  • The extra-ordinary powers of red in 18th- and 19th-century English needlework, Maureen Daly Goggin
  • Coloring the sacred in 16th-century Central Mexico, Molly Harbour Basset and Jeanette Favrot Peterson
  • The expense of ink and wastes of shame: poetic generation, black ink, and material waste in Shakespeare's Sonnets, Mitchell M. Harris
  • 'Luscious colors and glossy paint': the taste for China and the consumption of color in 18th-century England, Vanessa Alayrac-Fielding. Part II Producing and Exchanging Pigments and Dyes: Seeking red: the production and trade of cochineal dye in Oaxaca, Mexico, 1750-1821, Jeremy Baskes
  • Red ochre, vermilion and the transatlantic cosmetic encounter, Jean-FranAois Lozier
  • Indian Indigo, Padmini Tolat Balaram
  • The exceptional and the expected: red, white, and black made blue in colonial South Carolina, Andrea Feeser
  • Prussian Blue: transfers and trials, Sarah Lowengard. Part III Making Colored Objects: Glass bracelets in the medieval and early modern Middle East: design and color as identity markers, Stephanie Karine Boulogne
  • The colorful court of Gabriel Bethlen and Catherine of Brandenburg, A0/00va DeA!k
  • The evolution of blackface cosmetics on the early modern stage, Richard Blunt
  • Crafts of color: Tupi Tapirage in early colonial Brazil, Amy Buono
  • Colors and techniques of 18th-century Chinese wallpaper: Blair House as case study, Elaine M. Gibbs
  • Butterflies, spiders, and shells: coloring natural history illustrations in late 18th-century Britain, Beth Fowkes Tobin
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top