Art & Design Matters    ... a promotional services company
    Directory of Artists Art Galleries Directory of Designers Antiques Articles News

Search
   

Browse Gallery

   


by maker
   

Sponsor an Artist Campaign

"Sponsor an Artist" Campaign
Sponsor an Artist
& We'll Promote You
Contact us for details



ASID Industry PartnerAmerican Art Pottery AssociationDesign Success University

AccessoryHut.com - Home Décor with Yesterday’s & Today’s Artists in Mind


Articles


The Medium - What is Watercolor?
Information Provided by Tallahassee Watercolor Society

View Objects For Sale

Simply put, watercolor is a painting compound using water-soluble pigments that are either transparent or opaque.

Because of the medium itself as well as the paper to which it is applied, watercolor is frequently thought of as a fugitive medium. Not so! While watercolor may not rival oils for durability and longevity, it is a medium that has a very durable and distinguished history and, clearly, a healthy future.

While American artists in the early 19th century seemed to regard watercolor primarily as a sketching tool preparatory to the "finished" work in oil or engraving, English artists of the mid-1700's had already elevated watercolor to a serious medium equal to oil. In England, watercolor was first used by architectural draftsmen and topographers, but soon watercolorists were introducing figures into their compositions. It took the genius of Winslow Homer to reveal to American artists the extraordinary potential of watercolor as a medium of serious expression. Once accepted, watercolor became an inevitable medium for the American painter who, from the beginning, made landscape painting one of the dominant features of the American art tradition. Watercolor's inherent luminosity, combined with its capacity for rapid execution, gave landscape painters an ideal means for recording the fleeting effects of nature.

The history of watercolor is inextricably bound to the h istory of paper, invented in its present form by the Chinese shortly after 100 AD. Papermaking was introduced to Spain by the conquering Moors in the mid-12th century and spread to Italy 25 years later. One of the earliest paper centers was Fabriano, Italy with mills in operation by 1276.

The forerunner of watercolor painting was buon fresco painting: wall-painting using watercolor paints on wet plaster. The most famous example of buon fresco is, of course, the Sistine Chapel, begun in 1508 and completed in 1514. In Europe, as early as the 15th century, Albrecht Durer (1471 - 1528) was painting in watercolor. Durer's influence was partly responsible for the first school of watercolor painting in Europe, led by Hans Bol (1534 - 1593).

The American West was an important area in the history of American art, and of watercolor in particular. Much of the record of exploration of the lands and people west of the Mississippi was kept by artists whose only m eans of painting was watercolor. George Catlin (1796 - 1870) was one of the "explorer artists" who used watercolor to document his travels among Indian tribes during the 1830's. Thomas Moran's watercolor sketches of Yellowstone in 1871 so impressed Congress that they voted to make Yellowstone the nation's first National Park.

Great interest in watercolor was created by the reporter/artists of the Civil War. Their on-the-scene drawings of the battlefields were used as illustrations in the newspapers and magazines of the day, the most famous being Harper's Weekly.



Back to ArticlesBack to Articles



     About Us Order Info Links Contact


copyright 2005 AccessoryHut.com. copyright 2008 ArtandDesignMatters.com. all rights reserved.
   Site Design by Object Culture