Saturday, June 14, 2014

How I paint the blues

Ah! Blues.....you can sing them, you can play them but mostly I like to paint them. Those cobalt blue skies in a summer afternoon, or the cool cerulean blues in late spring. There is nothing harsher than the full tinting strenght of Pthalocyanine blue....but add lots of white to it and there is nothing nicer.
You finally get to the warnth of Ultramarine, what can I say? The most versatile of the blues, you can paint a vase, a flower, skies, water..... you can warm it up, or cool it down, you can green it or violet it....purple will be better.

The following posts show interesting historical facts and uses for BLUE

The Color Blue


The Marquise de Seignelay and two of her sons

by Pierre Mignard

If the Virgin Mary had paid for even one of her portraits showing her in celestial blue robes, she would have needed the income of King David instead of her carpenter husband Joseph. That's because painters created the ultramarine pigment first used in the 13th century to portray her from the mineral ultramarine, extracted from lapiz-lazuli  stone and imported at sky-high expense only from Sar-e-Sang in modern-day Afghanistan. this convoluted import system often made the pigment costlier than gold.

Even 700 years ago, contracts were extremely specific about the amount and qualty of the ultramarine used because it was so expesive. the color- and it associations with purity and divinit- became popular with wealthy women sitting for portraits.

In the 16th centuty, painters thought they had found a cheaper, identical color in smalt, created from adding cobalt oxide to potash-rich glass that was crushed. but the bright blue turns gray in about a century when combined with oil paint.  Those 'gray' skies in Dutch landscapes were meant to be sunny blue- a fact scholars only learned in the 1970's and 1980's and still unknown to most museum visitors.
Hello Blog friends:
It has been a long time sisnce my last post. I know, life sometimes gets complicated but I never stopped painting. My passion grows ever so slightly with each passing season and inspiration can be found at every corner.

This is one of my still life paintings showing the use of Ultramarine Blue deep as a contrast with the next post of what the old masters had to employ to depict their rich blues.
Thank you for viewing my blog. Paintings are available for sale.

Norma Yorsch
12x16 oil on canvas
The Blue vase