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The Alchemy of Paint: Art, Science and Secrets from the Middle Ages (Paperback)
$15.62 - Save $1.74 (10%) - RRP $17.36 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 24 hours | |Short Description for The Alchemy of PaintA fascinating look at how pigments were created, used, and revered in the Middle Ages.
Full description- Publisher: Marion Boyars Publishers Ltd
- Published: 30 June 2009
- Format: Paperback 362 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Art History: Byzantine & Medieval c 500 CE to c 1400 | Paintings | Art Techniques & Principles
- ISBN 13: 9780714531724 ISBN 10: 0714531723
- Sales rank: 92,279
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Full description for The Alchemy of Paint
"The Alchemy of Paint" is a critique of the modern world, which Spike Bucklow sees as the product of seventeenth-century ideas about science. In modern times, we have divorced color from its origins, using it for commercial advantage. Spike Bucklow shows us how in medieval times, color had mystical significance far beyond the enjoyment of shade and hue.Each chapter demonstrates the mindset of medieval Europe and is devoted to just one color, acknowledging its connections with life in the pre-modern world. Colors examined and explained in detail include a midnight blue called ultramarine, an opaque red called vermilion, a multitude of colors made from metals, a transparent red called dragonsblood, and, finally, gold.Today, "scarlet" describes a color, but it was originally a type of cloth. Henry VI's wardrobe accounts from 1438 to 1489 show that his cheapest scarlet was 14.2s.6d. and that scarlets could fetch up to twice that price. In the fifteenth century, a mid-priced scarlet cost more than two thousand kilos of cheese or one thousand liters of wine. This expense accounts for the custom of giving important visitors the "red carpet treatment."The book looks at how color was "read" in the Middle Ages and returns to materials to look at the hidden meaning of the artists' version of the philosopher's stone. The penultimate chapter considers why everyone has always loved gold.Spike Bucklow is a conservation scientist working with oil paintings at the Hamilton Kerr Institute in Cambridge.

