Introduction
to a book about the history of colour This
book examines how the ever-changing role of colour in society has been reflected
in manuscripts, stained glass, clothing, painting and popular culture. Colour
is a natural phenomenon, of course, but is is also a complex cultural construct
that resists generalization and, indeed, analysis itself. No doubt this is why
serious works devoted to colour are rare, and rarer still are those that aim to
study it in historical context. Many authors search for the universal or archetypal
truths they imagine reside in colour, but for the historian, such truths do not
exist. Colour is first and foremost a social phenomenon. There is no transcultural
truth to colour perception, despite what many books based on poorly grasped neurobiology
or - even worse - on pseudoesoteric pop psychology would have us believe. Such
books unfortunatley clutter the bibliography on the subject, and even do it harm. The
silence of historians on the subject of colour, or more particularly their difficulty
in conceiving colour as a subject separate from other historical phenomena, is
the result of three different sets of problems. The first concerns documentation
and preservation. We see the colours transmitted to us by the past as time has
altered them and not as they were originally. Moreover, we see them under light
conditions that often are entirely different from those known by past societies.
And finally, over the decades we have developed the habit of looking at objects
from the past in black-and-white photographs and, despite the current diffusion
of colour photography, our ways of thinking about and reacting to these objects
seem to have remained more or less black and white. The
second set of problems concerns methodology. As soon as the historian seeks to
study colour, he must grapple with a host of factors all at once: physics, chemistry,
materials, and techniques of production, as well as iconography, ideology, and
the symbolic meanings that colours convey. How to make sense of all of these elements?
How can one establish an analytical model facilitating the study of images and
coloured objects? No researcher, no method, has yet been able to resolve these
problems, because among the numerous facts pertaining to colour, a researcher
tends to select those facts that support his study and to conveniently forget
those that contradict it. This is clearly a poor way to conduct research. And
it is made worse by the temptation to apply to the objects and images of a given
historical period information found in texts of that period. The proper method
at least in the first phase of analysis is to proceed as do palaeontologists
(who must study cave paintings without the aid of texts): by extrapolating from
the images and the objects themselves a logic and a system based on various concrete
factors such as the rate of occurrence of particular objects and motifs, their
distribution and disposition. In short, one undertakes the internal structural
analysis with which any study of an image or coloured object should begin. The
third set of problems is philosophical: it is wrong to project our own conceptions
and definitions of colour onto the images, objects and monuments of past centuries.
Our judgements and values are not those of previous societies (and no doubt they
will change again in the future). For the writer-historian looking at the definitions
and taxonomy of colour, the danger of anachronism is very real. For example, the
spectrum with its natural order of colours was unknown before the seventeenth
century, while the notion of primary and secondary colours did not become common
until the nineteenth century. These are not eternal notions but stages in the ever-changing
history of knowledge. I
have reflected on such issues at greater length in my previous work, so while
the present book does address certain of them, for the most part it is devoted
to other topics. Nor is it concerned only with the history of colour in images
and artworks in any case that area still has many gaps to be filled. Rather,
the aim of this book is to examine all kinds of objects in order to consider the
different facets of the history of colour and to show how far beyond the artistic
sphere this history reaches. The history of painting is one thing; that of colour
is another, much larger, question. Most studies devoted to the history of colour
err in considering only the pictorial, artistic or scientific realms. But the
lessons to be learned from colour and its real interest lie elsewhere.
(Source:
CAE Handbook. Reproduced with permission from Cambridge English)
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