Front cover image for Color and meaning : art, science, and symbolism

Color and meaning : art, science, and symbolism

John Gage
Is color just a physiological reaction, a sensation resulting from different wavelengths of light on receptors in our eyes? Does color have an effect on our feelings? The phenomenon of color is examined in extraordinary new ways in John Gage's latest book. His pioneering study is informed by the conviction that color is a contingent, historical occurrence whose meaning, like language, lies in the particular contexts in which it is experienced and interpreted.Gage covers topics as diverse as the optical mixing techniques implicit in mosaic; medieval color-symbolism; the equipment of the manuscript illuminator's workshop, the color languages and color practices of Latin America at the time of the Spanish Conquest; the earliest history of the prism; and the color ideas of Goethe and Runge, Blake and Turner, Seurat and Matisse.From the perspective of the history of science, Gage considers the bearing of Newton's optical discoveries on painting, the chemist Chevreul's contact with painters and the growing interest of experimental psychologists in the topic of color in the late nineteenth century, particularly in relation to synaesthesia. He includes an invaluable overview of the twentieth-century literature that bears on the historical interpretation of color in art. Gage's explorations further extend the concepts he addressed in his prize-winning book Color and Culture.
Print Book, English, 2000
University of California Press, Berkeley, 2000
320 pages : illustrations (some color), facsimiles, portraits
9780520226111, 0520226119
638849432
Introduction7(4)
Part One
The Contexts of Colour
11(10)
Colour and Culture
21(13)
Colour in Art and its Literature
34(33)
Part Two
Colour in History - Relative and Absolute
67(23)
Colour-words and Colour-patches
90(8)
Ghiberti and Light
98(7)
Color Colorado - Cross-cultural Studies in the Ancient Americas
105(16)
The Fool's Paradise
121(13)
Newton and Painting
134(10)
Blake's Newton
144(9)
Magilphs and Mysteries
153(9)
Turner as a Colourist
162(7)
`Two Different Worlds' - Runge, Goethe and the Sphere of Colour
169(16)
Mood Indigo - From the Blue Flower to the Blue Rider
185(11)
Chevreul between Classicism and Romanticism
196(13)
The Technique of Seurat - A Reappraisal
209(10)
Seurat's Silence
219(9)
Matisse's Black Light
228(13)
Colour as Language in Early Abstract Painting
241(8)
A Psychological Background for Early Modern Colour
249(12)
Making Sense of Colour - The Synaesthetic Dimension
261(9)
Acknowledgments270(1)
Notes to the Text271(35)
Select Bibliography306(6)
List of Illustrations312(3)
Index315
Reprint. originally published: London : Thames and Hudson, ©1999