Tate: Colour: A Visual History, Hardback Book

Tate: Colour: A Visual History Hardback

Part of the Tate series

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Discover the story of colour through the significant scientific discoveries and key artist's works over 400 years. From Isaac Newton's investigations through to Olafur Eliasson's experiential creations, this stunning book documents the fascinating story of colour with an extraordinary collection of original colour material that includes charts, wheels, artists' palettes, swatches and schemes. "In 1704, the scientist Isaac Newton published Opticks, the result of many years of researching light and colour.

By splitting white light, Newton identified the visible range of colours, or the rainbow spectrum.

In Opticks, he built a colour system around his findings, and he visualised this system in a circular shape, making it one of the first printed colour wheels. The influence of Newton and his followers, combined with the invention of many new pigments as well as watercolours in moist cake form, had made painting with colour an exciting occupation not just for serious artists but also for a much wider audience.

The colour revolution had begun."ContentsIntroduction1.

Unravelling the Rainbow: The Eighteenth-Century Colour Revolution2.

Romantic Ideas & New Technologies: The Early Nineteenth Century3.

Industrialism to Impressionism: The Later Nineteenth Century4.

Colour for Colour's Sake: Colour into the Future:GlossaryBibliographyIndex

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