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Oil painting

Oil painting is the process of painting with pigments with a medium of drying oil as the binder. It has been the most common technique for artistic painting on wood panel or canvas for several centuries, spreading from Europe to the rest of the world. The advantages of oil for painting images include "greater flexibility, richer and denser colour, the use of layers, and a wider range from light to dark".[1] But the process is slower, especially when one layer of paint needs to be allowed to dry before another is applied.

Mona Lisa was created by Leonardo da Vinci using oil paints during the Renaissance period in the 15th century.

The oldest known oil paintings were created by Buddhist artists in Afghanistan and date back to the 7th century AD.[2] Oil paint was used by Europeans for painting statues and woodwork from at least the 12th century, but its common use for painted images began with Early Netherlandish painting in Northern Europe, and by the height of the Renaissance, oil painting techniques had almost completely replaced the use of egg tempera paints for panel paintings in most of Europe, though not for Orthodox icons or wall paintings, where tempera and fresco, respectively, remained the usual choice.

Commonly used drying oils include linseed oil, poppy seed oil, walnut oil, and safflower oil. The choice of oil imparts a range of properties to the paint, such as the amount of yellowing or drying time. The paint could be thinned with turpentine. Certain differences, depending on the oil, are also visible in the sheen of the paints. An artist might use several different oils in the same painting depending on specific pigments and effects desired. The paints themselves also develop a particular consistency depending on the medium. The oil may be boiled with a resin, such as pine resin or frankincense, to create a varnish prized for its body and gloss. The paint itself can be molded into different textures depending on its plasticity.

Techniques

 
Thin blade used for the application or removal of paint. Can also be used to create a mixture of various pigments.

Traditional oil painting techniques often begin with the artist sketching the subject onto the canvas with charcoal or thinned paint. Oil paint is usually mixed with linseed oil, artist grade mineral spirits, or other solvents to make the paint thinner, faster or slower-drying. (Because the solvents thin the oil in the paint, they can also be used to clean paint brushes.) A basic rule of oil paint application is 'fat over lean', meaning that each additional layer of paint should contain more oil than the layer below to allow proper drying. If each additional layer contains less oil, the final painting will crack and peel. The consistency on the canvas depend on the layering of the oil paint. This rule does not ensure permanence; it is the quality and type of oil that leads to a strong and stable paint film.

There are other media that can be used with the oil, including cold wax, resins, and varnishes. These additional media can aid the painter in adjusting the translucency of the paint, the sheen of the paint, the density or 'body' of the paint, and the ability of the paint to hold or conceal the brushstroke. These aspects of the paint are closely related to the expressive capacity of oil paint.

Traditionally, paint was most often transferred to the painting surface using paintbrushes, but there are other methods, including using palette knives and rags. Palette knives can scrape off any paint from a canvas and can also be used for application. Oil paint remains wet longer than many other types of artists' materials, enabling the artist to change the color, texture or form of the figure. At times, the painter might even remove an entire layer of paint and begin anew. This can be done with a rag and some turpentine for a time while the paint is wet, but after a while the hardened layer must be scraped off. Oil paint dries by oxidation, not evaporation, and is usually dry to the touch within a span of two weeks (some colors dry within days).

History

 
A section of the earliest discovered oil paintings (~ 650AD) depicting buddhist imagery in Bamiyan, Afghanistan
 
A detail from the oldest oil paintings in the world (~ 650 AD) a series of Buddhist murals created in Bamiyan, Afghanistan.

The earliest known surviving oil paintings are Buddhist murals created circa 650AD in Bamiyan, Afghanistan. Bamiyan is an historic settlement along the silk road and is famous for the Bamiyan Buddhas, a series of giant statues, behind which rooms and tunnels are carved from the rock. The murals are located in these rooms. The artworks display a wide range of pigments and ingredients, and even included the use of a final varnish layer. The refinement of this painting technique and the survival of the paintings into the present day suggests that oil paints had been used in Asia for some time before the 7th century. This technique of binding pigments in oil, first seen in the Bamiyan cave paintings of South Asia, was later brought to Europe about 900 years later, in the 15th century. Europeans adopted the technique with Early Netherlandish painting in Northern Europe, and later, during the Renaissance, oil painting techniques had almost completely replaced the earlier use of tempera paints in the majority of Europe. [3][4][5]

Most European Renaissance sources, in particular Vasari, falsely credit northern European painters of the 15th century, and Jan van Eyck in particular, with the invention of oil paints[6] However, Theophilus (Roger of Helmarshausen?) clearly gives instructions for oil-based painting in his treatise, On Various Arts, written about 1125.[7] At this period, it was probably used for painting sculptures, carvings and wood fittings, perhaps especially for outdoor use. Outdoor surfaces and surfaces like shields—both those used in tournaments and those hung as decorations—were more durable when painted in oil-based media than when painted in the traditional tempera paints. However, early Netherlandish painting with artists like Van Eyck and Robert Campin in the early and mid-15th century were the first to make oil the usual painting medium, and explore the use of layers and glazes, followed by the rest of Northern Europe, and only then Italy.

Such works were painted on wooden panels, but towards the end of the 15th century canvas began to be used as a support, as it was cheaper, easier to transport, allowed larger works, and did not require complicated preliminary layers of gesso (a fine type of plaster). Venice, where sail-canvas was easily available, was a leader in the move to canvas. Small cabinet paintings were also made on metal, especially copper plates. These supports were more expensive but very firm, allowing intricately fine detail. Often printing plates from printmaking were reused for this purpose. The increasing use of oil spread through Italy from Northern Europe, starting in Venice in the late 15th century. By 1540, the previous method for painting on panel (tempera) had become all but extinct, although Italians continued to use chalk-based fresco for wall paintings, which was less successful and durable in damper northern climates.

Renaissance techniques used a number of thin almost transparent layers or glazes, usually each allowed to dry before the next was added, greatly increasing the time a painting took. The underpainting or ground beneath these was usually white (typically gesso coated with a primer), allowing light to reflect back through the layers. But van Eyck, and Robert Campin a little later, used a wet-on-wet technique in places, painting a second layer soon after the first. Initially the aim was, as with the established techniques of tempera and fresco, to produce a smooth surface when no attention was drawn to the brushstrokes or texture of the painted surface. Among the earliest impasto effects, using a raised or rough texture in the surface of the paint, are those from the later works of the Venetian painter Giovanni Bellini, around 1500.[8]

This became much more common in the 16th century, as may painters began to draw attention to the process of their painting, by leaving individual brushstrokes obvious, and a rough painted surface. Another Venetian, Titian, was a leader in this. In the 17th century some artists, including Rembrandt, began to use dark grounds. Until the mid-19th century there was a division between artists who exploited "effects of handling" in their paintwork, and those who continued to aim at "an even, glassy surface from which all evidences of manipulation had been banished".[9]

Before the 19th century, artists or their apprentices ground pigments and mixed their paints for the range of painting media. This made portability difficult and kept most painting activities confined to the studio. This changed when tubes of oil paint became widely available following the American portrait painter John Goffe Rand's invention of the squeezable or collapsible metal tube in 1841. Artists could mix colors quickly and easily, which enabled, for the first time, relatively convenient plein air painting (a common approach in French Impressionism)

Ingredients

 
Flax seed is the source of linseed oil.

The linseed oil itself comes from the flax seed, a common fiber crop. Linen, a "support" for oil painting (see relevant section), also comes from the flax plant. Safflower oil or the walnut or poppyseed oil are sometimes used in formulating lighter colors like white because they "yellow" less on drying than linseed oil, but they have the slight drawback of drying more slowly and may not provide the strongest paint film. Linseed oil tends to dry yellow and can change the hue of the color.

Recent advances in chemistry have produced modern water miscible oil paints that can be used and cleaned up with water. Small alterations in the molecular structure of the oil creates this water miscible property.

Supports for oil painting

The earliest oil paintings were almost all panel paintings on wood, which had been seasoned and prepared in a complicated and rather expensive process with the panel constructed from several pieces of wood, although such a support has a tendency to warp. Panels continued to be used well into the 17th century, including by Rubens, who painted several large works on wood. The artists of the Italian regions moved towards canvas in the early 16th century, led partly by a wish to paint larger images, which would have been too heavy as panels. Canvas for sails was made in Venice and so easily available and cheaper than wood.

Smaller paintings, with very fine detail, were easier to paint on a very firm surface, and wood panels or copper plates, often reused from printmaking, were often chosen for small cabinet paintings even in the 19th century. Portrait miniatures normally used very firm supports, including ivory, or stiff paper card.

Traditional artists' canvas is made from linen, but less expensive cotton fabric has been used. The artist first prepares a wooden frame called a "stretcher" or "strainer". The difference between the two names is that stretchers are slightly adjustable, while strainers are rigid and lack adjustable corner notches. The canvas is then pulled across the wooden frame and tacked or stapled tightly to the back edge. Then the artist applies a "size" to isolate the canvas from the acidic qualities of the paint. Traditionally, the canvas was coated with a layer of animal glue (modern painters will use rabbit skin glue) as the size and primed with lead white paint, sometimes with added chalk. Panels were prepared with a gesso, a mixture of glue and chalk.

Modern acrylic "gesso" is made of titanium dioxide with an acrylic binder. It is frequently used on canvas, whereas real gesso is not suitable for canvas. The artist might apply several layers of gesso, sanding each smooth after it has dried. Acrylic gesso is very difficult to sand. One manufacturer makes a "sandable" acrylic gesso, but it is intended for panels only and not canvas. It is possible to make the gesso a particular color, but most store-bought gesso is white. The gesso layer, depending on its thickness, will tend to draw the oil paint into the porous surface. Excessive or uneven gesso layers are sometimes visible in the surface of finished paintings as a change that's not from the paint.

Standard sizes for oil paintings were set in France in the 19th century. The standards were used by most artists, not only the French, as it was—and evidently still is—supported by the main suppliers of artists' materials. Size 0 (toile de 0) to size 120 (toile de 120) is divided in separate "runs" for figures (figure), landscapes (paysage) and marines (marine) that more or less preserve the diagonal. Thus a 0 figure corresponds in height with a paysage 1 and a marine 2.[10]

Although surfaces like linoleum, wooden panel, paper, slate, pressed wood, Masonite, and cardboard have been used, the most popular surface since the 16th century has been canvas, although many artists used panel through the 17th century and beyond. Panel is more expensive, heavier, harder to transport, and prone to warp or split in poor conditions. For fine detail, however, the absolute solidity of a wooden panel has an advantage.

Process

 
A traditional wood palette used to hold and mix small amounts of paint while working

Oil paint is made by mixing pigments of colors with an oil medium. Since the 19th century the different main colors are purchased in paint tubes pre-prepared before painting begins, further shades of color are usually obtained by mixing small quantities together as the painting process is underway. An artist's palette, traditionally a thin wood board held in the hand, is used for holding and mixing paints. Pigments may be any number of natural or synthetic substances with color, such as sulphides for yellow or cobalt salts for blue. Traditional pigments were based on minerals or plants, but many have proven unstable over long periods of time. Modern pigments often use synthetic chemicals. The pigment is mixed with oil, usually linseed, but other oils may be used. The various oils dry differently, which creates assorted effects.

A brush is most commonly employed by the artist to apply the paint, often over a sketched outline of their subject (which could be in another medium). Brushes are made from a variety of fibers to create different effects. For example, brushes made with hog bristle might be used for bolder strokes and impasto textures. Fitch hair and mongoose hair brushes are fine and smooth, and thus answer well for portraits and detail work. Even more expensive are red sable brushes (weasel hair). The finest quality brushes are called "kolinsky sable"; these brush fibers are taken from the tail of the Siberian weasel. This hair keeps a superfine point, has smooth handling, and good memory (it returns to its original point when lifted off the canvas), known to artists as a brush's "snap". Floppy fibers with no snap, such as squirrel hair, are generally not used by oil painters.

In the past few decades, many synthetic brushes have been marketed. These are very durable and can be quite good, as well as cost efficient.

Brushes come in multiple sizes and are used for different purposes. The type of brush also makes a difference. For example, a "round" is a pointed brush used for detail work. "Flat" brushes are used to apply broad swaths of color. "Bright" is a flat brush with shorter brush hairs, used for "scrubbing in". "Filbert" is a flat brush with rounded corners. "Egbert" is a very long, and rare, filbert brush. The artist might also apply paint with a palette knife, which is a flat metal blade. A palette knife may also be used to remove paint from the canvas when necessary. A variety of unconventional tools, such as rags, sponges, and cotton swabs, may be used to apply or remove paint. Some artists even paint with their fingers.

 
Tubes of paint

Old masters usually applied paint in thin layers known as "glazes" that allow light to penetrate completely through the layer, a method also simply called "indirect painting". This technique is what gives oil paintings their luminous characteristics. This method was first perfected through an adaptation of the egg tempera painting technique (egg yolks used as a binder, mixed with pigment), and was applied by the Early Netherlandish painters in Northern Europe with pigments usually ground in linseed oil. This approach has been called the "mixed technique" or "mixed method" in modern times. The first coat (the underpainting) is laid down, often painted with egg tempera or turpentine-thinned paint. This layer helps to "tone" the canvas and to cover the white of the gesso. Many artists use this layer to sketch out the composition. This first layer can be adjusted before proceeding further, an advantage over the "cartooning" method used in fresco technique. After this layer dries, the artist might then proceed by painting a "mosaic" of color swatches, working from darkest to lightest. The borders of the colors are blended together when the "mosaic" is completed and then left to dry before applying details.

Artists in later periods, such as the Impressionist era (late 19th century), often expanded on this wet-on-wet method, blending the wet paint on the canvas without following the Renaissance-era approach of layering and glazing. This method is also called "alla prima". This method was created due to the advent of painting outdoors, instead of inside a studio, because while outside, an artist did not have the time to let each layer of paint dry before adding a new layer. Several contemporary artists use a combination of both techniques to add bold color (wet-on-wet) and obtain the depth of layers through glazing.

When the image is finished and has dried for up to a year, an artist often seals the work with a layer of varnish that is typically made from dammar gum crystals dissolved in turpentine. Such varnishes can be removed without disturbing the oil painting itself, to enable cleaning and conservation. Some contemporary artists decide not to varnish their work, preferring the surface unvarnished.

Examples of famous works

Notes

  1. ^ Osborne, 787
  2. ^ Archaeology, Current World (6 July 2008). "World's oldest use of oil paint found in Afghanistan". World Archaeology. Retrieved 10 August 2020.
  3. ^ "Synchrotron light unveils oil in ancient Buddhist paintings from Bamiyan". www.esrf.eu. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  4. ^ "Afghan caves hold world's first oil paintings: expert". www.abc.net.au. 25 January 2008.
  5. ^ April 2008, Live Science Staff 22 (22 April 2008). "Earliest Oil Paintings Discovered". livescience.com.
  6. ^ Borchert (2008), 92–94
  7. ^ Osborne, 787, 1132
  8. ^ Osborne, 787
  9. ^ Osborne, 787–788
  10. ^ Haaf, Beatrix (1987). "Industriell vorgrundierte Malleinen. Beiträge zur Entwicklungs-, Handels- und Materialgeschichte". Zeitschrift für Kunsttechnologie und Konservierung. 1: 7–71.

References

Further reading

painting, confused, with, paint, canvas, redirects, here, album, canvas, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sour. Not to be confused with Oil paint Oil on canvas redirects here For the album see Oil on Canvas This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Oil painting news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Oil painting is the process of painting with pigments with a medium of drying oil as the binder It has been the most common technique for artistic painting on wood panel or canvas for several centuries spreading from Europe to the rest of the world The advantages of oil for painting images include greater flexibility richer and denser colour the use of layers and a wider range from light to dark 1 But the process is slower especially when one layer of paint needs to be allowed to dry before another is applied Mona Lisa was created by Leonardo da Vinci using oil paints during the Renaissance period in the 15th century The oldest known oil paintings were created by Buddhist artists in Afghanistan and date back to the 7th century AD 2 Oil paint was used by Europeans for painting statues and woodwork from at least the 12th century but its common use for painted images began with Early Netherlandish painting in Northern Europe and by the height of the Renaissance oil painting techniques had almost completely replaced the use of egg tempera paints for panel paintings in most of Europe though not for Orthodox icons or wall paintings where tempera and fresco respectively remained the usual choice Commonly used drying oils include linseed oil poppy seed oil walnut oil and safflower oil The choice of oil imparts a range of properties to the paint such as the amount of yellowing or drying time The paint could be thinned with turpentine Certain differences depending on the oil are also visible in the sheen of the paints An artist might use several different oils in the same painting depending on specific pigments and effects desired The paints themselves also develop a particular consistency depending on the medium The oil may be boiled with a resin such as pine resin or frankincense to create a varnish prized for its body and gloss The paint itself can be molded into different textures depending on its plasticity Contents 1 Techniques 2 History 3 Ingredients 4 Supports for oil painting 5 Process 6 Examples of famous works 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further readingTechniques Edit Thin blade used for the application or removal of paint Can also be used to create a mixture of various pigments Traditional oil painting techniques often begin with the artist sketching the subject onto the canvas with charcoal or thinned paint Oil paint is usually mixed with linseed oil artist grade mineral spirits or other solvents to make the paint thinner faster or slower drying Because the solvents thin the oil in the paint they can also be used to clean paint brushes A basic rule of oil paint application is fat over lean meaning that each additional layer of paint should contain more oil than the layer below to allow proper drying If each additional layer contains less oil the final painting will crack and peel The consistency on the canvas depend on the layering of the oil paint This rule does not ensure permanence it is the quality and type of oil that leads to a strong and stable paint film There are other media that can be used with the oil including cold wax resins and varnishes These additional media can aid the painter in adjusting the translucency of the paint the sheen of the paint the density or body of the paint and the ability of the paint to hold or conceal the brushstroke These aspects of the paint are closely related to the expressive capacity of oil paint Traditionally paint was most often transferred to the painting surface using paintbrushes but there are other methods including using palette knives and rags Palette knives can scrape off any paint from a canvas and can also be used for application Oil paint remains wet longer than many other types of artists materials enabling the artist to change the color texture or form of the figure At times the painter might even remove an entire layer of paint and begin anew This can be done with a rag and some turpentine for a time while the paint is wet but after a while the hardened layer must be scraped off Oil paint dries by oxidation not evaporation and is usually dry to the touch within a span of two weeks some colors dry within days History Edit A section of the earliest discovered oil paintings 650AD depicting buddhist imagery in Bamiyan Afghanistan A detail from the oldest oil paintings in the world 650 AD a series of Buddhist murals created in Bamiyan Afghanistan The earliest known surviving oil paintings are Buddhist murals created circa 650AD in Bamiyan Afghanistan Bamiyan is an historic settlement along the silk road and is famous for the Bamiyan Buddhas a series of giant statues behind which rooms and tunnels are carved from the rock The murals are located in these rooms The artworks display a wide range of pigments and ingredients and even included the use of a final varnish layer The refinement of this painting technique and the survival of the paintings into the present day suggests that oil paints had been used in Asia for some time before the 7th century This technique of binding pigments in oil first seen in the Bamiyan cave paintings of South Asia was later brought to Europe about 900 years later in the 15th century Europeans adopted the technique with Early Netherlandish painting in Northern Europe and later during the Renaissance oil painting techniques had almost completely replaced the earlier use of tempera paints in the majority of Europe 3 4 5 Most European Renaissance sources in particular Vasari falsely credit northern European painters of the 15th century and Jan van Eyck in particular with the invention of oil paints 6 However Theophilus Roger of Helmarshausen clearly gives instructions for oil based painting in his treatise On Various Arts written about 1125 7 At this period it was probably used for painting sculptures carvings and wood fittings perhaps especially for outdoor use Outdoor surfaces and surfaces like shields both those used in tournaments and those hung as decorations were more durable when painted in oil based media than when painted in the traditional tempera paints However early Netherlandish painting with artists like Van Eyck and Robert Campin in the early and mid 15th century were the first to make oil the usual painting medium and explore the use of layers and glazes followed by the rest of Northern Europe and only then Italy Such works were painted on wooden panels but towards the end of the 15th century canvas began to be used as a support as it was cheaper easier to transport allowed larger works and did not require complicated preliminary layers of gesso a fine type of plaster Venice where sail canvas was easily available was a leader in the move to canvas Small cabinet paintings were also made on metal especially copper plates These supports were more expensive but very firm allowing intricately fine detail Often printing plates from printmaking were reused for this purpose The increasing use of oil spread through Italy from Northern Europe starting in Venice in the late 15th century By 1540 the previous method for painting on panel tempera had become all but extinct although Italians continued to use chalk based fresco for wall paintings which was less successful and durable in damper northern climates Renaissance techniques used a number of thin almost transparent layers or glazes usually each allowed to dry before the next was added greatly increasing the time a painting took The underpainting or ground beneath these was usually white typically gesso coated with a primer allowing light to reflect back through the layers But van Eyck and Robert Campin a little later used a wet on wet technique in places painting a second layer soon after the first Initially the aim was as with the established techniques of tempera and fresco to produce a smooth surface when no attention was drawn to the brushstrokes or texture of the painted surface Among the earliest impasto effects using a raised or rough texture in the surface of the paint are those from the later works of the Venetian painter Giovanni Bellini around 1500 8 This became much more common in the 16th century as may painters began to draw attention to the process of their painting by leaving individual brushstrokes obvious and a rough painted surface Another Venetian Titian was a leader in this In the 17th century some artists including Rembrandt began to use dark grounds Until the mid 19th century there was a division between artists who exploited effects of handling in their paintwork and those who continued to aim at an even glassy surface from which all evidences of manipulation had been banished 9 Before the 19th century artists or their apprentices ground pigments and mixed their paints for the range of painting media This made portability difficult and kept most painting activities confined to the studio This changed when tubes of oil paint became widely available following the American portrait painter John Goffe Rand s invention of the squeezable or collapsible metal tube in 1841 Artists could mix colors quickly and easily which enabled for the first time relatively convenient plein air painting a common approach in French Impressionism Ingredients Edit Flax seed is the source of linseed oil The linseed oil itself comes from the flax seed a common fiber crop Linen a support for oil painting see relevant section also comes from the flax plant Safflower oil or the walnut or poppyseed oil are sometimes used in formulating lighter colors like white because they yellow less on drying than linseed oil but they have the slight drawback of drying more slowly and may not provide the strongest paint film Linseed oil tends to dry yellow and can change the hue of the color Recent advances in chemistry have produced modern water miscible oil paints that can be used and cleaned up with water Small alterations in the molecular structure of the oil creates this water miscible property Supports for oil painting Edit Splined canvas The earliest oil paintings were almost all panel paintings on wood which had been seasoned and prepared in a complicated and rather expensive process with the panel constructed from several pieces of wood although such a support has a tendency to warp Panels continued to be used well into the 17th century including by Rubens who painted several large works on wood The artists of the Italian regions moved towards canvas in the early 16th century led partly by a wish to paint larger images which would have been too heavy as panels Canvas for sails was made in Venice and so easily available and cheaper than wood Smaller paintings with very fine detail were easier to paint on a very firm surface and wood panels or copper plates often reused from printmaking were often chosen for small cabinet paintings even in the 19th century Portrait miniatures normally used very firm supports including ivory or stiff paper card Traditional artists canvas is made from linen but less expensive cotton fabric has been used The artist first prepares a wooden frame called a stretcher or strainer The difference between the two names is that stretchers are slightly adjustable while strainers are rigid and lack adjustable corner notches The canvas is then pulled across the wooden frame and tacked or stapled tightly to the back edge Then the artist applies a size to isolate the canvas from the acidic qualities of the paint Traditionally the canvas was coated with a layer of animal glue modern painters will use rabbit skin glue as the size and primed with lead white paint sometimes with added chalk Panels were prepared with a gesso a mixture of glue and chalk Modern acrylic gesso is made of titanium dioxide with an acrylic binder It is frequently used on canvas whereas real gesso is not suitable for canvas The artist might apply several layers of gesso sanding each smooth after it has dried Acrylic gesso is very difficult to sand One manufacturer makes a sandable acrylic gesso but it is intended for panels only and not canvas It is possible to make the gesso a particular color but most store bought gesso is white The gesso layer depending on its thickness will tend to draw the oil paint into the porous surface Excessive or uneven gesso layers are sometimes visible in the surface of finished paintings as a change that s not from the paint Standard sizes for oil paintings were set in France in the 19th century The standards were used by most artists not only the French as it was and evidently still is supported by the main suppliers of artists materials Size 0 toile de 0 to size 120 toile de 120 is divided in separate runs for figures figure landscapes paysage and marines marine that more or less preserve the diagonal Thus a 0 figure corresponds in height with a paysage 1 and a marine 2 10 Although surfaces like linoleum wooden panel paper slate pressed wood Masonite and cardboard have been used the most popular surface since the 16th century has been canvas although many artists used panel through the 17th century and beyond Panel is more expensive heavier harder to transport and prone to warp or split in poor conditions For fine detail however the absolute solidity of a wooden panel has an advantage Process Edit A traditional wood palette used to hold and mix small amounts of paint while working Oil paint is made by mixing pigments of colors with an oil medium Since the 19th century the different main colors are purchased in paint tubes pre prepared before painting begins further shades of color are usually obtained by mixing small quantities together as the painting process is underway An artist s palette traditionally a thin wood board held in the hand is used for holding and mixing paints Pigments may be any number of natural or synthetic substances with color such as sulphides for yellow or cobalt salts for blue Traditional pigments were based on minerals or plants but many have proven unstable over long periods of time Modern pigments often use synthetic chemicals The pigment is mixed with oil usually linseed but other oils may be used The various oils dry differently which creates assorted effects A brush is most commonly employed by the artist to apply the paint often over a sketched outline of their subject which could be in another medium Brushes are made from a variety of fibers to create different effects For example brushes made with hog bristle might be used for bolder strokes and impasto textures Fitch hair and mongoose hair brushes are fine and smooth and thus answer well for portraits and detail work Even more expensive are red sable brushes weasel hair The finest quality brushes are called kolinsky sable these brush fibers are taken from the tail of the Siberian weasel This hair keeps a superfine point has smooth handling and good memory it returns to its original point when lifted off the canvas known to artists as a brush s snap Floppy fibers with no snap such as squirrel hair are generally not used by oil painters In the past few decades many synthetic brushes have been marketed These are very durable and can be quite good as well as cost efficient Brushes come in multiple sizes and are used for different purposes The type of brush also makes a difference For example a round is a pointed brush used for detail work Flat brushes are used to apply broad swaths of color Bright is a flat brush with shorter brush hairs used for scrubbing in Filbert is a flat brush with rounded corners Egbert is a very long and rare filbert brush The artist might also apply paint with a palette knife which is a flat metal blade A palette knife may also be used to remove paint from the canvas when necessary A variety of unconventional tools such as rags sponges and cotton swabs may be used to apply or remove paint Some artists even paint with their fingers Tubes of paint Old masters usually applied paint in thin layers known as glazes that allow light to penetrate completely through the layer a method also simply called indirect painting This technique is what gives oil paintings their luminous characteristics This method was first perfected through an adaptation of the egg tempera painting technique egg yolks used as a binder mixed with pigment and was applied by the Early Netherlandish painters in Northern Europe with pigments usually ground in linseed oil This approach has been called the mixed technique or mixed method in modern times The first coat the underpainting is laid down often painted with egg tempera or turpentine thinned paint This layer helps to tone the canvas and to cover the white of the gesso Many artists use this layer to sketch out the composition This first layer can be adjusted before proceeding further an advantage over the cartooning method used in fresco technique After this layer dries the artist might then proceed by painting a mosaic of color swatches working from darkest to lightest The borders of the colors are blended together when the mosaic is completed and then left to dry before applying details Artists in later periods such as the Impressionist era late 19th century often expanded on this wet on wet method blending the wet paint on the canvas without following the Renaissance era approach of layering and glazing This method is also called alla prima This method was created due to the advent of painting outdoors instead of inside a studio because while outside an artist did not have the time to let each layer of paint dry before adding a new layer Several contemporary artists use a combination of both techniques to add bold color wet on wet and obtain the depth of layers through glazing When the image is finished and has dried for up to a year an artist often seals the work with a layer of varnish that is typically made from dammar gum crystals dissolved in turpentine Such varnishes can be removed without disturbing the oil painting itself to enable cleaning and conservation Some contemporary artists decide not to varnish their work preferring the surface unvarnished Examples of famous works Edit Arnolfini Portrait Jan van Eyck 1434 on panel La donna velata Raphael 1516 The Rape of Europa Titian 1562 The Raising of the Cross Peter Paul Rubens 1610 11 The Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicolaes Tulp Rembrandt 1632 Innocent X Velazquez c 1650 The Milkmaid Johannes Vermeer 1658 1660 La Belle Strasbourgeoise Nicolas de Largilliere 1703 The Toilet of Venus Francois Boucher 1751 The Blue Boy Thomas Gainsborough 1770 Battle of Somosierra Piotr Michalowski 1837 Woman with a Parasol Madame Monet and Her Son Claude Monet 1875 Bal du moulin de la Galette Pierre Auguste Renoir 1876 Portrait of Dr Gachet Vincent van Gogh 1890 The Card Players Paul Cezanne 1892 The Old Guitarist Pablo Picasso 1903 Le Grand Canal Venice Henri Le Sidaner 1906 Les Demoiselles d Avignon Pablo Picasso 1907 The Kiss Der Kuss Gustav Klimt 1907 8 Composition VII Wassily Kandinsky 1913 Bella with White Collar Marc Chagall 1917 Motive from Tartu Villem Ormisson 1937 Nighthawks Edward Hopper 1942Notes Edit Osborne 787 Archaeology Current World 6 July 2008 World s oldest use of oil paint found in Afghanistan World Archaeology Retrieved 10 August 2020 Synchrotron light unveils oil in ancient Buddhist paintings from Bamiyan www esrf eu Retrieved 12 April 2020 Afghan caves hold world s first oil paintings expert www abc net au 25 January 2008 April 2008 Live Science Staff 22 22 April 2008 Earliest Oil Paintings Discovered livescience com Borchert 2008 92 94 Osborne 787 1132 Osborne 787 Osborne 787 788 Haaf Beatrix 1987 Industriell vorgrundierte Malleinen Beitrage zur Entwicklungs Handels und Materialgeschichte Zeitschrift fur Kunsttechnologie und Konservierung 1 7 71 References EditBorchert Till Holger Van Eyck London Taschen 2008 ISBN 3 8228 5687 8 Osborne Harold ed The Oxford Companion to Art 1970 OUP ISBN 019866107X Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Introduction to Art Wikimedia Commons has media related to Oil paintings Further reading EditChieffo Clifford T Contemporary Oil Painter s Handbook Prentice Hall 1976 The Artist s Handbook of Materials and Techniques comprehensive reference book by Ralph Mayer 1940 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oil painting amp oldid 1133981878, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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