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Special topics in art history
Course: Special topics in art history > Unit 2
Lesson 3: About colorThe Alchemy of Color and Chemical Change in Medieval Manuscripts
Medieval manuscript artists used alchemy to create vibrant pigments for their paints. They mixed and heated elements like sulfur and mercury to produce brilliant colors like vermilion. Over time, these pigments can change due to exposure to light and air. Today, chemistry helps us understand these transformations and preserve these ancient artworks.
Want to join the conversation?
- Why do you use it urine to make pigments(3 votes)
- The chemicals found in urine reacted with other elements of the paint to create different colors.
When you think of what was available for experimentation back then, there was a lot of urine around. And when the bottle got empty, you just had to wait a little while, and it could be easily filled again.(2 votes)
Video transcript
[MUSIC PLAYING] Medieval manuscript
artists typically made paint from colored
materials ground into powder and mixed with a liquid binder. Many of the most
brilliant pigments didn't come straight
from nature but were made through alchemy, an
experimental practice that predates modern chemistry. Beyond trying to change
base metals into gold, the alchemists
explored how materials interacted and transformed. Discovering paint colors
was a practical outcome. Alchemy embraced astrology,
medicine, philosophy, and mysticism. And within those contexts,
colors had specific meanings. A brilliant red, vermilion, was
associated with chemical change and with alchemy itself. Producing vermilion
involved combining two elements, sulfur and
mercury, mixed and heated until a chemical
reaction occurred. When ground into powder,
vermilion turns deep red. Many other vibrant
pigments result from chemical transformations--
mosaic gold, produced by fusing tin and sulfur
in the presence of mercury; verdigris, made
by exposing copper to fumes of vinegar,
wine, or even urine; and lead white, made in a
process similar to verdigris but with lead. Chemical transformation
doesn't just happen when a color is born. It can occur throughout
the life of a pigment, even centuries later, and
museum researchers study it. The vivid colors
of illuminations are often preserved
because books are typically kept closed. But sometimes,
books are left open and their pigments can fade
from exposure to light. Some colors darken from exposure
to atmospheric conditions, others corrode. Verdigris can actually
destroy the parchment or paper it's painted on. Today, chemistry
deepens our knowledge about paint colors,
their identification, and potential transformations. Museums take
preventative measures by controlling an artwork's
environment and exposure to light. Sometimes, an original color
can be restored as long as this is done carefully. By analyzing the chemical
nature of materials, scientists can visualize how
a pigment may have looked when it was first created. Chemistry also reveals
the astonishing knowledge that medieval
alchemists and painters brought to working with color.