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Special topics in art history
Course: Special topics in art history > Unit 2
Lesson 4: Painting materials and techniquesGold-ground panel painting
Gold-ground paintings from the 13th and 14th centuries were a labor of love, involving many steps and artisans. From building the panel with poplar planks, to applying layers of gesso for a smooth surface, to sketching the design with charcoal, every step was crucial. The gold leaf background was then applied, followed by the painting process using egg tempera paint. The result was a vibrant, brilliant work of art. Created by Getty Museum.
Want to join the conversation?
- What type of people visited these "private chapels", mentioned at- 0:15? 0:16(12 votes)
- Affluent families, who often requested their image painted in with the deity as a saving grace, on their family chapel ceiling. At least they left us with some lovely chapels to gaze at and ask questions about!(18 votes)
- I still don't understand how colors mixed and blended together when painting with tempera.Can someone please explain ?(6 votes)
- Well, the first thing is that they didn't really "blend" the tempera paint. The paint dried too quickly to allow proper blending. Instead, they would have several shades of the same color. They would lay down a base coat and then paint over it with the other shades, varying the width of the strokes to help achieve the color they wanted.
Think of it a bit like coloring with colored pencils. You can't blend the colors, but you can draw over one color with another and how thickly you do so affects what the resulting shade is. You can get some incredible gradients without ever truly "blending" the colors.(23 votes)
- Why are county eggs darker than town eggs and why are they applied differently in art. Example: Younger faces have town eggs and Older faces have country eggs.(7 votes)
- The amount of fresh air and grass a chicken takes in will have a direct effect on the egg quality. As for how they applied differently, people may have darker skin tones from tanning.(13 votes)
- Hello there, does anyone know the title of the text on painting, with commentary on tempera egg yolk colors, that this video mentions, and if it is available to read today? Thank you!(3 votes)
- The Craftsman's Handbook: "Il Libro dell' Arte"
by Cennino d'Andrea Cennini is still in print.(12 votes)
- Why all those people in the paintings had that circumference around their heads? what does that symbolize?(3 votes)
- Thanks for all the great questions Julian. They are all answered in the main art history section. The golden ring or disk is a halo, it is usually a sign of divinity.(7 votes)
- At, the planks are joined by glue. I've tried joining two pieces of wood with glue, and it doesn't really work.... how does it work here? 0:34(4 votes)
- after joint you leave it some time. when the glue will hard then it functioned. you use good quality glue which use for joint the wood.(4 votes)
- Atthe narrator speaks of a reddish brown clay uses as the adhesive for the gold. What kind of clay was it and where did they get it? Was this clay prevalent everywhere or just in specific regions of the world? 4:10(4 votes)
- Bole, otherwise known as burnishing clay, is primarily found in Armenia.
sources: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armenian_bole, personal experience
please fact check.(2 votes)
- Why did they use would back then? Wasn't paper available?(2 votes)
- From the beginning of the medieval period - c. 500 - parchment (made from processed animal skin) was the primary material for writing. In the early days of parchment, books were also made from papyrus (plant leaves), which had been the main support for writing before parchment emerged. Books made from paper first appeared in the late 13th century, although the material itself had been around longer, though limited to administrative purposes (from the 12th century in the West, and even much earlier in Arabic and Chinese culture). In the West, the two materials - parchment and paper - were equals in the early 15th century. Paper provided a cheaper means to make books.(4 votes)
- Also, at, how thick was the gold leaf in the middle ages compared to gold leaf today? what is the measurement for gold leaf today? 3:58(3 votes)
- Not sure of the measurement in medieval/Renaissance times, but today it's measured as grams per 1000 leaves (i.e. 18 to 23 gms/1000 leaves). Content is varied - up to 24kt (100% gold). Leaf with lower gold contents can include silver, copper, and/or mica; different contents contribute to different colourings/tonal variations.
Sources: personal experience; http://www.gildedplanet.com/gold_home.asp#thick;
Readers -- please feel free to correct any erroneous information!(2 votes)
- I still can not understand how the artist achieved such a smooth and straight gold surface, which looks like a one single and unbroken leaf. Inwe see that surface is covered by small separate leaves with wrinkles; we also see the clay between. After this on 4:55we already see solid surface. Can you tell me please how the seams are hidden while burnishing? Thank you! 5:03(3 votes)
- As the artist put the work together, she was patient, gentle and meticulous in the process of burnishing with a very smooth tooth!(1 vote)
Video transcript
- [Voiceover] Gold-ground paintings of the 13 and 1400s were usually made for an altar piece which decorated a public church or as part of a devotional altar commissioned for a private chapel. Creating a gold-ground panel
painting was a lengthy process involving many steps
and numerous artisans. Before an artist could begin work, a carpenter had to build the panel. First, planks cut from poplar trees were butt joined and held together with a glue made from casein, an adhesive derived from skim milk. Next, the frame was carved and attached. Bare poplar is far too
absorbent to paint on. So the panel was coated with a thin layer of warm animal skin glue, an adhesive that was made by
boiling animal hides in water. Linen was soaked in warm glue, rid on any excess liquid, then spread across the panel and across the frame sometimes as well. This was done in order to
stabilize the seams of the panel and to ensure that the
final painting surface would be as smooth as ivory. The linen also provided the foundation for the next step, the
application of gesso. The gesso helped give the panel a surface smooth enough
for gilding and painting. Gesso, the Italian for
gypsum, is calcium sulfate, mined in Medieval times from
this quarry at Cavallino in the Tuscan region of northern Italy. Making gesso, a task carried
out by workshop assistants, required patience and vigilance. First, the white powdered gypsum was mixed into the animal skin glue. Incorrect proportions of gesso or glue would result in either
cracking or a dusty surface. If the mixture overheated, air bubbles ruined the gesso, for when it dried, the surface would be peppered with pinholes. As shown in our demonstration panel, this could be disastrous
for an angel's complexion. The gesso was brushed on in thin layers. For good adhesion between layers, six to eight coats of gesso were applied during one day and, if necessary, into the night. After the gesso had dried, artisans used charcoal to help them see where the panel was not uniformly smooth. Black charcoal was rubbed across
the now-hard white surface. A steel scraper was
used to level the gesso. Hollows would remain black until the whole surface
was uniformly worked. At this point the panel was ready for the preliminary drawing. Artists used bits of charcoal
to sketch in the design. This design served as a guide
for the gilding of the panel. Any mistakes could be easily
erased with a feather. The underdrawing could be made permanent by going over the faint lines of charcoal with a pen or brush. The underdrawing often
appears somewhat rough. Its main purpose was to fix the boundaries between the painted surfaces
and the gilded background. To provide a clearly
defined edge to the gold, a needle was used to incise
the outlines of the figures. The gold leaf served as the
background of the picture so the gilding was done before painting. Once a halo was gilded and decorated, it is too late to alter the
position of the saint's head. Over the centuries, gold leaf has retained the traditional measurements
of four fingers' width. The main difference
between Medieval gold leaf, which was beaten by hand from gold coins, and that produced today, is the degree of thickness. Medieval gold leaf was thicker, but still only semi-opaque. If the leaf was laid down directly onto the hard, white gesso, it appeared rather cold and greenish. So the artist first applied a soft, reddish-brown
clay mixed with glue. This material was called bol,
a Greek word meaning earth. And it was used to create
a rich, warm ground below the gold leaf. The fragile sheet of gold leaf was put on a padded leather surface and cut into small, manageable pieces. The dried bol was then
moistened with water, which reactivated the glue. And the gold was dropped
immediately into position using a special brush
or piece of thin card. This method of applying gold leaf is today called water gilding because the gold will only
stick to the moist areas. When first applied, the thin leaf appeared rather matte and wrinkled. But the purpose of gilding
was to make the surface look like solid, gleaming gold. To make the gold leaf brilliant, it was burnished with
a dog or wolf's tooth. Modern agate burnishers are still made in this traditional shape. The timing of these processes was crucial. If burnishing was attempted too soon, the gold was rubbed away. Too late, and the gesso hardened, making it difficult to
achieve a glittering surface. Once burnished, the panel was decorated with ornamental lines and punch marks, a process called tooling. Tooling made the gold sparkle and shimmer and drew a viewer's attention to figures of spiritual importance. A compass was used to incise the halo. But good hand and eye
coordination was needed for creating the punch mark pattern. The punch must be held exactly
perpendicular to the panel and struck evenly or one
side of the punch mark would be more deeply
indented than the other. For a more ornate decoration, stippling could be added. The gilded background
can be further enhanced by colors painted to
simulate expensive brocades. The usual method was to apply paint on top of the gilding and then transfer the design
with a pricked cartoon. The dots of white pigment would
pass through the prick marks and serve as an outline. Using the dots as a guide, the artisan gently
scratched away the paint and revealed the gold underneath. Another method of applying gold leaf is called mordant gilding. Artists would use a small brush to paint thin lines of oil and then apply the gold leaf directly onto these lines as they dried. This technique was used commonly to embellish the edges of garments, as shown here in this altar piece by the Florentine artist Bernardo Daddi. These fine lines of mordant gilding did not require burnishing. After gilding, the panel
was ready to be painted. The colored pigments used to make paint were usually obtained
from the local apothecary. To make the paint, water was
added to the powdered pigment and ground together on a marble slab. Paint is simply coloring matter or pigment mixed with a suitable adhesive, for example, the oil in oil paint. In the case of egg tempera paint, however, egg yolk was the adhesive or medium. The recipe was simple. Egg yolk and water were
added in equal quantities and mixed in mussel shells or small pots. The yellowness of the
yolk was commented on by the 14th century Florentine
painter Cennino Cennini. In his treatise on painting, he explained that for young faces, the paler yolks of town
hens should be used. For people of more swarthy complexions, the more orange yolks of
country eggs were acceptable. The very fast drawing time of egg tempera did not allow colors to be
blended as with oil paint. Three tones of the same
color were mixed beforehand. Then the artist hashed fine
lines of one tone into the next. These lights and darks could be modified by either applying more layers of color or by allowing the
underpainting to show through. This ladder technique is best seen in the painting of flesh tones. The flesh area is underpainted
with a layer of green earth as seen in this head of
Saint Luke by Simone Martini. The pink flesh tint, a color made by mixing vermilion, ochre, and white has been applied thinly
in the shadow areas, allowing the green underpaint
to create a cool half-tone. A striking feature of
gold-ground painting of the 1300s is the strength and
brilliance of the colors. Here in the Daddi altar piece the blue of the Virgin's robe was painted with ultramarine. Imported from Afghanistan, its name derives from the
Italian words for beyond the sea. The intensely blue pigment was extracted from crushed lapis lazuli, a long, complicated process that made it a painter's most expensive material. Bright, pure colors were
required for a number of reasons. First, only intense,
true colors could hold up to the glittering halos and
brilliant gold backgrounds. Saints were often identified
by their particular color. The Virgin Mary, for example, is shown here wearing her
traditional blue robe. Lastly, bright colors were needed because Medieval churches
were generally quite dark, and a viewer might see a painting only by a chance ray of sunlight or the glow of a candle. The colors, therefore,
had to be brilliant.