Miniature Color Chart

Miniature Color Chart
Author: H.W. Johns Manufacturing Co
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1
Release: 1893
Genre: Building materials
ISBN:

The card has a color chart of primary, secondary, tertiary, and complementary colors; on the verso is a listing of trade exhibitions featuring H.W. Johns products such as paints, roofing, building, and fire-proofing materials.

H.W. Johns' Miniature Color Chart

H.W. Johns' Miniature Color Chart
Author: H.W. Johns Manufacturing Co
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1
Release: 1892
Genre: Color guides
ISBN:

The card has a color chart of primary, secondary, and tertiary colors; on the verso is information on colors, definitions, principles, and rules.

Color Chart

Color Chart
Author: Ann Temkin
Publisher: The Museum of Modern Art
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2008
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780870707315

Color Chart celebrates a paradox: the lush beauty that results when contemporary artists assign colour decisions to chance, readymade source or arbitrary system. Midway through the 20th century, long-held convictions regarding the spiritual truth or scientific validity of particular colours gave way to an excitement about colour as a mass-produced and standardized commercial product. The Romantic quest for personal expression instead became Andy Warhol's 'I want to be a machine'; the artistry of mixing pigments was eclipsed by Frank Stella's 'Straight out of the can; it can't get better than that'. This book, and the exhibition it accompanies, is the first devoted to this pivotal transformation, and features work by some forty artists ranging from Ellsworth Kelly and Gerhard Richter to Sherrie Levine and Damien Hirst.

Chromographia

Chromographia
Author: Nicholas Gaskill
Publisher: U of Minnesota Press
Total Pages: 366
Release: 2018-12-25
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1452957630

The first major literary and cultural history of color in America, 1880–1930 Chromographia tells the story of how color became modern and how literature, by engaging with modern color, became modernist. From the vivid pictures in children’s books to the bold hues of abstract painting, from psychological theories of perception to the synthetic dyes that brightened commercial goods, color concerned both the material stuff of modernity and its theoretical and artistic formulations. Chromographia spans these diverse practices to reveal the widespread effects on U.S. literature and culture of the chromatic revolution that unfolded at the turn of the twentieth century. In analyzing color experience through the lens of U.S. writers (including Charlotte Perkins Gilman, L. Frank Baum, Stephen Crane, Charles Chesnutt, Gertrude Stein, Nella Larsen, and William Carlos Williams), Chromographia argues that modern aesthetic techniques are inseparable from the theories and technologies that drove modern color. Nicholas Gaskill shows how literature registered the social worlds within which chromatic technologies emerged, and also experimented with the ideas about perception, language, and the sensory environment that accompanied their proliferation. Chromographia is the only study of modern color in U.S. literature. It presents a new reading of perception in literature and a theory of experience that uses color to move beyond the usual divisions of modern thought.