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A look inside my brain.

Earth Pigments

7/26/2015

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Earth pigments are naturally occurring minerals, many times - iron oxides, that people have used for thousands of years for natural color. These natural pigments are found in rocks and soils around the world, where different combinations of minerals create vibrant colors that are unique to the region.  Some earth pigments are roasted in order to intensify their color.  Earth pigments include ochers, sienna, and umbers.  I have found that these pigments produce soft, earthy hues that create a uniquely vibrant, natural presence within any piece.  Color..... straight from nature.  

The ochers come from naturally tinted clay containing mineral oxides.  Among the oldest pigments known, ochers have been used for thousands of years for painting, body decoration, ceremonial practices, and the preservation of animals skins.  Available in a range of yellows, golds, and reds.  

Sienna is a form of limonite clay.  The pigment was first used in Italy in prehistoric times. The unique color is derived from ferric oxides.  The name refers to Sienna, Italy, where the pigment was originally extracted.  Today the pigment is found in Tuscany, Sardinia, Corsica, and Germany (in Bavaria, Palatinate and the Harz Mountains).  Sienna comes in a rich, earthy red.  

A clay pigment that contains iron and manganese oxides is known as Umber.  The name is said to be derived from the Latin word umbra (shadow) or from the mountainous Italian region of Umbria, where umber was originally extracted.  Unearthed umbers are harvested from Italy, Ardennes, and the island of Cyprus.  Umber is darker in color than ochers and sienna.  Colors range from cream to brown, depending on the ratio of iron and manganese compounds.  

Mineral pigments are pigments that are created by combining and heating naturally occurring elements. They include ultramarine and spinel pigments.  Historically, ultramarines were derived from the precious stone lapus lazuli.  During the Renaissance, the price of this rare pigment exceeded the cost of gold, and artists often reserved it for the robes of Christ and the Virgin.  Used to by Michelangelo, da Vinci, and Raphael, Europeans called the expensive imported pigment “ultramarine,”  which means “over the sea.”  In 1824, the French Societé d'Encouragement offered a prize of six thousand francs to anyone who could produce a synthetic variety of the pigment.  In 1828, the prize was awarded to Jean Baptiste Guimet who submitted a process he had secretly developed. Today, ultramarine is made by heating soda, clay, and sulfur.  Use ultramarine pigments to create deep blues and violets that are fit for a work of art.  


And finally  there is spinel. The word “spinel” is thought to come from the ancient Greek word for “spark” (spinos).  Spinels are hard, crystalline minerals of volcanic source.  Pure spinels are colorless.  Naturally colorful spinels are extremely rare, and are coveted gemstones.  Color occurs when spinel is combined with mineral impurities inside a volcanco.  The famous Black Prince’s Ruby, which adorns the Imperial State Crown of England, is actually a rare red spinel.  Bold and vivid, the Unearthed spinel colors are created by exchanging certain ions in the minerals by heating and combining them with other minerals.  
Spinel pigments provide vibrant colors with spark.   Available in yellow, orange, green, turquoise, and blue.  

 




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  • Home
  • News
    • New Releases
  • About
    • An Interview wIth Art Reveal Magazine Editor Ann Grahm
    • My Identity in My Work
    • my resume
  • Collections
    • A Colorado Collections
    • The Art of Leaves Exhibit 2019
    • Autumn Trails
    • A Western Collection 2018
    • Rockport Collection
    • Color Sights Collection
    • My Previous Work >
      • the importance of self
      • life celebration
      • gregarious
      • rippling affect
      • rain on my car window
      • healing colors
      • the shower
      • umbrella utensils
      • jose tito
      • the color of rain
      • italian Fruit
      • water dance
      • diversity
      • street stories and making street stories
      • Private commissions
  • Production
    • A word from the artist
    • Color in Black & White
    • A look inside my brain
    • Organics and Why?
  • Publications & Exhibits
    • Exhibits Worldwide >
      • Water Expressions
      • Custom House Museum Surroundings 2020
      • Albuquerque 2019
      • Life Speaks Texas Collection 2017
      • Lone Star Exhibit 2021