Colour - ACE351.2

1997. Colour - ACE351.2.

TitleColour - ACE351.2
Timecode
In00:00:00
Out00:16:45
Description

Plate of mixed colours, splashes of different colours on canvas, paint tubes, painting. VO says "Artists have always treated colour with caution. Its powerful but unpredictable effect on our emotions makes it difficult to control. How painters have harnessed its energy is a story of endless invention and discovery. Sometimes the masterpieces of colour are so resonant that they can even haunt our dreams’." June Redfern, a Scottish painter living in east London. VO says the colours in her paintings are often drawn from old masters. Examples of her painting. Redfern in a taxi, beginning a trip to Venice to visit her favourite paintings. Redfern VO says she’s going to look at the Titian Assumption for its colours, and do a lot of painting. Venice from the lagoon. Redfern taking photographs from a boat on the canals. Her VO comments on the colours of buildings, etc. Redfern carrying her equipment to the place she wants to paint. Redfern painting. Her VO comments on the colours and everything else she can see. VO points out that she is making a record of the colours and shapes that will be the basis "of something more ambitious" when she gets back to London. Redfern in a boat with art historian Paul Hills. He talks about the buildings "rising out of the water" and of the colours and their reflections, particularly the reflections seen under bridges which he believes inspired painters like Veronese and Titian. Redfern and Hills looking at and discussing Titian’s Assumption of the Virgin, (Assunzione della Vergine or Pala dell'Assunta) (1516–1518) in Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari. They are particularly taken with the qualities and varieties of the red colours. Reconstruction of mediaeval fresco painters at work; VO says these were the first to use colour "on a grand scale" but were forced to work within strict limits. The painter drawing his design on wet plaster and adding colour. VO points out that, as the colours were absorbed into the plaster, there was no room for improvisation; everything had to be planned out in advance. Furthermore, the artist’s contract stipulated how much of each colour he could use. Reconstruction of artist grinding blue pigment from lapis lazuli (ultramarine). The ground stone kneaded in a linen ball in water. It would be reserved for the most important parts of a painting. More pigments; map showing where some of them would have come from, including the Turkish "carmine red" made from crushed beetles. Reconstruction of Titian working on the Assumption, layering his colours (glazes) and thus subtly altering the tones. He also mimicked Venetian light, allowing colours to reflect onto other colours. Redfern’s house in London. She looks at the paintings she did in Venice but finds the colours don’t look as they did originally. She sets up a canvas already prepared with a white undercoat that will brighten any colours she puts over it, and starts painting. Hers VO talks about the work in progress and how she feels about it. Part of her technique is to throw turpentine at the canvas in order to keep the paint as runny as possible; she also uses paint straight from the tube as she finds it more intense. She views the painting from outside her window.

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Colour - ACE351.3
1997. Colour - ACE351.3.

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