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Updated: May 7, 2021


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The Mansard Roof by Edward Hopper, 1923.

Nothing hurts like a put down, especially when you least expect it. Let me explain. A few years ago (2013 to be precise), I very happily went to a large exhibition of the work of Edward Hopper at the Grand Palais in Paris. I walked through his lovely paintings of Paris from around 1906-07 and then into a room of beautiful watercolors, the pieces that had brought his first financial success in 1923. As a watercolorist, I was so proud to see these lovely pieces displayed beautifully as important works of art. However, as I walked into the next room, the first thing I saw was signage claiming Hopper's oils as his first "paintings," though they were all dated later than the watercolors. Whoa! Wait a minute. What were those watercolors that had sold so well if not paintings? Then it came to me. Classically (and these curators were obvious classicists) watercolors are not considered paintings, because they are works on paper and not oils on canvas or panels, like important works are. Oh, the pain of being thrown in the art world's dumpster as the medium used for coloring drawings, dabbling on Sundays, and amusing little old ladies (no disrespect, as I count my own gray hairs)!


Well, one can be kicked to the curb just one time too many. So in the interest of preserving my self-esteem and that of my favorite medium, I decided to look into why this most lovely of art forms is so denigrated in the art world. First, let me point out that the use of water to mix with pigments goes right back to prehistoric cave paintings, and no, that does not mean watercolorists are neanderthals. In terms of "civilization," the Chinese are credited with inventing watercolors around 4,000 B.C.E. Ancient Egyptians used fresco techniques to paint their tombs and temples, mixing color with egg yolk (tempera) made fluid by water and applying it to wet plaster. Old Roman murals were done with mixes of wheat paste and sometimes beeswax plus pigment and water. Now these opaque paints are more water media than watercolor since the latter is supposed to be transparent. Still, we are not talking oils here, but water soluble paint. (By the way, the Romans had the ultimate put down on painting, as pictorial representation was not considered important unless it was done in stone, i.e. mosaics. Ha!).



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The Catalan Atlas by Abraham Cresques colored in watercolor,1381

Moving forward in history, we come to see how watercolor took a backseat to the main purpose it was used for. For instance here in this medieval map, the figures are colored with watercolors, but the main thing here is the map. Similarly, there are drawings, illustrations, miniatures, and other items that used watercolors to color the work, but the works are not watercolor paintings. The watercolor takes a backseat to the main function of each piece, normally to show where things were located or to decorate a book, or illustrate an important scene in a biblical story, etc.



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Durer's Great Piece of Turf, 1503.

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Durer The Young Hare, 1502.

However, around 1500, along came Albrecht Durer, who made not just illustrations and drawings but things that come rather close to being watercolor painting (yes, I said it - painting). Look above at the picture of the grasses. It is sort of a botanical, yet it has a mood to it, as though you can feel a light summer breeze moving the stems of grass. It is not just one type of grass but a portrait of a great piece of turf, as it is called. The Young Hare certainly represents the species accurately, but the addition of the surrounding ground with twigs and different plants, and the contrast of that to the cream color of the paper and the reddish brown of the hare are not just ways to illustrate nature but something on its way to being a painting. His watercolors, however, are still categorized along with his drawings and separated from his oil paintings.


It seems to have taken the English, who live surrounded by water, to bring watercolor forward. Watercolors became a "thing" and were actually shown, though they were still thought to be the medium of "ladies" or the sign of a gentleman's fine education. (Prince Charles has followed in that tradition by painting watercolors himself.) However, many fine watercolors were produced, often as sketches for works to be finished in oils. The Lord God of Watercolor (at least for me) is J.M.W. Turner, who not only did magnificent watercolor paintings but translated watercolor techniques into thin fluid veils of color that float abstractly in many of his oil paintings. He was no purest either, using whatever was necessary to get his watercolor effects. Below in The Dark Rigi, he achieves that veil of morning mist with white gouache, an opaque watercolor not a transparent one. But then you gotta do what you gotta do to get the effect you want. This painting was just tagged with a temporary export ban in order to save the painting, valued at £10 million, for the British nation. Thank you, Master Turner. (See the link to the article below) https://www.artlyst.com/news/temporary-export-bar-placed-10m-jmw-turner-watercolour/


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The Dark Rigi Lake Lucerne Sunrise by J.M.W. Turner, 1842.

Of course, even a watercolor worth more than 10 million pounds sterling hasn't yet saved watercolor from being cast aside. In the article "In Art Schools, Watercolors Don't Get Any Respect" by Daniel Grant for the Chronicle of Higher Education, we still see them cast off as part of Illustration courses. It was in reading that article that I discovered why my own watercolor skills were largely self-taught. Art schools don't offer courses past Watercolor I. After that you are on your own.


Galleries, of course, are notorious for not wanting to show watercolors as they are works on paper, of lesser value (tell that to Turner), and have to be under glass. I presented a dealer in Santa Fe, twenty years in the business he, with some updated information. Watercolors can be painted on canvas or panels because of wonderful new products like watercolor ground, which coats the surface to be painted on, and even comes in textures to match that of 140 lb. Cold Press paper. Colors are lightfast and colorfast and can be sealed in with clear non-yellowing sprays. They can be hung just like oils and are quite durable, though Durer's 500-year-old works already show that even the older colors can be maintained. Still it is an uphill battle. However, since I am now two paragraphs away from Turner, I will dare to show a couple of my watercolors here, the first on a large canvas and the second on illustration board over acrylic medium. There are so many ways to go and so much one can do that watercolor should never be a neglected, disrespected form.



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Between the Trees 20" x 30" watercolor on canvas, Marjorie Vernelle

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West of the Imagination, watercolor resist on illustration board by Marjorie Vernelle

So I say, as always, Long Live Watercolor!



What watercolor paintings do your remember and why? Log in to tell us about them.



For more on Marjorie Vernelle, see the author page at amazon.com/author/marjorievernelle

She also has an engaging art history blog that talks of painting and wine on ofartandwine.com


© Marjorie Vernelle 2019


 
 
 

Updated: May 7, 2021


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Black on Maroon by Mark Rothko, 1958

Only Mark Rothko would be cheeky enough to sum up J.M.W. Turner's career in a New York Minute by saying, "This man Turner, he learnt a lot from me." Seeing the work of the two side-by-side, I admit I thought that Rothko's "student" had mastered his master. My cheekiness aside, I counted myself lucky to have been there at the Tate Britain at that moment in 2009 when, for the first time since 1988, works by the two artists were shown together. Their complimentary energies streamed along like two silk banners unfurled in a soft breeze, one touching the other from time-to-time, but neither ever losing its individuality.


I have always loved Rothko ever since discovering his work in 1971, the year after his death. I was newly-arrived in San Francisco and adored hanging out at the San Francisco Art Institute to be at least near the other young art students, though the classes I took were at the Academy of Art, downtown. Now here I was once again in the presence of his work, so I looked at the painting long and hard. It was one of six paintings originally done for the walls of the Four Seasons Restaurant inside the Seagram's building at 375 Park Avenue, New York City. Rothko's feelings about the corporate America of 1959 were made clear when he said he wished the paintings would make the diners sick. Ultimately, he had kept the paintings and given the commission money back. Though I looked long and hard at that painting, it wasn't hard enough, because I don't now remember which of the Seagram's pieces it was. They were all somber and moody like the one above and sent me into meditation, where all was lost in nothingness.


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Three Seascapes by J.M.W. Turner c. 1827

However, once I returned from wherever my mind had gone, on the wall perpendicular to the Rothko was this fabulous Turner, Three Seascapes. Well, Rothko be damned, I'd never seen anything like this. The three "scapes" were stacked one upon the other, with the sky for one being white froth from the waves of the one above it. Little white foam edges of collapsed waves ran along one part of murky gray-brown shore, with a pale hint of hidden blue moving away and under that white fog (froth?). My eyes traveled up and down the canvas finding nothing in any way imperfect about it. It reminded me of some of Rothko's later pieces done in similar colors (see below).


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Untitled Brown and Gray, Rothko. 1969 Metropolitain Museum of Art

The thing that most attracts me to the Turner, especially when compared to a Rothko like the one here, is how Turner uses a touch of nature in the middle on the left. Those points of paint pretending to be white caps lift the eye up to the upper section of the painting, and the heavy black clouds there bring the eye back down again. Your vision roves up and down the painting, giving you the sensation of the heaving sea. Now I certainly do not disparage the beautiful Rothko here, for it very easily makes my consciousness fall into its mystery and lose my distinction of self. The Turner, however, keeps me on the shore, objectively looking into an indistinct distance. For as much as I am drawn to it, I do not lose myself in it even though it is hard to break away from it. I actually loved that painting so, I found myself there at the Tate, contemplating how many years I'd have to serve in a British prison if I walked out the door with that Turner.


And the door was nearby. Just outside was a riverside street, and stairs leading down to a dock on the Thames. I'd be out the door and down those stairs in a flash. Who'd notice? Though it might have be kind of awkward walking around the Tate Modern with this big picture under my arm. I stood there a long time, so long I think a guard got suspicious. "They are really beautiful," I said to reassure him. He nodded warily. Then I looked at the time. Yes, I would have to scurry out and down those stairs if I were to catch the last boat going up to the Tate Modern. So I said goodbye to those seascapes, leaving the guard, who was lingering, much relieved. I hurried off with Turner in my heart to go sit in a wonderful, shadowy room full of somber Rothkos, given by the artist to the Tate Modern because he, Rothko, so loved Turner.



Please join the community and tell one of your art experiences. Have you ever seen a painting you'd love to walk out of the museum with?


The Rothko painting, Black on Maroon, is in the collection at the Tate Modern in London.

https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/exhibition/rothko/rothko-room-guide/room-3-seagram-muralsv


The Rothko painting, Untitled Brown and Gray, is part of the collection at the Metropolitan Museum in New York. https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/484366


The Turner painting, Three Seascapes, is in the collection of the Tate Britain in London

https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/turner-three-seascapes-n05491



Images for these paintings released under Creative Commons CC-BY-NC-ND (3.0 Unported)

Not for commercial use.


For more on Marjorie Vernelle, see the author page at amazon.com/author/marjorievernelle

She also has an engaging art history blog that talks of painting and wine on ofartandwine.com


© Marjorie Vernelle 2019

 
 
 
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