Monday 17 September 2012

Van Gogh's Colours

You might have seen reports recently about new research which has shown that some of Van Gogh's colours are fading and altering in his paintings.  His paintings are of course around 125-130 years old now.

It seems to be a problem with his yellows especially.  Layers of varnish which were added later to his paintings appear to have absorbed some of the surface layers of the oil paint, leading to a dulling or fading effect.

This is one of the paintings which art restorers have been looking at, called Flowers in a Blue Vase.  Paint was extracted and examined in two areas (marked).


Cadmium yellow, which is this colour



had turned a greyish-orange colour and had cracked.  Normally cadmium yellow gets paler and less vibrant as it ages.  However, in this painting the cadmium has formed oxalates within the surface layer of varnish.  

Ironically, this varnish wasn't put on by Van Gogh himself, who preferred his paintings to have a natural raw 'genuine' feel, rather than a pretty finished look.  The varnish was applied by later dealers, conservators and private individuals in accordance with popular taste and accepted practice of the time.  However, the fact that some of the paint surface has been drawn into the varnish creates a troubling problem for present day conservators, who of course want to prevent any further degradation but are duty-bound not to remove any original material.

Van Gogh also used chrome yellow a lot, which is a sharper, more acidic colour (cadmium is a more eggy colour).


Here's that chrome yellow in action in the background, along with cadmium yellow and yellow ochre (the more mustardy shade) on the flowers.

Vincent van Gogh, Sunflowers
 
For Van Gogh, the colour yellow in all its forms symbolised feelings of love, life, hope, positivity in the future.  However, chrome yellow is affected by sunlight, darkening to a brown shade over time.  New analysis using sophisticated X-ray techniques shows that the cause of the problem is a "reduction" reaction that alters the chemical make-up of the chromium in the paint.  

As you can tell by the names, these pigments are made from the colour-bearing metallic elements at the centre of the periodic table.  You don't really want to tangle with cadmium, lead, titanium, chromium or anything else in the paint too much - although as an artist, you do get covered in the stuff.  It's not really advisable to ingest it, although artists do have a habit of 'tipping' their brushes - licking the ends to get a fine point.  Charles Rennie Mackintosh, for example,  tipped his brushes whilst painting his watercolours in the south of France, and ended up dying of oral cancer.

Back at the Van Gogh's, the Van Gogh Museum in the Netherlands is on the case as regards the fading and altering pigments.  However, what about those paintings that are in private hands or in less pro-active or cash-strapped institutions?  

It could mean that, without conservation, we will be looking at some very faded and brown Van Gogh's in a hundred years time.  With colour so bound up with meaning in Van Gogh's work, it would fundamentally alter the essence of his paintings.

4 comments:

  1. judith - you are correct about chromium, especially chromium VI. The oxidation state of the metal will have changed and hence its chemical and colour properties of light due to different adsorption and transmission properties.

    M

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  2. Thank you for that, M! Great to have that feedabck.

    Apparently the research team discovered that the change was caused when the chromium in the yellow paint was reduced (meaning it gained electrons) from chromium (VI) to chromium (III). This process changed the colour of the pigment.

    The 19th century, the time in which Van Gogh was painting, was a time of huge change for painters, with new pigments emerging and new ways of packaging pigment (ie the collapsable tin tube, which meant that oil paint could easily be be taken outdoors on a painting trip). Cadmium Yellow appeared in 1817.

    As regards pigment toxicity, Emerald Green, for example, another favourite of Van Gogh, was so poisonous it was marketed as Paris Green and apparently used to kill rats in the Parisian sewers.

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  3. judith, thats not surprising as its copper acetoarsenite (ie, it contains arsenic) and 0.002mg/m3 concentrations in air require masks and breathing respirators. 5mg/m3 and you are history apparently - but am glad i was not part of the experiment!! It is on the official hazardous substances list so no wonder artists did not live to paint for very long if using it!!

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