Saturday, December 24, 2022

Earning a Living in the Visual Arts and Crafts [1]
Art Essay

Marie-Therese Wisniowski

Preamble
It has been a long couple of years living with Covid. Loved ones departed, isolation mixed with fear for those we love and want to protect. Lockdowns, isolation, socially distancing, and the need to wear personal protective equipment (ppe). Vaccines that protect us from possible death, but which cannot contain the infectious spread. Variants from alpha through to delta and beyond. Then there are the African variants, Omicron, sweeping across the world and others, that are predicted to come.
Note: In November 2021 a COVID-19 variant was named Omicron, after the 15th letter of the Greek alphabet. The World Health Organization uses Greek letters to name variants, because these names are easier to communicate than scientific designations, like B.1.617.2. According to WHO, the 13th and 14th Greek letters (nu and xi) were skipped over because “nu” sounds like “new” and “xi” is also a common surname.

This is not the first pandemic (e.g., Black Death, and Spanish flu etc.) nor will it be the last. However, where there is human life there remains hope. Kangaroos still skip across our landscapes. Koalas still nest in trees, not far from where I live. The Hells Angels of Australian birdlife, Lorikeets, check out their food source amongst our trees.

Lorikeets
The Hells Angels of Australian birdlife, namily, Lorikeets.

Nature is a constant source of inspiration. We have had an unbelievably wet summer. The flora is just growing in leaps and bounds. Of course, amongst what we find pleasure in, there are weeds to be removed, and so time spent in the garden is another source of inspiration and mental comfort. Our Wollemi Pine (the oldest tree in the world) has added another two feet and is fast growing. How this endangered and primitive tree was discovered is another inspirational story.

Wollemi Pine
Wollemi Pine.

No matter what your belief systems, I wish you a happy and joyous festive season.
Marie-Therese.

Note: The next post will appear on the 14th of January 2023.


Earning a Living in the Visual Arts and Crafts [1]
Most people who practice art, begin their artistic dream, as a hobby and are initially surprised when others want to purchase their work. Okay, if the purchasers are family members then that is par for the course, but when perfect strangers, in an informal setting (such as in a workshop) start to enquire - 'How much do you want for this piece of work?' - an idea to market and sell your art/craftwork starts to gather pace, and in next to know time, you find yourself attending a stall at a local market.

Art & Craft Expo

Kids doing an art 'shoot out' at the Art & Craft Expo (Australia).
For more information click on the link - That Little Art Place, by Guest Editor, Lisa Bendeich - for further inspiration.

People frequently ask me questions about the distinction between a hobby and a business when they are attending my workshops. Their concern is obvious, since as a professional their income is assessable from a taxation viewpoint. However, as a hobbyist, their proceeds are not considered income and therefore is not assessable. But when/how/why does a hobby become a business? There's no simple answer to this complex question, as any accountant will tell you. In Australia the Income Tax Assessment ACT states that: '...the assessable income of a taxpayer shall include...the gross income derived directly or indirectly from all sources whether in or out of Australia...' Nowhere does the act define income. The Act does not distinguish between income from exertion, and income from personal property. While the former is held to include proceeds from carrying on a business and the carrying out of any profit-making undertaking or scheme, nowhere are any of these terms defined.

Craft & Quilt Fair
Click on the link - Marie-Therese and Art Quill Studio @ 2018 Sydney Craft & Quilt Fair.

There are basically three criteria that need to be addressed and they are as follows.
Criterion 1: Does the activity have continuity or repetition?
While a hobby can be the flavour of the month at one time and totally rejected at another, a business has continuity as the needs of customers and clients are satisfied on a continuous and systematic, rather than an intermittent basis. For example, a person could advertise and have one garage sale, but she/he had better be careful if they plan a series of such sales, and intend not declaring the proceeds. It could be argued that they are carrying on the business of selling, and so liable to be taxed because of it.

Criterion 2: Is profit making the object of the activity, and is the degree of participation capable of producing a profit?
While the absence of profit does not necessarily mean that a business is not being conducted, the presence of a profit is a strong indicator that the activity constitutes a business venture.

Of course taxation authorities realize that many taxpayers embark on schemes with the aim of making a loss to set against income earned elsewhere. Similarly, it is realized that profits may be made sometime down the track. Hence, it is the probability of profits not the presence of them, which is important, and therefore the intention of the person is the main focus of a taxation department. It is reasonable to assume that in many hobbies (e.g. art/craft) cost recovery of expenses incurred, rather than the generation of profits, is the financial motive. Once the generation of profits becomes relevant, then the generation of profits is seen as the financial motive. Once the generation of profits becomes relevant, then the characteristic of the activity changes. The presence of capital gains is a separate issue.

Criterion 3: How is the activity conducted?
Three elements can be identified in answering this question. Firstly, on what scale is the activity conducted? This is related to Criterion 2, since in some cases the scale of the operations will preclude the derivation of profits. Scale, however, goes a bit further and introduces the notion of the commitment of assets. For example, if you imported and installed a $6,000 plus loom, with industrial capacity, this would support the conclusion that you were conducting a business activity.

Secondly, the amount of time spent on an art/craft activity is indicative, but not conclusive, that you are conducting a business venture. In general, the running of a business generally requires the application of more time than a hobby, but a person can carry on more than one business at a time, and so it is irrelevant that more time is spent on one more, than another. Hence, the fact you have another occupation or business would not preclude the assessment of the proceeds from the sale of your art/craftwork as assessable income.

Thirdly, the manner of conduct is influenced by the expertise of the operator, and thus training, education and experience are important indicators of professionalism. In this context, the output of a person who holds a degree and/or diploma in art is more likely to be seen as contributing to assessable income than that of people attempting to teach themselves by using articles in the various art/craft magazines.

Contrary to popular belief there is no sum of money which, once earned, indicates that business is being undertaken. For example, most punters pursue horse racing as a hobby, some recording substantial winnings. However, just as losses cannot be set against other income neither do these wins count as income.

For many artists and craft people, the movement from hobby to a business is not a discrete division. Rather, there is more likely to be a sequential development, as expertise is sharpened and the acceptance of work is broadened.

While the emergence of a business from a hobby is a matter of fact and degree in general, if you start to sell on a regular basis, develop a clientele, accept commission(s), exhibit work at professional venues (e.g., art galleries), enter your work in competitions and contests competing against professional artists, promote yourself and your work (have a business card, portfolios, website(s) that sells your art/craft output etc.), you are starting to do what a professional artist/crafter does, it would be argued that you are conducting a business.

Effects of Global Warming
Exhibition: Effects of Global Warming.
View of the exhibited ArtCloth works to the left of the Boiler Room entrance (Rathmines Heritage Center, Lake Macquarie, NSW, Australia).
Click on the following two links - Global Warming and Effects of Global Warming - to see images of ArtCloths that were on display.

Secondly, the onus is on you to prove the correctness of any situation, and not on government officials. The government might declare your proceeds to be the result of a hobby (and thus your expenditure is not tax deductible), or declare your proceeds to be income and therefore assessable. It is then up to you to prove them wrong if you disagree. In arguing your case, test your arguments against the criteria outlined above before seeking accounting and/or legal advice.

Thirdly, you would be well advised to keep accurate records of all incomings and outgoings from the earliest possible moment. Governments generally require that if you are carrying on a business, you must keep records, and even if you don't believe you are, you nevertheless should keep records of your financial activity, since they may require you to present years of records of your transactions at a most inconvenient time for you. As a hobbyist, there is no requirement for you to keep and disclose records, but if the government deems you are conducting a business, they can demand such records to be documented and given to them, over a lengthy period of time. Failure to comply may be very costly for you.

Craft & Quilt Fair
Art Quill Studio@2019 Melbourne Craft & Quilt Fair. July 25 - 28, 2019, at the Melbourne Convention & Exhibition Centre, South Wharf, Melbourne, Victoria.
Click on the following link - Melbourne Craft and Quilt Fair - to read about our company's involvement in that event.
Note: A view of the Art Quill Studio stand at the 2019 Melbourne Craft & Quilt Fair. Here I am surrounded with my range of unique, Australian, contemporary ArtCloth textiles.

During my workshops, some of my students, who enquired about the business versus hobby conundrum when told roughly of all of the above hurdles, a few enquired, 'Do you mean I can't produce art/craft output that people may want to buy without paying for legal/accounting advice and serrvices?'
To which I replied,'By all means do you art/craftwork. It's when you start to sell these products that you may have a problem.'

Workshop: Melding Experoences
Workshop: Melding Experiences: New Landscapes Using Disperse Dyes and Transfer Printing (Two Day Workshop).
To view the students outputs from this and other workshops click on the following link - New Landscapes.

The old scouting motto - 'Be prepared' - is a wise axiom for you to adopt.


Reference:
[1] J. Stokes, Earning a Living in the Visual Arts and Crafts, 3rd Edition, Southward Press Pty Ltd, Sydney (1997).

Saturday, December 17, 2022

African Tie and Dye [1]
ArtCloth

Marie-Therese Wisniowski


Preamble
For your convenience I have listed below other posts in this series:
Diversity of African Textiles
African Textiles: West Africa
Stripweaves (West Africa) - Part I
Stripweaves (West Africa) - Part II
Stripweaves (West Africa) - Part III
Stripweaves (West Africa) - Part IV
Djerma Weaving of Niger and Burkina-Faso
Woolen Stripweaves of the Niger Bend
Nigerian Horizontal - Loom Weaving
Yoruba Lace Weave
Nigerian Women's Vertical Looms
The Supplementary Weft Cloths of Ijebu-Ode and Akwete
African Tie and Dye
Tie and Dye of the Dida, Ivory Coast
African Stitch Resist


African Tie and Dye [1]
Indigo is by far the most common dye used in West Africa. The most popular way of creating a pattern is by introducing some kind of resist by tying, sewing or by applying a paste or wax resist to one side of the fabric. Tie-dyeing is the simplest way, teasing up a small section of the cloth into a peak and then sometimes, introducing some bulking-out medium, such as a seed, grain or chip of wood and finally, tying it off.

Woman selling bread in Mali
Woman selling bread in Mali. She is wearing a dress of tie-dyed cloth.

Sketch of a cotton cloth tie-dyed in Southern Nigeria
Sketch of a cotton cloth tie-dyed in Southern Nigeria for the Igbo market.

The way the peak of cloth is tied off creates different kinds of patterns, although the basic pattern is of a white circle containing a blue dot, all set against a blue ground.

Blue African tie-dye
Blue African tie-dye.

In Gambia, women's cloths, sometimes handwoven, and yardage, always mill-woven, are tie-dyed in indigo vats. Most production now uses synthetic indigo mixed with gentian violet to give a fashionable purple tinge.

Gambian gentian violet
Gambian gentian violet.

Indigo-dyed tie and dye is found all over West Africa, most often on hand woven women's wraps of handspun cotton. The arrangement of the tied circles varies from place to place. One famous tie-dyed cloth from Mali is known as "Salamander's Eyes."

Mud Cloth
Mud Cloth African Indigo throw from Mali.

Long veils called thobes, made of thin, gauze-like cotton or imported damask, are worn by the women of Mauritania.

Long veil


The current fashion is to tie-dye them! Mutli-colored and dyed with chemical dyes, they have a very Indian appearance. They are tied in workshops in Nouakchott. The fashion has spread north and they are now also reputed to be made in Dahkla.

Much contemporary tie and dye in West Africa is done with synthetic dyes on cotton, damask or synthetic fabric. The larger variety of dyes allows for a much wider palette than was avaiable with natural dyes and the thinner mill-woven cloth permits a greater range of possibilities for pleating and folding than the thicker handwoven cloth. However, as with any tie and dye process, the dyeing is always started with the lightest color.

Tie-dyed satin Gara cloth
Tie-dyed satin Gara cloth from Sierra Leone dyed with synthetic dyes.

Tie-dyed cotton Gara cloth
Tie-dyed cotton Gara cloth from Guinea dyed with synthetic dyes.

Cotton cloth tie-dyed
Cotton cloth tie-dyed in southern Nigeria for the Igbo market.


Reference:
[1] J. Gillow, African Textiles, Thames & Hudson Ltd, London (2003).

Saturday, December 10, 2022

‘Vine Glow’
A New Collection of Digitally Designed ArtCloth Textiles

Marie-Therese Wisniowski

Preamble
On this blog spot there are posts that center on my “Wearable Art” (e.g. scarves, digital or analogue created fabric lengths etc.) For your convenience I have listed these posts below.
A Selection of My Scarves
Leaves Transformed: A New Collection of My Digitally Designed Fabrics
My New Silk Rayon Velvet Scarves@Purple Noon Art And Sculpture Gallery
My Fabric Lengths@QSDS
My Fabric Collection:"Oh, Oh Marilyn and Mona!"@Spoonflower
2013 Australian Craft Awards – Finalist
My Scarves@2014 Scarf Festival: "Urban Artscape" Pashminas
My New Scarves and Fabric Lengths
New Range of Silk Neckties - Karma and Akash
AIVA: My New Hand Dyed and Hand Printed Fabric Design
New Colorways For My 'Cultural Graffiti' Fabrics
Byzantine Glow: A New Collection of My Digitally Designed Fabrics
Wall Flower: A New Collection of My Digitally Designed Fabrics
Ink Fern - A New Collection of My Digitally Designed Fabrics
Celebratory Fireworks
My New Silk ArtCloth Scarves
New ‘Unique State’ Silk ArtCloth Scarves
UBIRR - My New Hand Dyed & Printed Fabric Design
Renaissance Man - My New Hand Dyed & Printed Fabric Design
Banksia - My New Hand Dyed and Hand Printed Fabric Design
Ginkgo Love - My New Hand Dyed and Hand Printed Fabric Design
Garden Delights I & II - My New Hand Dyed and Hand Printed Fabric Design
Wallflower III - My New Hand Dyed and Hand Printed Fabric Design
Rainforest Beauty - Collection My New Hand Dyed and Hand Printed Fabric Design
Spring & Autumn Flurry Collection - My New Hand Dyed and Hand Printed Fabric Design
La Volute Collection - My New Hand Dyed and Hand Printed Fabric Design
Urban Butterfly - My New Hand Printed Fabric Design
Acanthus Dream - My New Hand Printed Fabric Design
“Cascading Acanthus” - My New Hand Dyed and Hand Printed Fabric Design
My New Hand Dyed and Hand Printed 'Rainforest Beauty' Pashmina Wraps Collection
My ArtCloth Tea Towels: A New Collection of Digitally Designed Products
Through the Land it Roared . . . ArtCloth Shawl
My New Hand Dyed and Hand Printed ‘Urban Codes - Series 1’ Collection
Urban Moonlight - My Post Graffiti Doily
My New Hand Printed Fabric Design - "Morocco" ArtCloth
‘Vine Glow’
“Bush Banksia’s” Collection"
Releasing My New - ‘Unique State’ ArtCloth Scarves

If you like any of my artworks in the above links, please email me at - Marie-Therese - for pricing and for any other enquiries.


Introduction
This is the last post in the 2022 ‘Vine Glow’ series on this blog spot, which featured the design/s as fine art prints on paper. The prints on paper series consisted of ‘Vine Glow’, ‘Vine Glow - Series 2’, and ‘Vine Glow - Series 3’. Each series consisted of four sets of prints on paper. Each set consisted of a limited edition of three signed prints throughout the series (e.g., 1/3, 2/3, 3/3).

This fourth and final ‘Vine Glow’ post features the design/s translated into a new collection of digitally designed ArtCloth textile designs, which includes fabric lengths and interior design homeware items. The ArtCloth textile designs can also be used for wearable art, accessories, and numerous decorative and functional pieces.


‘Vine Glow’ - A New Collection of Digitally Designed ArtCloth Textiles
I have been designing my hand dyed and hand printed fabric lengths using a range of fabrics and multiple surface design techniques. As a professional senior graphic designer/illustrator in a previous career, I have always had an interest in creating imagery, prints, illustrations, posters, and publications using digital processes. This interest has led me to some fascinating explorations in the field of digitally created fabrics and textiles. I have uploaded my new digitally designed ArtCloth fabric collection, ‘Vine Glow’, to this blogspot.

The ‘Vine Glow’ collection of digitally designed prints on cloth have been based on one of my personal and unique prints on cloth, which employs my signature MultiSperse Dye Sublimation (MSDS) technique. The imagery was scanned, and digitally reworked in Photoshop to create a superb complimentary colorways suite. There are four color-ways in the ‘Vine Glow’ collection. The colors have been sensitively and painstakingly created to encompass the mysterious, deeply rich, abstract vine shapes with vivid hues. The stunning designs can be used for interior design, clothing items and other decorative purposes. The designs employ a mirror repeat pattern technique.

These deconstructed, contemporary, botanically influenced images have been intentionally designed to give the illusion of an aesthetic ‘glow’ and portray another world view of our beautiful fragile flora in sumptuous, rich color! Additional digital techniques have been employed to create imagery that contains depth and a luminous quality to the printed works.

The printed designs are available in the following fabric types from Spoonflower – chiffon, celosia velvet, cotton lawn, cotton poplin, cotton twill, petal signature cotton, linen cotton canvas, organic cotton sateen, performance pique, performance velvet, poly crepe de chine, and satin. Fabric widths vary from 40" (102 cm), 42" (107 cm), 54" (137 cm), 56" (142 cm), and 58" (147 cm) depending on the chosen fabric.

There is no minimum order, and the printed fabrics range from a test swatch (8" x 8" or 20 cm x 20 cm) to a fat quarter (21" x 18" or 53 cm x 46 cm) or to whatever your yardage requirements may be.

These fabric designs can be used for wearable art, accessories, furnishing and interior design projects. If you would like to purchase fabric lengths from my ‘Vine Glow’ collection, please email me at - Marie-Therese - for pricing and any for other queries.

My ‘Vine Glow’ ArtCloth design/s - for wearable art, accessories, interior and other decorative design projects - are shown below. Each image in the collection below shows a swatch (8" x 8" or 20 cm x 20 cm) view of the printed fabric design, a fat quarter (21" x 18" or 53 x 46 cm) view of the printed fabric design and a one yard length (36" or 91.5 cm) view of the printed fabric design.

There are also additional images of the fabric designs which have been crafted into throw pillows, dinner napkins, placemats, table runners, throw blankets, sheet sets, and duvet covers. Other items available in the range include curtains, wall hangings, tea towels, and tablecloths.

To view more of my Digital ArtCloth Fabric Collections please click the following link: My Fabric Collections on Spoonflower

Vine Glow I (Swatch)
Vine Glow I (Swatch).

Vine Glow I (Fat Quarter)
Vine Glow I (Fat Quarter).

Vine Glow I (One Yard Length)
Vine Glow I (One Yard Length).

Vine Glow I (Lumbar Throw Pillow)
Vine Glow I (Lumbar Throw Pillow).

Vine Glow I (Dinner Napkins)
Vine Glow I (Dinner Napkins).

Vine Glow I (Placemat)
Vine Glow I (Placemat).

Vine Glow I (Table Runner With Napkins)
Vine Glow I (Table Runner With Napkins).

Vine Glow II (Swatch)
Vine Glow II (Swatch).

Vine Glow II (Fat Quarter)
Vine Glow II (Fat Quarter).

Vine Glow II (One Yard Length)
Vine Glow II (One Yard Length).

Vine Glow II (Square Throw Pillow)
Vine Glow II (Square Throw Pillow).

Vine Glow II (Throw Blanket)
Vine Glow II (Throw Blanket).

Vine Glow II (Sheet Set)
Vine Glow II (Sheet Set).

Vine Glow II (Duvet Cover)
Vine Glow II (Duvet Cover).

Vine Glow III (Swatch)
Vine Glow III (Swatch).

Vine Glow III (Fat Quarter)
Vine Glow III (Fat Quarter).

Vine Glow III (One Yard Length)
Vine Glow III (One Yard Length).

Vine Glow III (Square Throw Pillow)
Vine Glow III (Square Throw Pillow).

Vine Glow III (Throw Blanket)
Vine Glow III (Throw Blanket).

Vine Glow III (Sheet Set)
Vine Glow III (Sheet Set).

Vine Glow III (Duvet Cover)
Vine Glow III (Duvet Cover).

Vine Glow IV (Swatch)
Vine Glow IV (Swatch).

Vine Glow IV (Fat Quarter)
Vine Glow IV (Fat Quarter).

Vine Glow IV (One Yard Length)
Vine Glow IV (One Yard Length).

Vine Glow IV (Lumbar Throw Pillow)
Vine Glow IV (Lumbar Throw Pillow).

Vine Glow IV (Dinner Napkins)
Vine Glow IV (Dinner Napkins).

Vine Glow IV (Placemat)
Vine Glow IV (Placemat).

Vine Glow IV (Table Runner with Napkins)
Vine Glow IV (Table Runner with Napkins).

Saturday, December 3, 2022

Tempera Painting [1]
Art Resource

Marie-Therese Wisniowski

Preamble
This is the seventeenth post in a new Art Resource series that specifically focuses on techniques used in creating artworks. For your convenience I have listed all the posts in this new series below:
Drawing Art
Painting Art - Part I
Painting Art - Part II
Painting Art - Part III
Painting Art - Part IV
Painting Art - Part V
Painting Art - Part VI
Home-Made Painting Art Materials
Quality in Ready-Made Artists' Supplies - Part I
Quality in Ready-Made Artists' Supplies - Part II
Quality in Ready-Made Artists' Supplies - Part III
Historical Notes on Art - Part I
Historical Notes on Art - Part II
Historical Notes on Art - Part III
Historical Notes on Art - Part IV
Historical Notes on Art - Part V
Tempera Painting
Oil Painting - Part I
Oil Painting - Part II
Oil Painting - Part III
Oil Painting - Part IV
Oil Painting - Part V
Oil Painting - Part VI
Pigments
Classification of Pigments - Part I
Classification of Pigments - Part II
Classification of Pigments - Part III
Pigments for Oil Painting
Pigments for Water Color
Pigments for Tempera Painting
Pigments for Pastel
Japanese Pigments

There have been another one hundred and thirteen posts in a previous Art Resource series that have focused on the following topics:
(i) Units used in dyeing and printing of fabrics;
(ii) Occupational, health & safety issues in an art studio;
(iii) Color theories and color schemes;
(iv) Optical properties of fiber materials;
(v) General properties of fiber polymers and fibers - Part I to Part V;
(vi) Protein fibers;
(vii) Natural and man-made cellulosic fibers;
(viii) Fiber blends and melt spun fibers;
(ix) Fabric construction;
(x) Techniques and woven fibers;
(xi) Basic and figured weaves;
(xii) Pile, woven and knot pile fabrics;
(xiii) Nainkage, durable press and wash-wear finishes;
(xvi) Classification of dyes and dye blends;
(xv) The general theory of printing.

To access any of the above resources, please click on the following link - Units Used in Dyeing and Printing of Fabrics. This link will highlight all of the one hundred and thirteen posts in the previous a are eight data bases on this blogspot, namely, the Glossary of Cultural and Architectural Terms, Timelines of Fabrics, Dyes and Other Stuff, A Fashion Data Base, the Glossary of Colors, Dyes, Inks, Pigments and Resins, the Glossary of Fabrics, Fibers, Finishes, Garments and Yarns, Glossary of Art, Artists, Art Motifs and Art Movements, Glossary of Paper, Photography, Printing, Prints and Publication Terms and the Glossary of Scientific Terms. All data bases in the future will be updated from time-to-time.

If you find any post on this blog site useful, you can save it or copy and paste it into your own "Word" document for your future reference. For example, Safari allows you to save a post (e.g. click on "File", click on "Print" and release, click on "PDF" and then click on "Save As" and release - and a PDF should appear where you have stored it). Safari also allows you to mail a post to a friend (click on "File", and then point cursor to "Mail Contents On This Page" and release). Either way, this or other posts on this site may be a useful Art Resource for you.

The new Art Resource series will be the first post in each calendar month. Remember - these Art Resource posts span information that will be useful for a home hobbyist to that required by a final year University Fine-Art student and so undoubtedly, some parts of any Art Resource post may appear far too technical for your needs (skip those mind boggling parts) and in other parts, it may be too simplistic with respect to your level of knowledge (ditto the skip). The trade-off between these two extremes will mean that Art Resource posts will be hopefully useful in parts to most, but unfortunately may not be satisfying to all!


Tempera Painting[1]
From the crude beginnings in Byzantine and early Christian art and, as some early writers suggest, but without definite proof, from the ancient Greeks, a traditional tempera process came into general use throughout Italy.

Egg Tempera process
Egg Tempera process.

The pure egg-yolk technique was described by Cennino Cennini in a treatise on painting as practiced at least as early as the fourteenth century; it was well established in his day, and his knowledge and training using this technique came to him from the studio of his idol, Giotto.

Giotto
Giotto 1267-1337.

Egg tempera continued to be the principal medium used for easle painting in Europe until the development of artistic oil painting. As the art expert Eastlake expresses it, the early Italian painters, though taking great care to produce durable works, made no attempt to lessen executive difficulties tending rather to overcome such difficulties by superior skill.

Madonna and Child
Madonna and Child by Duccio. Tempera with gold ground on wood, 1284, Siena.

The Flemish and other Northern painters departed from the early Italian methods, using new materials, aimed at ease of manipulation, and producing works technically excellent to a degree impossible to duplicate by strict adherence to the egg tempera technique of Cennini.These methods and materials are supposed to have been initiated about the year 1400 in Flanders and thereafter introduced into Venice.

Figure above shows a map of Europe in the fifteenth century. The area in Northern Europe that is dark red is Flanders, which was controlled by the Dukes of Burgundy (in France) during this time period. We now call the art and culture of this area, Flemish.

Though the medium of oil paint had been in use since the late middle ages, the artists of the North were the first to exploit what this medium had to offer. Using thin layers of paint, called glazes, they created a depth of color that was entirely new, and because oil paint can imitate textures far better than fresco or tempera, it was perfectly suited to creating that illusion of reality that was so important to Renaissance artists and patrons. In contrast to oil paint, tempera dries quickly and to create an illusion of three dimensional form, the paint has to be applied in short thin brushstrokes, like cross-hatching. In the Northern Renaissance, we see artists making the most of oil paint—creating the illusion of light reflecting on metal surfaces or jewels, and textures that appear to replicate real fur, hair, wool or wood.

The period from the beginning of the fifteenth century to about the middle of the sixteenth century produced tempera paintings of a high degree of technical excellence, which serve as models for the tempera techniques of today.

The Holy Family
The Holy Family.
Tempera on panel, 39 x 32 cm, unframed.

Around the same time (beginning about 1400 AD) new materials began to be discovered or perfected. A commercial renaissance began, a result of which was the wide distribution and availability of raw materials. Traders brought supplies from the Orient, and the manufacture of finished goods on a larger scale improved quality and gave uniformity to materials in common use.



Linseed oil had been known and used for ordinary decorative and protective coatings from the earliest recorded periods of European history, but it was a crude, mucilaginous product unlike well-made material we know now as raw linseed oil; however, thinners such a turpentine were virtually unknown. Processes for the purification of linseed oil in the modern sense began to be published about the year, that is 1400.

Distillation was known to writers of the third century AD, but it was not practiced commercially until the fifteenth century, at which time its products, alcohol and other volatile solvents for varnishes and paints, began to be widely available.

Medieval Art
The process of alkali refining linseed oil.

The aim and taste of the artists and their public should be taken into consideration when a study of these changes in techniques is made. Vasari and other writers who lived in a day when tempera was becoming obsolete, and when novel effects produced by oils were widely acclaimed were often prone to condemn the tempera technique from the viewpoint of the tastes, fashions, and styles of their day. Tempera painting was condemned by them as inferior to oil because of the very qualities which make it appeal to its present-day users.

Fred Wessel's tempera painting
Fred Wessel's tempera painting. He is a professor of printmaking at the Hartford Art School at University of Hartford in Connecticut. He teaches tempera painting, lithography and drawing. Fred did his BFA at Syracuse University in New York and MFA at the University of Massachusetts He is very much inclined towards Italian Renaissance and takes his inspiration from the same. He says: "The ever-changing inner light that radiates from gold leaf used judiciously on the surface of a painting, and the use of pockets of rich, intense colors that illuminate the picture's surface impressed me deeply".

During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, some tempera paintings were done on canvas, which had been introduced with the oil painting technique, by that time in full swing. Tempera as a universally used medium in a high state of technical development may be considered to have become obsolete by the end of the sixteenth century.

In following any recipes or instructions of former times, even up to nineteenth-century methods, it is important to remember that the quality, character, and nomenclature of many raw materials have undergone changes, and to be familiar with the artistic or pictorial aims of the period for which the methods were intended.

The statement, made in accordance with general opinion, that tempera painting became obsolete more than three hundred years prior to its present revival, is true only so far as its wide general usage is concerned. Examples and records of isolated works done with older materials can be cited for almost every age, but these individual experiments had small influence either on the general practice among painters of the time or on the major part of the painters' own works. The present revival of tempera owes its extent to the adaption of the technique to the requirements of modern taste, since it makes possible effects particularly well suited to certain modern artistic aims, which did not exist in the recent past. In the early part of the 20th Century its seems to have received its greatest impetus in Germany, although isolated groups of English and American painters have also pioneered its use.

The Dancer Anita Berber by Otto Dix
Title and Artist: The Dancer Anita Berber by Otto Dix (German).
Techniques and Materials: oil and tempera on plywood.

Some partial use of tempera by American painters of the early nineteenth century is recorded. Scully recommended that colors be ground in skim milk (crude casein). A ground made from skim milk and white lead was one of his favorites, and he also mentioned the use of colors ground in skim milk for underpaintings, carrying this work as far towards completion as possible, then finishing with transparent oil and varnish glazes. An emulsion of flour paste and Venice turpentine is also mentioned.

Sean Scully


Reference:
[1] The Artist's Handbook of Materials and Techniques, R. Mayer, (ed. E. Smith) 4th Edition, Faber and Faber, London (1981).