Architectural colour in British interiors, 1615-1840
Details
Type of record: Book
Title: Architectural colour in British interiors, 1615-1840
Classmark: Bedford Collection B279
Creator(s): Bristow, Ian C
Additional creator(s): Bedford, John Victor (1941-2019) (Former owner); Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art (Other)
Publisher: Published for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art by Yale University Press
Publication city: New Haven
Date(s): 1996
Language: English
Size and medium: xxi, 265 pages
Persistent link: https://explore.library.leeds.ac.uk/special-collections-explore/729644
Printed items catalogue: https://leeds.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?vid=44LEE_INST:VU1&docid=alma991019895466305181
Description
Includes bibliographical references (pages 241-249) and index.
"For many years, historical architectural colour has been an elusive topic, since paint fades and discolours, and most early schemes have been obliterated by succeeding phases of redecoration. In parallel with this, the taste of later generations has also overlaid earlier ideas of colour with a mass of subjective opinion and received wisdom. To remedy matters, this objective study combines information from documentary sources with data obtained from the technical investigation of significant interiors by important architects of the period, and presents for the first time a coherent outline of true historical practice. It is an essential complement to more conventional architectural studies of form and space." "In a series of chapters, the noble interiors of Inigo Jones are contrasted with more intimate spaces of the period; and the succeeding drabness adopted in many rooms of the second half of the seventeenth century is set against its taste for marbling, graining, and imitation japan. It
is shown how the new foundation established by the Palladians came to provide the basis for the lively use of colour by Robert Adam and his contemporaries; and the study concludes by showing how the development of colour theory in the early nineteenth century superseded eighteenth-century ideas and, combined with the Regency taste for the exotic, led to an entirely new outlook, much of which still forms present-day preconceptions."--Jacket.
1. Introduction: the age of Inigo Jones -- 2. The age of Wren -- 3. The Palladians from 1715 to the mid-1750s -- 4. The coloured neo-classical ceilings of Robert Adam and his contemporaries -- 5. Paint colour on walls in neo-classical interiors -- 6. The late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries: archaeological and exotic influences -- 7. New perceptions of colour: its usage at the end of the period -- Sources: 1 Bibliography -- Sources: 2 Manuscript and other unpublished sources -- Sources: 3 Collections of architectural drawings -- Sources: 4 Pictures and watercolours -- Sources: 5 Other objects, trade cards, &c.
Provenance
Leeds University Library copy at Bedford Collection B279: From the John Evan Bedford Library, gifted in 2019. Twenty-first-century pictorial bookplate on front pastedown: John Evan Bedford. Former reference: JDC/10.
Access and usage
Access
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