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Blue paper

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Blue paper, also known as carta azzurra, carta cerulea, and carta turchina.[1]

History

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Blue paper has been produced as a type of handmade paper since the early days of paper production. Paper production can be traced back to China around 100 CE, first arriving in Spain and then Italy via the Middle East around 1100.[2] European cotton paper differs from Asian paper in that the pulp is composed mainly of processed rags, rather than of plant fibres.

Production

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The rags were processed into paper in so-called paper mills. The working steps were subject to a strict hierarchy[3]: The rags sold to the paper mill by rag pickers were first sorted by workers, often women and children. In the next step, the rags were stamped and mixed into paper pulp. The pulp was removed with sieves and placed as a freshly laid sheet on a felt base in a first drying process (couching).

Sorting the rags was a time-consuming process that was carried out meticulously for high-quality writing papers. Less so for coarser wrapping paper (carta da zucchero). As work clothing in many regions consisted mainly of blue textiles, blue papers are extremely common. Further, neither woad nor indigo, the most common blue colourants, require a mordant, or substance to fix the dye, and were dark enough to cover stains. However, there are also brown and grey papers[4]. The paper pulp for these less refined papers was stamped less thoroughly. Unlike white papers, they were not bleached and were not treated with starch, as they did not need to be resistant to a quill.

Art

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Until the 18th century, there was no production of paper specifically or exclusively for artistic works. However, artists discovered the material of blue paper for drawings in the 15th century at the latest[5]. Towards the end of the 15th century, blue paper was used as a support for letterpress printing and after the late 1400s, it was also used for printmaking [6]. The reason for the choice of blue paper may, above all, lie in its colour, which offered a unique starting point for modelling light and shadow compared to white paper. This is because the artist usually began with a dark drawing instrument, such as a pen or brush dipped in ink, charcoal or chalk. These dark lines or traces are closer in tonality to the coloured paper than to the lighter white paper. This gives you the option of adding white as a point of contrast, with modelling the highlights with lead or opaque white as an additional step. This step is not trivial, as it provides a new opportunity to differentiate the modelling. Even white paper was sometimes coloured with an opaque ground layer to achieve this differentiation[7]. These drawn studies of light and shadow provided a preparation for the more nuanced execution of such modelling in coloured painting. However, such drawings on coloured paper with their more elaborate modelling (compared, for example, to many chalk or pen and ink drawings on white paper) had a special aesthetic effect. As such, they were prized early on by collectors.

The earliest drawings on blue paper date back to the early 15th century in Northern Italy[8]. Beginning in the 15th century, a proliferation took place in Venice[9]. North of the Alps, blue paper was used for drawings from the early 16th century: First by Albrecht Dürer, then demonstrably by Hans Burgkmair and Jörg Breu[10]. In the Netherlands, the material became as a chosen support beginning in the 1630s[11]. The Dutch used logwood, made available by through the West Indies Company, as a blue colourant. Logwood-dyed rags were processed into paper pulp or the dye was introduced directly into the vat, a process credited to Dutch papermakers[12]. For pastel painting, which emerged in the late 17th century, blue paper was used particularly frequently as a support material alongside parchment, silk, canvas, wood, and copper[13].

Literature

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  • Irene Brückle, The Historical Manufacture of Blue-Coloured Paper, in: The Paper Conservator, 1993, vol. 17, pp. 20-31.
  • Irene Brückle, Blue-colored paper in drawings, in: Drawing, 1993, vol. 14, no. 4, pp. 73-77.
  • Peter Bower, Blues and Browns and Drabs: The Evolution of Colored Papers, in: Harriet K. Stratis and Britt Salvesen (eds.), The Broad Spectrum. Studies in the Materials, Techniques, and Conservation of Color on Paper, London 2002, pp. 42-48, ISBN 978-1873132579.
  • Iris Brahms, Schnelligkeit als visuelle und taktile Erfahrung. Zum chiaroscuro in der venezianischen Zeichenpraxis, in: Magdalena Bushart and Henrike Haug (eds.), Technische Innovationen und künstlerisches Wissen in der Frühen Neuzeit, Interdependenzen: Die Künste und ihre Techniken, vol. 1, Cologne/Weimar/Berlin 2015, pp. 205-229, pl. 28-30, ISBN: 978-3412210908.
  • Thea Burns, Making Space for the Materiality of Blue Paper, in: Claude Laroque (eds.), Histoire du papier et de la papeterie, Actualités de la recherche - II, Paris, site de l'HiCSA, 2020, pp. 70-84. <https://hicsa.univ-paris1.fr/>. Last accessed: 29.10.2024.
  • Alexa McCarthy, Govert Flinck's Figure Studies on Blue Paper: The Role of Materials in Stylistic Development, in: Iris Brahms (ed.), Gezeichnete Evidentia: Zeichnungen auf kolorierten Papieren in Süd und Nord von 1400 bis 1700, Berlin 2021, pp. 197-216, ISBN 978-3110634495.
  • Iris Brahms, Textur, Transparenz und Täuschung. Blaue Papiere und Schriftquellen in Pastellen des 18. Jahrhunderts, in: Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte, 2023, vol. 86, no. 1, pp. 68-99, <https://doi.org/10.1515/ZKG-2023-1006>. Last accessed: 10.01.2024.
  • Iris Brahms, Ecologies of Blue Paper. Dürer and Beyond, in: 21: Inquiries into Art, History and the Visual, 2023, no. 4, pp. 603-638, <https://doi.org/10.11588/xxi.2023.4>. Last accessed: 21.12.2023.
  • Iris Brahms, The Carracci’s Reflection of Blue. Carte Azzurre in Annibale and Agostino’s Drawings and their Criticism of Vasari’s Doctrine, in: Logbuch Wissensgeschichte des SFB Episteme in Bewegung, Freie Universität Berlin, 22.03.2024, <https://www.logbuch-wissensgeschichte.de/author/iris-brahms/>. Last accessed: 23.10.2024.
  • Alexa McCarthy, Legacies on Blue Paper: Drawing in the Bassano, Caliari, and Tintoretto Family Workshops, in: Thomas Dalla Costa and Maria Aresin (eds.), Venetian Disegno: New Frontiers, London 2024, pp. 74-84, ISBN 978-1915401007.
  • Edina Adam and Michelle Sullivan (eds.), Drawing on Blue: European Drawings on Blue Paper, 1400s-1700s, Los Angeles 2024, ISBN 978-1606068670.
  • Leila Sauvage and Marie-Noëlle Grison, The handmade blue paper project: Application of experimental archaeology methods to study the materiality of Dutch blue paper (1650-1750), in: Jaarboek voor Nederlandse Boekgeschiedenis, 2023, vol. 30, pp. 64-90. <https://doi.org/10.5117/JNB2023.004.GRIS>. Last accessed: 30.10.2024.
  • Alexa McCarthy, Laura Moretti, Paolo Sachet (eds.), Venice in Blue: The Use of carta azzurra in the Artist’s Studio and in the Printer’s Workshop, ca. 1500–50 (Testi e fonti per la storia della grafica), Florence 2024, ISBN 978-8822269096.

References

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  1. ^ Barbara H. Berrie, I pigmenti nella pittura veneziana e islamica, in: Stefano Carboni (ed.), Venezia e l’Islam: 828-1797, Venice 2007, pp. 163-167, 166, ISBN-13: 9788831793742.
  2. ^ S.J. Robert I. Burns, Paper comes to the West. 800-1400, in: Uta Lindgren (ed.), Europäische Technik im Mittelalter 800 bis 1400. Tradition und Innovation, Berlin 1996, pp. 413-422, ISBN 978-3-7861-1748-3.
  3. ^ Cathleen Baker, From the Hand to the Machine: Nineteenth-Century American Paper and Mediums: Technologies, Materials, and Conservation, Ann Arbor 2010, p. 20, ISBN: 9780979797422.
  4. ^ Bower 2002, pp. 42-48.
  5. ^ Brückle 1993.
  6. ^ McCarthy / Moretti / Sachet 2024.
  7. ^ Jana Graul, "Il principio e la porta del colorire". Zur Rolle farbiger Fonds in der Florentiner Zeichnung des 14. und 15. Jahrhunderts, in: Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Institutes in Florenz, 2008, vol. 52, pp. 6-22; Iris Brahms, Zwischen Licht und Schatten. Zur Tradition der Farbgrundzeichnung bis Albrecht Dürer (Berliner Schriften zur Kunst), Paderborn 2016, ISBN 978-3-7705-5899-5.
  8. ^ Lorenza Melli, I disegni Italiani del quattrocento nel Kupferstich-Kabinett di Dresda,Istituto Universitario Olandese di Storia dell’Arte, Florence, Florence 2006; Brahms 2015.
  9. ^ McCarthy / Moretti / Sachet 2024; McCarthy, Legacies, 2024.
  10. ^ Brahms, Ecologies, 2023.
  11. ^ McCarthy 2021; Alexa McCarthy, Carta azzurra / blauw papier: Drawing on Blue Paper in Italy and the Netherlands, ca. 1450–ca. 1660, PhD Dissertation, University of St Andrews, 2022; Sauvage / Grison, Making Blue Paper in the Dutch Republic, 1650-1750, in: Adam / Sullivan 2024, pp. 21-32.
  12. ^ Sauvage / Grison 2024, pp. 25-26.
  13. ^ Brahms, Textur, 2023.
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