Description
Four Centuries of Color
The human history of color, in two sweeping volumes.
The earliest forms of human creativity – in carvings, markings, and cave paintings – bear witness to
humanity’s engagement with color. Almost as old as these examples is the desire to assign structure, order, and meaning to this
universal yet elusive concept, and it is this fascination that unites the works compiled in this expansive edition.
Gathering over 65 rare books and manuscripts from a wealth of institutions, including the most distinguished
color collections worldwide, The Book of Colour Concepts takes the reader on a chromatic odyssey across four centuries and over 1,000
images of luscious wheels and globes, painstakingly collated charts, and meticulous diagrams, many of them newly photographed
exclusively for this edition. Some of these concepts provide exhaustive taxonomies of color, while others reflect upon the relationship
of color and music, or the affinities between color and human emotions.
Seminal works of
color theory, such as Isaac Newton’s Opticks and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s hugely significant Zur Farbenlehre, are shown alongside
rare and unfamiliar contributions, including the theosophical color systems of Charles Webster Leadbeater and Annie Besant, the
comprehensive color ‘dictionary’ of Aloys John Maerz and Morris Rea Paul, and the patchwork combinations of the Japanese costume
designer and artist Sanzō Wada.
The two volumes also bring many intriguing and often
overlooked works by women into the spotlight, including the radically inventive color “blots” of the English flower painter Mary
Gartside and a botanical notebook by the pionieering spiritualist Hilma af Klint.
The color
systems that make up this edition are contextualized by introductory essays from editor Alexandra Loske and co-author Sarah Lowengard,
while authoritative texts from the editor on the works reproduced set out each concept in further detail. Illuminating the history of
color in all its shapes and forms, The Book of Colour Concepts offers a chromatic chronology unparalleled in scope.
The editor
Alexandra Loske is a British-German art historian, writer, and museum curator, with a particular interest in the role of women in the history of colour. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Sussex, and is currently Curator of the Royal Pavilion in Brighton. Loske has lectured and been published widely on colour and other topics, and has curated a number of exhibitions, including “Regency Colour and Beyond, 1785–1845” at the Royal Pavilion in 2014.
The contributing author
Sarah Lowengard is a historian of technology and science who writes about practical and philosophical engagements with colour. A practicing art conservator for more than 40 years and an artisan colour-maker for even longer, Lowengard is a member of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at the Cooper Union in New York City, and maintains affiliation with several technical art history and analytical art organizations in the United States and abroad.
The Book of Colour Concepts
Hardcover, two vols. in slipcase, 24.3 x 30.4 cm, 6.15 kg, 846 pages
Edition: Multilingual (English, French, German, Spanish)