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画作名称:
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A Woman Putting Flowers in Her Hair |
中文名称:
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在头发上插花的女人 |
画 家:
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罗萨尔巴·卡列拉(Rosalba Carriera) |
作品年份:
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1917 年 |
原作材质:
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象牙上的水彩画(Watercolor on ivory in a tortoiseshell pique-point frame) |
画作尺寸:
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8.6 x 10.5 cm |
馆藏链接:
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克利夫兰艺术博物馆(The Cleveland Museum of Art) |
备注信息:
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Its extraordinary thickness indicates that this is one of Carriera's earliest experiments painting on ivory.
Description
Scholars generally agree that Rosalba Carriera (1675-1757) developed the art of painting miniatures on ivory, in place of the traditional support of vellum, a fine animal skin. Although she became famous as a pastel painter, in her early career, Carriera decorated ivory snuff boxes-containers used to hold powdered tobacco taken by sniffing up the nostrils-for tourists. This miniature likely served as a lid to a snuff box, due to its elliptical shape in contrast to the oval or occasionally round shapes of most other miniatures. Although painters of ivory snuff boxes used watercolor, the same media artists used on vellum, the finished images on ivory were crude in comparison to those painted on vellum because ivory presents a greasy, non-absorbent surface, causing watercolor to run. Carriera revolutionized the art of watercolor painting on ivory through a process she termed her fondelli, or foundation. She developed a way in which to work in watercolor on ivory that emulated the soft powdery sophistication of her pastels. She used opaque gouache, essentially watercolor paint mixed with a gummy white, a combination of media which adhered to the oily surface of ivory. News of Carriera's innovation spread through Europe, and in the first few decades of the 1700s, most miniaturists abandoned vellum in favor of ivory.
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