The Material History of the Color Blue


Product Detail

Product Tags



Blue pigment occurs naturally in exactly one form: lapis lazuli. That uniqueness made the color a luxury commodity for thousands of years. Traded at a cost greater than gold, reserved for royalty, and written into artist’s contracts, blue is both visually and materially rich. Marc Walton, senior scientist at the Center for Scientific Studies in the Arts, is an expert on blue’s history. Join him as he uncovers the color’s journey through art history, from Cleopatra’s eye shadow to Picasso’s blue period.

The annual Richard Gray Visual Art Series recognizes a significant gift from founding CHF board member and distinguished art dealer Richard Gray and is presented in partnership with the Art Institute of Chicago.

This program was recorded on November 1, 2014 as part of the 25th Anniversary Chicago Humanities Festival, Journeys: https://chf.to/2014Journeys

See upcoming CHF events: https://chicagohumanities.org

Help us subtitle and translate our videos: https://www.amara.org/en/profiles/videos/ChicagoHumanitiesFestival

Follow CHF on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Chi_Humanities

Like CHF on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/chicagohumanities

Subscribe to the CHF podcast on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/chicago-humanities-festival/id303222991

Help us caption & translate this video!

https://amara.org/v/FjuH/


  • Previous:
  • Next:

  • Write your message here and send it to us

    related products