Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Between colour and pattern: Ruskin’s ambivalent theory of constructional polychromy
View through CrossRef
John Ruskin offered an alternative paradigm to the debates on constructional polychromy in Victorian Britain. The paper considers the larger context of the debate and Ruskin’s place within it, which is that he favoured the decorative use of innate colour of materials to achieve concealment of the building’s structure. However, even then Ruskin’s theory of polychromy, especially his attitudes to colour and pattern, remains far from obvious. The paper offers an original insight into this, as it explores Ruskin’s approach to architecture and colour through the lenses of gender, body, soul and dress, presenting his triadic theory of architecture that asserted: a) architecture is a combination of painting and sculpture; b) it is feminine; and c) it analogous to a dressed body. The paper then deploys this understanding to revisit the ambivalence between colour as pattern, and colour as effect, and to argue that for Ruskin the visual field is characterized essentially by simultaneity and vacillation, not singularity and stability. It is argued that Ruskin’s writings complexified as well as undermined polarities prevalent in the dominant paradigms of polychromy, as his writings refused to resolve the difference between pattern and effect, to the same extent that they also refused to the settle the difference between sculpture and painting; canvas and textile; and flatness and texture.
Auckland University of Technology (AUT) Library
Title: Between colour and pattern: Ruskin’s ambivalent theory of constructional polychromy
Description:
John Ruskin offered an alternative paradigm to the debates on constructional polychromy in Victorian Britain.
The paper considers the larger context of the debate and Ruskin’s place within it, which is that he favoured the decorative use of innate colour of materials to achieve concealment of the building’s structure.
However, even then Ruskin’s theory of polychromy, especially his attitudes to colour and pattern, remains far from obvious.
The paper offers an original insight into this, as it explores Ruskin’s approach to architecture and colour through the lenses of gender, body, soul and dress, presenting his triadic theory of architecture that asserted: a) architecture is a combination of painting and sculpture; b) it is feminine; and c) it analogous to a dressed body.
The paper then deploys this understanding to revisit the ambivalence between colour as pattern, and colour as effect, and to argue that for Ruskin the visual field is characterized essentially by simultaneity and vacillation, not singularity and stability.
It is argued that Ruskin’s writings complexified as well as undermined polarities prevalent in the dominant paradigms of polychromy, as his writings refused to resolve the difference between pattern and effect, to the same extent that they also refused to the settle the difference between sculpture and painting; canvas and textile; and flatness and texture.
.
Related Results
COLOUR PERCEPTION SYSTEM FOR PRIMARY COLOURS IN PRINTING
COLOUR PERCEPTION SYSTEM FOR PRIMARY COLOURS IN PRINTING
The current colour system for printing specifies colours using percentages of dot areas of each primary colour, i.e. cyan, magenta, yellow and black. However, this system does not ...
polychromy, sculptural, Greek and Roman
polychromy, sculptural, Greek and Roman
The term “polychromy” has been in use since the early 19th century to denote the presence of any element of colour in Greek and Roman sculpture. The evidence for such polychromy is...
Colour Printing in the Uttermost Part of the Sea: a Study of the Colour Print Products, Printers, Technology and Markets in New Zealand, 1830-1914
Colour Printing in the Uttermost Part of the Sea: a Study of the Colour Print Products, Printers, Technology and Markets in New Zealand, 1830-1914
<p>This thesis is an historical study of the development and the relationships between some aspects of colour printing in New Zealand from 1830 to 1914, including the practit...
The relationship between colour harmony and colour emotions—using two‐colour combinations applied on 3D colour configuration
The relationship between colour harmony and colour emotions—using two‐colour combinations applied on 3D colour configuration
AbstractBoth studies on colour emotion and colour harmony have been developed for many years. For designers, creating harmonious colour combinations that satisfy specific colour em...
The Blue Beret
The Blue Beret
When we think of United Nations (UN) peacekeepers, the first image that is conjured in our mind is of an individual sporting a blue helmet or a blue beret (fig. 1). While simple an...
Menorahs in Color: Polychromy in Jewish Visual Culture of Roman Antiquity
Menorahs in Color: Polychromy in Jewish Visual Culture of Roman Antiquity
Abstract
In recent years, polychromy has developed as a significant area of research in the study of classical art. This essay explores the significance of this work for interpreti...
Constructional network at work in second language acquisition
Constructional network at work in second language acquisition
AbstractSecond Language Acquisition (SLA) has benefited quite a lot from Construction Grammar. Most of the previous SLA researches adopting a constructionist approach have been pri...
Colour variation without objective colour
Colour variation without objective colour
Colour variation is the fact that what colour physical objects look to have depends on viewing conditions and a perceiver’s visual system. Both Colour Relationalists and Colour Eli...

