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An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

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Page 1: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

An Introduction to COLOR THEORY

by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School

All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Page 2: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Color is one of the most expressive elements because its quality affects our emotions directly and immediately.- In representational art, color serves to identify objects and to create the effect of illusionistic space

Orange Bowl and Yellow Apples1980, Oil on canvas

Janet Fish

Page 3: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Red, Yellow & Blue

Page 4: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Roy LICHTENSTEIN (1923-1997)Untitled1974Silkscreen 82/100113 cm x 90 cmTehran Museum of Contemporary Art

Primary color scheme

Page 5: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

When you mix a primary color with a primary color next to it on the color wheel you get a secondary color.

Red+Yellow=Orange

Yellow+Blue=Green

Blue+Red=Violet

Page 6: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

To achieve Tertiary Colors you mix the primary & secondary colors next to each other on the color wheel.

Page 7: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Warm and cool color schemes

Warm colors

Cool colors

Page 8: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Henri Fantin-LatourFrench, 1836 - 1904Still Life, 1866oil on canvas, 62 x 74.8 cm (24 3/8 x 29 1/2 in.)National Gallery of Art, Washington

Local color (objective color)

Page 9: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Subjective color

Subjective colors are when the colors do not represent the actual local color.

MarlynAndy WarholSilk screen print

Page 10: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Poplars on the Banks of the River Epte, SunsetClaude Monet, 1891The Athenaeum

Local or subjective?

Page 11: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Andy WarholElvis I and II 1964silkscreen on acrylic, on aluminum208.3 x 208.3 cm

Complementary Color scheme

Complementary colors: colors opposite each

other on the color wheelRed/Green Orange/Blue Yellow/Violet

Page 12: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Conditioned color & atmospheric conditioning-

colors appear more intense in the foreground

and have a lesser value in background

Conditioned color & Neutralized Color

Page 13: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Neutralized color - color intensity is neutralized by adding

its complement or a neutral color, white, black or grey.

Conditioned color & Neutralized Color

Page 14: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Local color: the actual color of an objectTonal color: the color variations that result from the effects of light and shadow.

Reflected color -any object you look at is influenced by the color of the environment.

These colors are reflections of surrounding objects.

Local Color

Reflected Color

Tonal Color

Page 15: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Atmospheric conditioning

Neutralizedcolors

The Wolf River, KansasAlbert Bierstadtc.1859Oil on canvas48 1/8 x 38 1/8 inches (122.5 x 97.1 cm)The Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, USA

Warm color scheme

Page 16: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Color evokes mood

Cool color scheme

Pablo Picasso,

The Tragedy, 1903, oil on wood, 1.053 x .690 m (41 7/16 x 27 3/16 in.), National Gallery of Art, Washington,

Page 17: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Light intensity

- a color appears lighter when the color around it is darker

Michelangelo Merisi called CaravaggioMadonna dei Palafrenieri (1605)oil on canvascm. 2,92x2,11Borghese Gallery

Page 18: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Liubov PopovaSitzender weiblicher Akt, 1914, Oil on canvas106 x 87 cmMuseum LudwigAnalogous

Colors

Analogous Colors – colors that have ‘neighboring’ hues,

contain one common color from the color wheel.

Page 19: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Warm or cool color scheme?

Paul Cezanne 1839-1906Landscape, 1900Oil on canvas h62.2 cm , w 51.5 cm

Analogous or complementary color schemes?

Page 20: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Georges Seurat French, 1859-1891A Sunday on La Grande Jatte—1884Oil on canvas207.5 x 308 cm

Optical color mixtures are when the artist depends on the eye to mix the colors.

Page 21: An Introduction to COLOR THEORY by Lawrence Montgomery George Washington High School All graphics by Lawrence Montgomery©

Local color?

Chuck CloseLyle, 2002Chuck Close (American, born 1940)147-color silk screen65 1/2 x 53 7/8 in. Edition of 80

Optical colormixture

Complementary color scheme?