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Jaune. Histoire d'une couleur (Beau livre)

par Michel Pastoureau

Séries: Histoire d'une couleur (Beau livre, Seuil, Jaune)

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"Aujourd'hui, en Europe, le jaune est une couleur peu présente dans la vie quotidienne et guère sollicitée parle monde des symboles. Il n'en a pas toujours été ainsi. Les peuples de l'Antiquité voyaient en lui une couleur presque sacrée, celle de la lumière, de la chaleur et de la prospérité. Les Grecs et les Romains lui accordaient une place importante dans les rituels religieux, tandis que les Celtes et les Germains l'associaient à l'or et à l'immortalité.0Le déclin du jaune date du Moyen Age qui en fait une couleur ambivalente. D'un côté, le mauvais jaune, celui de la bile amère et du soufre démoniaque : il est signe de mensonge, d'avarice, de félonie, parfois de maladie ou de folie. De l'autre, le bon jaune, celui de l'or, du miel et des blés mûrs : il est signe de pouvoir, de joie, d'abondance. Toutefois, à partir du XVIe siècle, la place du jaune dans la culture matérielle ne cesse de reculer.0La Réforme protestante, la Contre-Réforme catholique, plus tard les avaleurs bourgeoises" du XIXe siècle le tiennent en peu d'estime. Môme si la science le range au nombre des couleurs primaires, sa symbolique reste équivoque. De nos jours encore, le jaune verdâtre est ressenti comme désagréable ou dangereux car il porte en lui quelque chose de maladif ou de toxique ; au contraire, le jaune qui se rapproche de l'orangé passe pour tonique, joyeux et bienfaisant, à l'image des fruits de cette couleur."--Back cover.… (plus d'informations)
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Yellow is the latest installment in a series by Michel Pastoureau on the history of colors. Previously he has written about red, blue, black and green. The book was a bear to get through. It has been written like a textbook, quite scholarly. My interest in the book was peaked because I am an artist. However, when I bought it it was wrapped in plastic so I was unable to preview its pages. Had I seen how difficult it is to read I would have passed it up. That said, reading each section several times was helpful. I was able to remember many facts about my favorite color.

The book is divided into three sections. We initially have a section devoted to yellow's usage as a beneficial color, i.e., from ancient times to the fifth century. Next we see it as an ambiguous color, or it's usage between the sixth and fifteenth century. Finally, the color is seen as an unpopular one which is how it has been viewed from the fourteenth to the twenty first century.

As a beneficial color we read which plants or metals were used to create the color as well as how it was used in early cave drawings and clothing. Yellow was seen in nature in fields of grain and from the sun. Dressing in yellow was seen as feminine as it still is today. As an ambiguous color, yellow was seen as an important color when it was seen as gold. When yellow was shown as an ordinary yellow, its importance in heraldry and religious texts was much lower than red, blue or green. However, blond hair was always viewed as more favorable than other hair colors, especially on women. The section on yellow as an unpopular color states that the color was never used on clothing by the nobility because it was viewed as not being very modest. Artists viewed it negatively too. While in a bright light yellow is a happy color. When the light becomes dark, it no longer looks pleasant but rather dirty and ugly. Thus, the color ceased to be used in daily life.

The book is a fine treatise but it is not for the light hearted reader. Obviously, someone interested in art history should read this book. It would be helpful for artists too but I believe there are other books on color that would be more helpful for the studio artist. ( )
  Violette62 | Mar 5, 2022 |
A Scholar Proves Research Can Make a Mountain Out of a Color
Michel Pastourea. Yellow: The History of a Color. $39.95. 242pp, color paintings, hardback. ISBN: 978-069119825-5. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2019.
*****
The only other mention of “yellow” in this set of reviews is one regarding “yellow fever”, and yet here is an entire book dedicated to this color. This book is part of Princeton’s series dedicated to the various colors in art. The portrait of a reclining man in yellow on this particular cover drew my attention more than others. The man’s attitude might match my own reverie more than I’d like to admit, though his might be induced by smoking, while mine has been brought about by excessive reading alone. I looked through every page earlier when I was writing a few fiction stories and needed visual inspiration. When I was younger, I would go to parks or travel to different cities or landscapes for inspiration, but now I find that much more active inspiring is achieved by studying art or researching books accessible without spending time and gas on the road. As I was browsing through the pictures searching to details that might color my story, I observed that there really is a great deal of scholarly discussion that can be applied even to a color such as “yellow”. The heavy use of “yellow” in abstract art and ancient Egyptian wall paintings are curious, but then there is the use of yellow gold, which made me ponder if a psychological preference for this color has made this into a metal more highly prized than silver or metals of other less radiant colors. It is mesmerizing to look at Egyptian tombs made entirely of gold metal (28): it would be odd if modern humans spent this much money and labor on a single burial box, even if the occupant was a billionaire, though why billionaires do not bury themselves in golden crypts today is puzzling as well. I have used some of the medieval European and ancient Chinese paintings with gold elements on some of my designed book covers, and these are indeed some of my more attractive covers. As the text explains, across the ages, colors gained religious significance in rituals and in religious laws. Some religions such as Judaism forbit the depiction of humans, while others such as Christianity developed rules regarding the required and forbidden utilizations of various colors: thus, most of us use black for burials and white for weddings today (even if these do not reflect medieval symbolisms). Michel Pastoureau writes: “beginning in the ninth century, gold and brilliant, saturated colors made their appearance into the rich fabrics and garments used for worship”, making yellow less symbolically-specific than white and other defined colors (78). Even without reading these details, this is a beautiful book to behold. In fact, I think I’ll leave it open by my wall to serve as a decoration on the page that depicts a gold-laden anonymous portrait called, “The Family of Henry VIII” (1545) (142). It was drawn two years into his last marriage, after he had killed or otherwise disposed of his first five wives. So, here is his last wife, Chatherine Parr, who outlasted him by apparently looking downwards and enjoying the gold she was given. This should be a useful reminder for me to glimpse as I contemplate the relationship between “servant” authors such as Fletcher and Munday and monarchs such as Elizabeth I and James I.
Michel Pastoureau is celebrated as “a renowned authority on the history of color”: if I knew this was a career option, I might have majored in the study of color. Pastoureau’s previous volumes in this series covered: blue, black, green, and red. This historically explained collection of paintings is “Focusing on European societies, with comparisons from East Asia, India, Africa, and South America. The changes of this color’s significance are recorded with an explanation for how social, cultural and political changes altered its utilization or lack thereof in “art, religion, fashion, literature, and science.” The significance of this particular color is pumped up from its current low standing: “In antiquity, yellow was almost sacred, a symbol of light, warmth, and prosperity. It became highly ambivalent in medieval Europe: greenish yellow came to signify demonic sulfur and bile, the color of forgers, lawless knights, Judas, and Lucifer—while warm yellow recalled honey and gold, serving as a sign of pleasure and abundance.” During a brief period when I was interested in “pagan” religions or witchcraft, I remember studying these types of symbols closely. And during my Hassidic Judaic education, I recall being lectured regarding the colors suitable and unsuitable to female modesty, so these ideas resonate with my subconscious fears and attractions. “In Asia, yellow has generally had a positive meaning. In ancient China, yellow clothing was reserved for the emperor, while in India the color is associated with happiness.” The parts of this book that explain how only the monarchy was allowed to wear purple in England, and these other laws over color are particularly curious. There are similar rules that favor the rich today, but they appear normal to us; considering these obscure color rules of the past stress how wrong these modern discriminations are. Sleeping in a tent in the middle of a national park for free for a wealthy person is perfectly legal, but sleeping in a tent on a street in San Francisco has been criminalized with up to a misdemeanor, and the likely loss of said tent and all other worldly possessions. Is this really much better than not being allowed to wear yellow clothing in front of the king? “Above all, yellow is the color of Buddhism, whose temple doors are marked with it.” This is a curious perspective: modern companies choose sets of colors as their brand-identity, but I guess religions as well as states are much better in this game, as they have retained proprietary rights to their preferred color-codes for centuries if not millennia.
This book features one of the most elaborate and “striking” designs of all of the books I have reviewed. The paper and printing are so elaborate, it makes the images appear as close to the originals as they would look from across a gallery floor. The language describing these meanings is designed for the general public and if you do not speak English, it is also available in “more than thirty languages.” If you are contemplating going to a museum, or purchasing a painting for millions for your private collection, this book is going to involve less gas or less investment, and the outcome might be more nourishing.
 

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Histoire d'une couleur (Beau livre, Seuil, Jaune)
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Introduction

LES CULTES SOLAIRES

Artémis-Diane, déesse de la lune, de la chasse et de la nature sauvage.

Artémis (Diane pour les Romains) est la sœur jumelle d’Apollon. De même que celui-ci est le dieu de la lumière solaire, elle est, entre autres attributions, la déesse de la lumière lunaire. Par là même, elle entretient des rapports étroits avec deux couleurs : le blanc et le jaune
Vu de la terre, le soleil apparaît généralement jaune, du moins par beau temps au milieu de la journée. Pour les astrophysiciens cependant sa vraie couleur est le blanc, car c’est une lumière blanche que l’astre envoie vers la terre. [...]
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"Aujourd'hui, en Europe, le jaune est une couleur peu présente dans la vie quotidienne et guère sollicitée parle monde des symboles. Il n'en a pas toujours été ainsi. Les peuples de l'Antiquité voyaient en lui une couleur presque sacrée, celle de la lumière, de la chaleur et de la prospérité. Les Grecs et les Romains lui accordaient une place importante dans les rituels religieux, tandis que les Celtes et les Germains l'associaient à l'or et à l'immortalité.0Le déclin du jaune date du Moyen Age qui en fait une couleur ambivalente. D'un côté, le mauvais jaune, celui de la bile amère et du soufre démoniaque : il est signe de mensonge, d'avarice, de félonie, parfois de maladie ou de folie. De l'autre, le bon jaune, celui de l'or, du miel et des blés mûrs : il est signe de pouvoir, de joie, d'abondance. Toutefois, à partir du XVIe siècle, la place du jaune dans la culture matérielle ne cesse de reculer.0La Réforme protestante, la Contre-Réforme catholique, plus tard les avaleurs bourgeoises" du XIXe siècle le tiennent en peu d'estime. Môme si la science le range au nombre des couleurs primaires, sa symbolique reste équivoque. De nos jours encore, le jaune verdâtre est ressenti comme désagréable ou dangereux car il porte en lui quelque chose de maladif ou de toxique ; au contraire, le jaune qui se rapproche de l'orangé passe pour tonique, joyeux et bienfaisant, à l'image des fruits de cette couleur."--Back cover.

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