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Painting is a visual art, which is characterized by the practice of applying paint, pigment, color or other medium to a solid surface (called "matrix"[1] or "support").[2] The medium is commonly applied to the base with a brush. Other implements, such as palette knives, sponges, airbrushes, the artist's fingers, or even a dripping technique that uses gravity may be used. One who produces paintings is called a painter.
In art, the term "painting" describes both the act and the result of the action (the final work is called "a painting"). The support for paintings includes such surfaces as walls, paper, canvas, wood, glass, lacquer, pottery, leaf, copper and concrete, and the painting may incorporate other materials, in single or multiple form, including sand, clay, paper, cardboard, newspaper, plaster, gold leaf, and even entire objects.
Cave paintings depicting a wild boar hunt in the Maros-Pangkep karst of Sulawesi are estimated to be at least 43,900 years old (2014). This finding was recognized as "the oldest known depiction of storytelling and the earliest instance of figurative art in human history."
Redrawing of hunting scene from the Caves in the Maros-Pangkep karst
The depiction of a bull found in the Lubang Jeriji Saleh, Indonesia, in 2018, is the world's oldest known figurative painting. The painting is estimated to have been created around 40,000 to 52,000 years ago, or even earlier.
In 2021, researchers discovered ancient cave art in Leang Tedongnge, Sulawesi, Indonesia, estimated to be at least 45,500 years old. Depicting a warty pig, this artwork is recognized as the world's oldest known example of figurative or representational art.
In November 2018, scientists reported the discovery of the then-oldest known figurative art painting, over 40,000 (perhaps as old as 52,000) years old, of an unknown animal, in the cave of Lubang Jeriji Saléh on the Indonesian island of Borneo.[6][7] In December 2019, cave paintings portraying pig hunting within the Maros-Pangkep karst region in Sulawesi were discovered to be even older, with an estimated age of at least 43,900 years. This finding was recognized as "the oldest known depiction of storytelling and the earliest instance of figurative art in human history."[8][9] In 2021, cave art of a pig found in Sulawesi, Indonesia, and dated to over 45,500 years ago, has been reported.[10][11] On July 3, 2024, the journal Nature published research findings indicating that the cave paintings which depict anthropomorphic figures interacting with a pig and measure 36 by 15 inches (91 by 38 cm) in Leang Karampuang are approximately 51,200 years old, establishing them as the oldest known paintings in the world.[12][13]
The invention of photography had a major impact on painting. In the decades after the first photograph was produced in 1829, photographic processes improved and became more widely practiced, depriving painting of much of its historic purpose to provide an accurate record of the observable world. A series of art movements in the late 19th and early 20th centuries—notably Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Fauvism, Expressionism, Cubism, and Dadaism—challenged the Renaissance view of the world. Eastern and African painting, however, continued a long history of stylization and did not undergo an equivalent transformation at the same time.[citation needed]
Modern and Contemporary art has moved away from the historic value of craft and documentation in favour of concept. This has not deterred the majority of living painters from continuing to practice painting either as a whole or part of their work. The vitality and versatility of painting in the 21st century defy the previous "declarations" of its demise. In an epoch characterized by the idea of pluralism, there is no consensus as to a representative style of the age. Artists continue to make important works of art in a wide variety of styles and aesthetic temperaments—their merits are left to the public and the marketplace to judge.
The Feminist art movement[15] began in the 1960s during the second wave of feminism. The movement sought to gain equal rights and equal opportunities for female artists internationally.
Color, made up of hue, saturation, and value, dispersed over a surface is the essence of painting, just as pitch and rhythm are the essence of music. Color is highly subjective, but has observable psychological effects, although these can differ from one culture to the next. Black is associated with mourning in the West, but in the East, white is. Some painters, theoreticians, writers, and scientists, including Goethe,[16]Kandinsky,[17] and Newton,[18] have written their own color theory.
Moreover, the use of language is only an abstraction of color equivalent. The word "red", for example, can cover a wide range of variations from the pure red of the visible spectrum of light. There is not a formalized register of different colors in the way that there is agreement on different notes in music, such as F or C♯. For a painter, color is not simply divided into basic (primary) and derived (complementary or mixed) colors (like red, blue, green, brown, etc.).
Painters deal practically with pigments,[19] so "blue" for a painter can be any of the blues: phthalocyanine blue, Prussian blue, indigo, Cobalt blue, ultramarine, and so on. Psychological and symbolical meanings of color are not, strictly speaking, means of painting. Colors only add to the potential, derived context of meanings, and because of this, the perception of a painting is highly subjective. The analogy with music is quite clear—sound in music (like a C note) is analogous to "light" in painting, "shades" to dynamics, and "coloration" is to painting as the specific timbre of musical instruments is to music. These elements do not necessarily form a melody (in music) of themselves; rather, they can add different contexts to it.
Modern artists have extended the practice of painting considerably to include, as one example, collage, which began with Cubism and is not painting in the strict sense. Some modern painters incorporate different materials such as metal, plastic, sand, cement, straw, leaves or wood for the texture. Examples of this are the works of Jean Dubuffet and Anselm Kiefer. There is a growing community of artists who use computers to "paint" color onto a digital "canvas" using programs such as Adobe Photoshop, Corel Painter, and many others. These images can be printed onto traditional canvas if required.
Jean Metzinger's mosaic-like Divisionist technique had its parallel in literature; a characteristic of the alliance between Symbolist writers and Neo-Impressionist artists:
I ask of divided brushwork not the objective rendering of light, but iridescences and certain aspects of color still foreign to painting. I make a kind of chromatic versification and for syllables, I use strokes which, variable in quantity, cannot differ in dimension without modifying the rhythm of a pictorial phraseology destined to translate the diverse emotions aroused by nature. (Jean Metzinger, c. 1907)[20]
Rhythm, for artists such as Piet Mondrian,[21][22] is important in painting as it is in music. If one defines rhythm as "a pause incorporated into a sequence", then there can be rhythm in paintings. These pauses allow creative force to intervene and add new creations—form, melody, coloration. The distribution of form or any kind of information is of crucial importance in the given work of art, and it directly affects the aesthetic value of that work. This is because the aesthetic value is functionality dependent, i.e. the freedom (of movement) of perception is perceived as beauty. Free flow of energy, in art as well as in other forms of "techne", directly contributes to the aesthetic value.[21]
Music was important to the birth of abstract art since music is abstract by nature—it does not try to represent the exterior world, but expresses in an immediate way the inner feelings of the soul. Wassily Kandinsky often used musical terms to identify his works; he called his most spontaneous paintings "improvisations" and described more elaborate works as "compositions". Kandinsky theorized that "music is the ultimate teacher",[23] and subsequently embarked upon the first seven of his ten Compositions. Hearing tones and chords as he painted, Kandinsky theorized that (for example), yellow is the color of middle C on a brassy trumpet; black is the color of closure, and the end of things; and that combinations of colors produce vibrational frequencies, akin to chords played on a piano. In 1871 the young Kandinsky learned to play the piano and cello.[24][25] Kandinsky's stage design for a performance of Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition illustrates his "synaesthetic" concept of a universal correspondence of forms, colors and musical sounds.[26]
Female painter sitting on a campstool and painting a statue of Dionysus or Priapus onto a panel which is held by a boy. Fresco from Pompeii, 1st century
Aesthetics is the study of art and beauty; it was an important issue for 18th- and 19th-century philosophers such as Kant and Hegel. Classical philosophers like Plato and Aristotle also theorized about art and painting in particular. Plato disregarded painters (as well as sculptors) in his philosophical system; he maintained that painting cannot depict the truth—it is a copy of reality (a shadow of the world of ideas) and is nothing but a craft, similar to shoemaking or iron casting.[28] By the time of Leonardo, painting had become a closer representation of the truth than painting was in Ancient Greece. Leonardo da Vinci, on the contrary, said that "Italian: La Pittura è cosa mentale" ("English: painting is a thing of the mind").[29] Kant distinguished between Beauty and the Sublime, in terms that clearly gave priority to the former.[citation needed] Although he did not refer to painting in particular, this concept was taken up by painters such as J.M.W. Turner and Caspar David Friedrich.
Hegel recognized the failure of attaining a universal concept of beauty and, in his aesthetic essay, wrote that painting is one of the three "romantic" arts, along with Poetry and Music, for its symbolic, highly intellectual purpose.[30][31] Painters who have written theoretical works on painting include Kandinsky and Paul Klee.[32][33] In his essay, Kandinsky maintains that painting has a spiritual value, and he attaches primary colors to essential feelings or concepts, something that Goethe and other writers had already tried to do.
Iconography is the study of the content of paintings, rather than their style. Erwin Panofsky and other art historians first seek to understand the things depicted, before looking at their meaning for the viewer at the time, and finally analyzing their wider cultural, religious, and social meaning.[34]
In 1890, the Parisian painter Maurice Denis famously asserted: "Remember that a painting—before being a warhorse, a naked woman or some story or other—is essentially a flat surface covered with colors assembled in a certain order."[35] Thus, many 20th-century developments in painting, such as Cubism, were reflections on the means of painting rather than on the external world—nature—which had previously been its core subject. Recent contributions to thinking about painting have been offered by the painter and writer Julian Bell. In his book What is Painting?, Bell discusses the development, through history, of the notion that paintings can express feelings and ideas.[36] In Mirror of The World, Bell writes:
A work of art seeks to hold your attention and keep it fixed: a history of art urges it onwards, bulldozing a highway through the homes of the imagination.[37]
Different types of paint are usually identified by the medium that the pigment is suspended or embedded in, which determines the general working characteristics of the paint, such as viscosity, miscibility, solubility, drying time, etc.
Encaustic painting, also known as hot wax painting, involves using heated beeswax to which colored pigments are added. The liquid/paste is then applied to a surface—usually prepared wood, though canvas and other materials are often used. The simplest encaustic mixture can be made from adding pigments to beeswax, but there are several other recipes that can be used—some containing other types of waxes, damar resin, linseed oil, or other ingredients. Pure, powdered pigments can be purchased and used, though some mixtures use oil paints or other forms of pigment. Metal tools and special brushes can be used to shape the paint before it cools, or heated metal tools can be used to manipulate the wax once it has cooled onto the surface. Other materials can be encased or collaged into the surface, or layered, using the encaustic medium to adhere it to the surface.
The technique was the normal one for ancient Greek and Roman panel paintings, and remained in use in the Eastern Orthodox icon tradition.
Watercolor is a painting method in which the paints are made of pigments suspended in a water-soluble vehicle. The traditional and most common support for watercolor paintings is paper; other supports include papyrus, bark papers, plastics, vellum or leather, fabric, wood and canvas. In East Asia, watercolor painting with inks is referred to as brush painting or scroll painting. In Chinese, Korean, and Japanese painting it has been the dominant medium, often in monochrome black or browns. India, Ethiopia and other countries also have long traditions. Finger-painting with watercolor paints originated in China. There are various types of watercolors used by artists. Some examples are pan watercolors, liquid watercolors, watercolor brush pens, and watercolor pencils. Watercolor pencils (water-soluble color pencils) may be used either wet or dry.
Rudolf Reschreiter, Blick von der Höllentalangerhütte zum Höllentalgletscher und den Riffelwandspitzen, Gouache (1921)
Gouache is a water-based paint consisting of pigment and other materials designed to be used in an opaque painting method. Gouache differs from watercolor in that the particles are larger, the ratio of pigment to water is much higher, and an additional, inert, white pigment such as chalk is also present. This makes gouache heavier and more opaque, with greater reflective qualities. Like all water media, it is diluted with water.[38]
Gouache was a popular paint utilized by Egyptians,[39] Painters such as Francois Boucher used this medium. This paint is best applied with sable brushes.
Glazing is commonly known as a premelted liquid glass. This glaze can be dipped or brushed on. This glaze appears chalky and there is a vast difference between the beginning and finished result. To be activated glazed pottery must be placed in a kiln to be fired. This melts the Silica glass in the glaze and transforms it into a vibrant glossy version of itself.[40][41]
Sesshū Tōyō, Landscapes of the Four Seasons (1486), ink and light color on paper
Ink paintings are done with a liquid that contains pigments or dyes and is used to color a surface to produce an image, text, or design. Ink is used for drawing with a pen, brush, or quill. Ink can be a complex medium, composed of solvents, pigments, dyes, resins, lubricants, solubilizers, surfactants, particulate matter, fluorescers, and other materials. The components of inks serve many purposes; the ink's carrier, colorants, and other additives control flow and thickness of the ink and its appearance when dry.
Enamels are made by painting a substrate, typically metal, with powdered glass; minerals called color oxides provide coloration. After firing at a temperature of 750–850 degrees Celsius (1380–1560 degrees Fahrenheit), the result is a fused lamination of glass and metal. Unlike most painted techniques, the surface can be handled and wetted. Enamels have traditionally been used for decoration of precious objects,[42] but have also been used for other purposes. Limoges enamel was the leading centre of Renaissance enamel painting, with small religious and mythological scenes in decorated surrounds, on plaques or objects such as salts or caskets. In the 18th century, enamel painting enjoyed a vogue in Europe, especially as a medium for portrait miniatures.[43] In the late 20th century, the technique of porcelain enamel on metal has been used as a durable medium for outdoor murals.[44]
Tempera, also known as egg tempera, is a permanent, fast-drying painting medium consisting of colored pigment mixed with a water-soluble binder medium (usually a glutinous material such as egg yolk or some other size). Tempera also refers to the paintings done in this medium. Tempera paintings are very long-lasting, and examples from the first centuries CE still exist. Egg tempera was a primary method of painting until after 1500 when it was superseded by the invention of oil painting. A paint commonly called tempera (though it is not) consisting of pigment and glue size is commonly used and referred to by some manufacturers in America as poster paint.
White Angel (fresco, c. 1235), Mileševa monastery, Serbia
Fresco is any of several related mural painting types, done on plaster on walls or ceilings. The word fresco comes from the Italian word affresco[afˈfresːko], which derives from the Latin word for fresh. Frescoes were often made during the Renaissance and other early time periods.
Buon fresco technique consists of painting in pigment mixed with water on a thin layer of wet, fresh lime mortar or plaster, for which the Italian word for plaster, intonaco, is used. A secco painting, in contrast, is done on dry plaster (secco is "dry" in Italian). The pigments require a binding medium, such as egg (tempera), glue or oil to attach the pigment to the wall.
Honoré Daumier, The Painter (1808–1879), oil on panel with visible brushstrokes
Oil painting is the process of painting with pigments that are bound with a medium of drying oil, such as linseed oil, poppyseed oil which was widely used in early modern Europe. Often the oil was boiled with a resin such as pine resin or even frankincense; these were called 'varnishes' and were prized for their body and gloss. Oil paint eventually became the principal medium used for creating artworks as its advantages became widely known. The transition began with Early Netherlandish painting in northern Europe, and by the height of the Renaissance oil painting techniques had almost completely replaced tempera paints in the majority of Europe.
Pastel is a painting medium in the form of a stick, consisting of pure powdered pigment and a binder.[45] The pigments used in pastels are the same as those used to produce all colored art media, including oil paints; the binder is of a neutral hue and low saturation. The color effect of pastels is closer to the natural dry pigments than that of any other process.[46] Because the surface of a pastel painting is fragile and easily smudged, its preservation requires protective measures such as framing under glass; it may also be sprayed with a fixative. Nonetheless, when made with permanent pigments and properly cared for, a pastel painting may endure unchanged for centuries. Pastels are not susceptible, as are paintings made with a fluid medium, to the cracking and discoloration that result from changes in the color, opacity, or dimensions of the medium as it dries.
Ray Burggraf, Jungle Arc (1998), acrylic paint on wood
Acrylic paint is fast drying paint containing pigment suspension in acrylic polymer emulsion. Acrylic paints can be diluted with water but become water-resistant when dry. Depending on how much the paint is diluted (with water) or modified with acrylic gels, media, or pastes, the finished acrylic painting can resemble a watercolor or an oil painting, or have its own unique characteristics not attainable with other media. The main practical difference between most acrylics and oil paints is the inherent drying time.[47] Oils allow for more time to blend colors and apply even glazes over under-paintings. This slow drying aspect of oil can be seen as an advantage for certain techniques but may also impede the artist's ability to work quickly. Another difference is that watercolors must be painted onto a porous surface, primarily watercolor paper. Acrylic paints can be used on many different surfaces.[47][48] Both acrylic and watercolor are easy to clean up with water. Acrylic paint should be cleaned with soap and water immediately following use. Watercolor paint can be cleaned with just water.[49][50][51]
Between 1946 and 1949, Leonard Bocour and Sam Golden invented a solution acrylic paint under the brand Magna paint. These were mineral spirit-based paints. Water-based acrylic paints were subsequently sold as latex house paints.[52] In 1963, George Rowney (part of Daler-Rowney since 1983) was the first manufacturer to introduce artists' acrylic paints in Europe, under the brand name "Cryla".[53] Acrylics are the most common paints used in grattage, a surrealist technique that began to be used with the advent of this type of paint. Acrylics are used for this purpose because they easily scrape or peel from a surface.[54]
Aerosol paint (also called spray paint)[55] is a type of paint that comes in a sealed pressurized container and is released in a fine spray mist when depressing a valve button. A form of spray painting, aerosol paint leaves a smooth, evenly coated surface. Standard sized cans are portable, inexpensive and easy to store. Aerosol primer can be applied directly to bare metal and many plastics.
Speed, portability and permanence also make aerosol paint a common graffiti medium. In the late 1970s, street graffiti writers' signatures and murals became more elaborate, and a unique style developed as a factor of the aerosol medium and the speed required for illicit work. Many now recognize graffiti and street art as a unique art form and specifically manufactured aerosol paints are made for the graffiti artist. A stencil protects a surface, except the specific shape to be painted. Stencils can be purchased as movable letters, ordered as professionally cut logos or hand-cut by artists.
Water miscible oil paints (also called "water soluble" or "water-mixable") is a modern variety of oil paint engineered to be thinned and cleaned up with water,[56][57] rather than having to use chemicals such as turpentine. It can be mixed and applied using the same techniques as traditional oil-based paint, but while still wet it can be effectively removed from brushes, palettes, and rags with ordinary soap and water. Its water solubility comes from the use of an oil medium in which one end of the molecule has been altered to bind loosely to water molecules, as in a solution.
Sandpainting is the art of pouring coloured sands, and powdered pigments from minerals or crystals, or pigments from other natural or synthetic sources onto a surface to make a fixed or unfixed sand painting.
Digital painting is a method of creating an art object (painting) digitally or a technique for making digital art on the computer. As a method of creating an art object, it adapts traditional painting medium such as acrylic paint, oils, ink, watercolor, etc. and applies the pigment to traditional carriers, such as woven canvas cloth, paper, polyester, etc. by means of software driving industrial robotic or office machinery (printers). As a technique, it refers to a computer graphics software program that uses a virtual canvas and virtual painting box of brushes, colors, and other supplies. The virtual box contains many instruments that do not exist outside the computer, and which give a digital artwork a different look and feel from an artwork that is made the traditional way. Furthermore, digital painting is not 'computer-generated' art as the computer does not automatically create images on the screen using some mathematical calculations. On the other hand, the artist uses his own painting technique to create a particular piece of work on the computer.[58]
Bodily fluids have been used as painting media. Andy Warhol produced his Oxidization series by covering canvases with metallic paint and having his assistants and friends urinate on the still-wet paint.[59] Blood from menstrual periods has been used to paint images.[60] Sarah Maple, a contemporary artist, has used her menstrual blood to create portraits to help erase the taboo covering the topic of periods.[citation needed]
Style is used in two senses: It can refer to the distinctive visual elements, techniques, and methods that typify an individual artist's work. It can also refer to the movement or school that an artist is associated with. This can stem from an actual group that the artist was consciously involved with or it can be a category in which art historians have placed the painter. The word 'style' in the latter sense has fallen out of favor in academic discussions about contemporary painting, though it continues to be used in popular contexts. Such movements or classifications include the following:
Modernism describes both a set of cultural tendencies and an array of associated cultural movements, originally arising from wide-scale and far-reaching changes to Western society in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Modernism was a revolt against the conservative values of realism.[61][62] The term encompasses the activities and output of those who felt the "traditional" forms of art, architecture, literature, religious faith, social organization, and daily life were becoming outdated in the new economic, social, and political conditions of an emerging fully industrialized world. A salient characteristic of modernism is self-consciousness. This often led to experiments with form, and work that draws attention to the processes and materials used (and to the further tendency of abstraction).[63]
The first example of modernism in painting was impressionism, a school of painting that initially focused on work done, not in studios, but outdoors (en plein air). Impressionist paintings demonstrated that human beings do not see objects, but instead see light itself. The school gathered adherents despite internal divisions among its leading practitioners and became increasingly influential. Initially rejected from the most important commercial show of the time, the government-sponsored Paris Salon, the Impressionists organized yearly group exhibitions in commercial venues during the 1870s and 1880s, timing them to coincide with the official Salon. A significant event of 1863 was the Salon des Refusés, created by Emperor Napoleon III to display all of the paintings rejected by the Paris Salon.
Abstract painting uses a visual language of form, colour and line to create a composition that may exist with a degree of independence from visual references in the world.[64][65]Abstract expressionism was an American post-World War IIart movement that combined the emotional intensity and self-denial of the German Expressionists with the anti-figurative aesthetic of the European abstract schools—such as Futurism, Bauhaus and Cubism, and the image of being rebellious, anarchic, highly idiosyncratic and, some feel, nihilistic.[66]
Action painting, sometimes called gestural abstraction, is a style of painting in which paint is spontaneously dribbled, splashed or smeared onto the canvas, rather than being carefully applied.[67] The resulting work often emphasizes the physical act of painting itself as an essential aspect of the finished work or concern of its artist. The style was widespread from the 1940s until the early 1960s and is closely associated with abstract expressionism (some critics have used the terms "action painting" and "abstract expressionism" interchangeably).
The term outsider art was coined by art critic Roger Cardinal in 1972 as an English synonym for art brut (French:[aʁbʁyt], "raw art" or "rough art"), a label created by FrenchartistJean Dubuffet to describe art created outside the boundaries of official culture; Dubuffet focused particularly on art by insane-asylum inmates.[68] Outsider art has emerged as a successful art marketing category (an annual Outsider Art Fair has taken place in New York since 1992). The term is sometimes misapplied as a catch-all marketing label for art created by people outside the mainstream "art world", regardless of their circumstances or the content of their work.
Photorealism is the genre of painting based on using the camera and photographs to gather information and then from this information, creating a painting that appears to be very realistic like a photograph. The term is primarily applied to paintings from the United States art movement that began in the late 1960s and early 1970s. As a full-fledged art movement, Photorealism evolved from Pop Art[69][70][71] and as a counter to Abstract Expressionism.
Hyperrealism is a genre of painting and sculpture resembling a high-resolution photograph. Hyperrealism is a fully-fledged school of art and can be considered an advancement of Photorealism by the methods used to create the resulting paintings or sculptures. The term is primarily applied to an independent art movement and art style in the United States and Europe that has developed since the early 2000s.[72]
Surrealism is a cultural movement that began in the early 1920s and is best known for the artistic and literary production of those affiliated with the Surrealist Movement. Surrealist artworks feature the element of surprise, the uncanny, the unconscious, unexpected juxtapositions and non-sequitur; however, many Surrealist artists and writers regard their work as an expression of the philosophical movement first and foremost, with the works being an artifact. Leader André Breton was explicit in his assertion that Surrealism was above all a revolutionary movement.
Surrealism developed out of the Dada activities of World War I and the most important center of the movement was Paris. From the 1920s onward, the movement spread around the globe, eventually affecting the visual arts, literature, film and music of many countries, as well as political thought and practice, philosophy and social theory.
Miniature paintings were the primary form of painting in pre-colonial India. These were done on a special paper (known as wasli) using mineral and natural colours. Miniature painting is not one style but a group of several styles of schools of painting such as Mughal, Pahari, Rajasthani, Company style etc.
Mughal miniature painting is a particular style of South Asian, particularly North Indian (more specifically, modern day India and Pakistan), painting confined to miniatures either as book illustrations or as single works to be kept in albums (muraqqa). It emerged[73] from Persian miniature painting (itself partly of Chinese origin) and developed in the court of the Mughal Empire of the 16th to 18th centuries. Mughal painting immediately took a much greater interest in realistic portraiture than was typical of Persian miniatures. Animals and plants were the main subject of many miniatures for albums, and were more realistically depicted.[74][75][76]
Krishna and Radha, might be the work of Nihâl Chand, master of Kishangarh school of Rajput Painting
Rajasthani painting evolved and flourished in the royal courts of Rajputana[77] in northern India, mainly during the 17th century. Artists trained in the tradition of the Mughal miniature were dispersed from the imperial Mughal court, and developed styles also drawing from local traditions of painting, especially those illustrating the Sanskrit Epics, the Mahabharata and Ramayana. Subjects varied, but portraits of the ruling family, often engaged in hunting or their daily activities, were generally popular, as were narrative scenes from the epics or Hindu mythology, as well as some genre scenes of landscapes, and humans.[78][79]
Punjab Hills or Pahari painting of which Kangra, Guller, Basholi were major sub-styles. Kangra painting is the pictorial art of Kangra, named after Kangra, Himachal Pradesh, a former princely state, which patronized the art. It became prevalent with the fading of Basohli school of painting in mid-18th century.[80][81] The focal theme of Kangra painting is Shringar (the erotic sentiment). The subjects are seen in Kangra painting exhibit the taste and the traits of the lifestyle of the society of that period.[82] The artists adopted themes from the love poetry of Jayadeva and Keshav Das who wrote ecstatically of the love of Radha and Krishna with Bhakti being the driving force.[83][84]
Khan Bahadur Khan with Men of his Clan, c. 1815, from the Fraser Album, Company Style
Company style is a term for a hybrid Indo-European style of paintings made in India by Indian artists, many of whom worked for European patrons in the British East India Company or other foreign Companies in the 18th and 19th centuries.[85] Three distinct styles of Company Painting emerged in three British Power Centres – Delhi, Calcutta and Madras. The subject matter of company paintings made for western patrons was often documentary rather than imaginative, and as a consequence, the Indian artists were required to adopt a more naturalistic approach to painting than had traditionally been usual.[86][87]
The Sikh style and Deccan style are other prominent Miniature painting styles of India.
Pichwai paintings are paintings on textile and usually depicting stories from the life of Lord Krishna.[88] These were made in large format and often used as a backdrop to the main idol in temples or homes. Pichwai paintings were made and are still made mainly in Rajasthan, India. However very few were made in the Deccan region, but these are extremely rare. The purpose of pichhwais, other than artistic appeal, is to narrate tales of Krishna to the illiterate. Temples have sets with different images, which are changed according to the calendar of festivals celebrating the deity.[89]
Pattachitra is a general term for traditional, cloth-based scroll painting, based in the eastern Indian states of Odisha and West Bengal.[90] The Pattachitra painting tradition is closely linked with the worship of Lord Jagannath in Odisha.[91] The subject matter of Pattachitra is limited to religious themes. Patachitra artform is known for its intricate details as well as mythological narratives and folktales inscribed in it. All colours used in the Paintings are natural and paintings are made fully old traditional way by Chitrakaras that is Odiya Painter. Pattachitra style of painting is one of the oldest and most popular art forms of Odisha. Patachitras are a component of an ancient Bengali narrative art, originally serving as a visual device during the performance of a song.[92][93][94]
Madhubani Art is a style of Indian painting, practiced in the Mithila region of India and Nepal. The style is characterized by complex geometrical patterns, these paintings are famous for representing ritual content used for particular occasions like festivals, religious rituals etc.[95]
The Bengal School[96] was an art movement and a style of Indian painting that originated in Bengal, primarily Kolkata and Shantiniketan, and flourished throughout the Indian subcontinent, during the British Raj in the early 20th century.[97] The Bengal school arose as an avant garde and nationalist movement reacting against the academic art styles previously promoted in India, both by Indian artists such as Raja Ravi Varma and in British art schools. The school wanted to establish a distinct Indian style which celebrated the indigenous cultural heritage. In an attempt to reject colonial aesthetics, Abanindranath Tagore also turned to China and Japan with the intent of promoting a pan-Asian aesthetic and incorporated elements from Far Eastern art, such as the Japanese wash technique.[98][99][100]
19th Century Mysore Painting of Goddess Saraswathi
Mysore painting is an important form of classical South Indian painting that originated in and around the town of Mysore in Karnataka encouraged and nurtured by the Mysore rulers. Mysore paintings are known for their elegance, muted colours, and attention to detail. The themes for most of these paintings are Hindu gods and goddesses and scenes from Hindu mythology.[101]
Allegory is a figurativemode of representation conveying meaning other than the literal. Allegory communicates its message by means of symbolic figures, actions, or symbolic representation. Allegory is generally treated as a figure of rhetoric, but an allegory does not have to be expressed in language: it may be addressed to the eye and is often found in realistic painting. An example of a simple visual allegory is the image of the grim reaper. Viewers understand that the image of the grim reaper is a symbolic representation of death.
In Spanish art, a bodegón is a still life painting depicting pantry items, such as victuals, game, and drink, often arranged on a simple stone slab, and also a painting with one or more figures, but significant still life elements, typically set in a kitchen or tavern. Starting in the Baroque period, such paintings became popular in Spain in the second quarter of the 17th century. The tradition of still life painting appears to have started and was far more popular in the contemporary Low Countries, today Belgium and Netherlands (then Flemish and Dutch artists), than it ever was in southern Europe. Northern still lifes had many subgenres: the breakfast piece was augmented by the trompe-l'œil, the flower bouquet, and the vanitas. In Spain, there were much fewer patrons for this sort of thing, but a type of breakfast piece did become popular, featuring a few objects of food and tableware laid on a table.
A figure painting is a work of art in any of the painting media with the primary subject being the human figure, whether clothed or nude.
Figure painting may also refer to the activity of creating such a work. The human figure has been one of the contrast subjects of art since the first Stone Age cave paintings and has been reinterpreted in various styles throughout history.[102] Some artists well known for figure painting are Peter Paul Rubens, Edgar Degas, and Édouard Manet.
Illustration paintings are those used as illustrations in books, magazines, and theater or movie posters and comic books. Today, there is a growing interest in collecting and admiring the original artwork. Various museum exhibitions, magazines, and art galleries have devoted space to the illustrators of the past. In the visual art world, illustrators have sometimes been considered less important in comparison with fine artists and graphic designers. But as the result of computer game and comic industry growth, illustrations are becoming valued as popular and profitable artworks that can acquire a wider market than the other two, especially in Korea, Japan, Hong Kong and the United States.
Landscape painting is a term that covers the depiction of natural scenery such as mountains, valleys, trees, rivers, lakes, and forests, and especially art where the main subject is a wide view, with its elements arranged into a coherent composition. In other works, landscape backgrounds for figures can still form an important part of the work. The sky is almost always included in the view, and weather is often an element of the composition. Detailed landscapes as a distinct subject are not found in all artistic traditions and develop when there is already a sophisticated tradition of representing other subjects. The two main traditions spring from Western painting and Chinese art, going back well over a thousand years in both cases.
Portrait paintings are representations of a person, in which the face and its expression is predominant. The intent is to display the likeness, personality, and even the mood of the person. The art of the portrait flourished in Ancient Greek and especially Roman sculpture, where sitters demanded individualized and realistic portraits, even unflattering ones. One of the best-known portraits in the Western world is Leonardo da Vinci's painting titled Mona Lisa, which is thought to be a portrait of Lisa Gherardini, the wife of Francesco del Giocondo.[109]
Warhol was one of the most prolific portrait painters of the 20th century. Warhol's painting Orange Shot Marilyn of Marilyn Monroe is an iconic early example of his work from the 1960s, and Orange Prince (1984) of the pop singer Prince is later example, both exhibiting Warhol's unique graphic style of portraiture.[110][111][112]
A still life is a work of art depicting mostly inanimate subject matter, typically commonplace objects—which may be either natural (food, flowers, plants, rocks, or shells) or human-made (drinking glasses, books, vases, jewelry, coins, pipes, and so on). With origins in the Middle Ages and Ancient Greek/Roman art, still life paintings give the artist more leeway in the arrangement of design elements within a composition than do paintings of other types of subjects such as landscape or portraiture. Still life paintings, particularly before 1700, often contained religious and allegorical symbolism relating to the objects depicted. Some modern still life breaks the two-dimensional barrier and employs three-dimensional mixed media, and uses found objects, photography, computer graphics, as well as video and sound.
A veduta is a highly detailed, usually large-scale painting of a cityscape or some other vista. This genre of landscape originated in Flanders, where artists such as Paul Bril painted vedute as early as the 16th century. As the itinerary of the Grand Tour became somewhat standardized, vedute of familiar scenes like the Roman Forum or the Grand Canal recalled early ventures to the Continent for aristocratic Englishmen. In the later 19th century, more personal impressions of cityscapes replaced the desire for topographical accuracy, which was satisfied instead by painted panoramas.
^"Paint – Definition". Merriam-webster.com. 2012. Archived from the original on 4 March 2018. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
^Perry, Lincoln (Summer 2014). "The Music of Painting". The American Scholar. 83 (3): 85.
^M. Aubert et al., "Pleistocene cave art from Sulawesi, Indonesia", Nature vol. 514, pp. 223–227 (9 October 2014).
"using uranium-series dating of coralloid speleothems directly associated with 12 human hand stencils and two figurative animal depictions from seven cave sites in the Maros karsts of Sulawesi, we show that rock art traditions on this Indonesian island are at least compatible in age with the oldest European art. The earliest dated image from Maros, with a minimum age of 39.9 kyr, is now the oldest known hand stencil in the world. In addition, a painting of a babirusa ('pig-deer') made at least 35.4 kyr ago is among the earliest dated figurative depictions worldwide, if not the earliest one. Among the implications, it can now be demonstrated that humans were producing rock art by ~40 kyr ago at opposite ends of the Pleistocene Eurasian world."
^, François Le Targat, Kandinsky, Twentieth Century masters series, Random House Incorporated, 1987, p. 7, ISBN0847808106
^Susan B. Hirschfeld, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Hilla von Rebay Foundation, Watercolours by Kandinsky at the Guggenheim Museum: a selection from the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the Hilla von Rebay Foundation, 1991
^Wallace, William (1911). "Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 200–207, see page 207. Painting and music are the specially romantic arts. Lastly, as a union of painting and music comes poetry, where the sensuous element is more than ever subordinate to the spirit
^Franciscono, Marcel, Paul Klee: His Work and Thought, part 6 'The Bauhaus and Düsseldorf', chap. 'Klee's theory courses', p. 246 and under 'notes to pp. 245–54' p. 365
^Green-Cole, Ruth. "Painting Blood: Visualizing Menstrual Blood in Art." The Palgrave Handbook of Critical Menstruation Studies [Internet], U.S. National Library of Medicine, 25 July 2020, www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK565646/.
^Graff, Gerald (1975) Babbitt at the Abyss: The Social Context of Postmodern. American Fiction, TriQuarterly, No. 33 (Spring 1975), pp. 307–37; reprinted in Putz and Freese, eds., Postmodernism and American Literature.
^Gardner, Helen, Horst De la Croix, Richard G. Tansey, and Diane Kirkpatrick. Gardner's Art Through the Ages (San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1991). ISBN0155037706. p. 953.
^Shapiro, David/Cecile (2000): Abstract Expressionism. The politics of apolitical painting. p. 189-90 In: Frascina, Francis (2000): Pollock and After. The critical debate. 2nd ed. London: Routledge
^Victoria and Albert Museum, Digital Media (16 November 2012). "Indian company paintings". www.vam.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 22 November 2021. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
Howard Daniel (1971). Encyclopedia of Themes and Subjects in Painting: Mythological, Biblical, Historical, Literary, Allegorical, and Topical. New York: Harry N. Abrams Inc.
W. Stanley Taft Jr. and James W. Mayer (2000). The Science of Paintings. Springer-Verlag.
Painting is a visual art form entailing the application of colored pigments, suspended or embedded in a medium such as water, oil, or resin—which typically identifies the type of paint and determines its general working characteristics, including viscosity, miscibility, solubility, and drying time—to a solid support like cave walls, wood panels, canvas, or paper, typically using tools including brushes, fingers, or spatulas to produce images ranging from figurative representations to abstract patterns.[1][2] The practice originated in prehistory, with the earliest datable figurative paintings—depicting anthropomorphic figures interacting with a pig—appearing approximately 51,200 years ago in Leang Karampuang cave, Sulawesi, Indonesia, executed in red ochre, evidencing early human symbolic cognition and possibly ritualistic intent. Over millennia, painting techniques diversified across civilizations, incorporating binders like animal fats in Paleolithic eras, egg tempera in medieval Europe, and oil mediums refined in the 15th century by Northern Renaissance artists such as Jan van Eyck, enabling greater depth, luminosity, and blending through layered glazing.[3][4] Key advancements included the mathematical systematization of linear perspective by Filippo Brunelleschi and Leon Battista Alberti in early 15th-century Italy, which allowed realistic spatial recession and revolutionized compositional structure, alongside Eastern traditions like Chinese ink monochrome on silk emphasizing calligraphic brushwork and philosophical minimalism.[5] Subsequent eras saw the 19th-century emergence of plein-air oil sketching and optical color theories in Impressionism, exemplified by broken brushwork capturing transient light effects, and 20th-century abstractions prioritizing form, color, and gesture over mimesis, as in Piet Mondrian's neoplastic geometries or Jackson Pollock's drip methods, reflecting shifts in perceptual philosophy and material experimentation.[6] These evolutions underscore painting's enduring role in documenting human experience, exploring perceptual realities, and challenging representational conventions through empirical observation of light, pigment chemistry, and surface interaction.
Overview
Definition and Core Characteristics
Painting, both the act and the resulting artwork produced by a painter, is a visual art form that involves the application of pigment to a surface such as canvas, paper, wood, walls, glass, lacquer, pottery, leaf, copper, or concrete, to create an image or expression.[7] This process employs paint, a mixture of pigmented particles suspended in a liquid binder, applied using tools such as brushes, palette knives, sponges, airbrushes, the artist's fingers, or dripping techniques that use gravity to manipulate color, form, and texture.[8] Paintings may incorporate additional materials such as sand, clay, paper, cardboard, newspaper, plaster, gold leaf, and even entire objects. The resulting work serves to represent subjects, evoke emotions, or explore abstract concepts on a two-dimensional plane.[9]At its core, painting consists of three essential elements: pigment, which imparts color and opacity as finely ground particles; the binder or vehicle, which disperses the pigment and adheres it to the support without dissolving it; and the support, a stable surface providing the foundation for the artwork.[10][11] Pigments derive from inorganic minerals, organic plant or animal sources, or modern synthetics, while binders range from drying oils like linseed to water-soluble gums or acrylic resins, each dictating properties such as viscosity, drying rate, and permanence.[11] Supports must resist warping and cracking, with traditional choices including primed canvas stretched on wooden frames or rigid panels of wood or metal.[12]Key characteristics include the medium's versatility in achieving optical effects through layering, blending, and impasto application, enabling illusions of depth, light, and three-dimensionality on a flat surface.[13] Unlike drawing, which emphasizes line and contour, painting prioritizes color modulation and surface modulation to convey volume and atmosphere, with techniques like glazing for translucency or scumbling for texture influencing visual and tactile qualities.[14] This capacity for material experimentation underscores painting's enduring role in visual expression, from prehistoric handprints to digital-assisted canvases, grounded in the physical interaction of artist, medium, and substrate.[15]
Cultural and Historical Significance
Painting originated as a vital cultural artifact in prehistory, with the earliest figurative examples, such as depictions of humans interacting with pigs in Sulawesi caves dated to approximately 51,200 years ago, indicating early symbolic expression tied to hunting, spirituality, or social narratives.[16] These works reveal cognitive advancements in representation, offering evidence of proto-language development and communal rituals that strengthened group cohesion among hunter-gatherers.[17]Religious art has dominated a significant share of painting's history in both Eastern and Western traditions, exemplified by depictions of mythological figures on ancient pottery, Biblical scenes such as those on the Sistine Chapel ceiling, and Eastern religious images like scenes from the life of Buddha. In ancient Egypt, spanning from around 3000 BCE, painting fulfilled religious and funerary roles by decorating tombs and temples with scenes ensuring the deceased's eternal sustenance and divine favor, where images functioned as magically potent substitutes for reality to sustain the ka (life force).[18] This practice reinforced pharaonic authority and cosmological order, embedding cultural values of hierarchy and immortality in durable media accessible primarily to elites.[19]From the Renaissance onward, particularly in 15th-century Italy, painting's significance expanded through elite patronage, as families like the Medici commissioned portraits and altarpieces to project political influence, humanist ideals, and familial legacy, elevating art from craft to a marker of refined status and intellectual patronage.[20] Such systems spurred innovations in perspective and realism, while serving propaganda by glorifying rulers—evident in ancient precedents like Ramesses II's temple reliefs exaggerating military triumphs to consolidate power around 1279–1213 BCE.[21][22]Throughout history, painting has preserved cultural identities and shaped societal norms, from Christian iconography educating illiterate congregations on doctrine via frescoes to modern canvases critiquing power, demonstrating its causal role in transmitting beliefs, evoking empathy, and influencing collective memory across civilizations.[23][24]
History
Prehistoric and Ancient Origins
The origins of painting trace to the Upper Paleolithic era, where humans applied pigments to cave walls and rock surfaces, producing some of the earliest surviving artworks. Evidence from sites in Europe (such as France, Spain, Portugal, and Italy), Southeast Asia (Indonesia), and other regions including China, India, Australia, and Mexico indicates that these practices began at least 40,000 years ago, coinciding with the arrival of anatomically modern humans in those regions.[25][17]Dating relies on methods like uranium-thorium analysis of mineral crusts overlying the art. A red disk in Spain's El Castillo cave dates to more than 40,800 years ago, while hand stencils there reach 37,290 years. Recent analyses of three Spanish caves—Ardales, La Pasiega, and Maltravieso—yield dates of 64,000 to 66,000 years ago for abstract red forms and stencils, suggesting possible Neanderthal authorship, though this remains debated due to the simplicity of the motifs compared to later Homo sapiens figurative work. In Indonesia's Sulawesi, in December 2019 cave paintings portraying pig hunting in the Maros-Pangkep karst region, including a hunting scene panel in Leang Bulu’ Sipong 2 cave, were dated to 43,900 years ago, depicting humans with spears pursuing pigs and buffalo, representing one of the oldest narrative compositions and older than the Lubang Jeriji Saléh painting. Also in Sulawesi, a depiction of a warty pig in Leang Tedongnge cave dates to at least 45,500 years ago. In Leang Karampuang cave, a painting depicting anthropomorphic figures interacting with a pig, measuring 91 by 38 cm, dates to approximately 51,200 years ago.[26][27][28][29][30]Prehistoric painters used natural earth pigments, primarily red ochre from iron oxides like hematite and black from charcoal or manganese dioxide, ground and mixed with water, saliva, or animal fat as binders. Application methods included finger painting, rudimentary brushes of moss or animal hair, engraving outlines, and spraying via blowing pigment through hollow bones or hands for stencils. These techniques produced durable images focused on animals, hand outlines, and abstract signs, often in deep, inaccessible caves, implying ritual or symbolic purposes tied to hunting or spiritual beliefs, though direct evidence of intent is absent.[31][32][33]With the emergence of complex societies in the Neolithic and Bronze Ages, painting shifted to architectural surfaces and portable objects. In ancient Egypt, from the Predynastic period (c. 6000–3150 BC), but flourishing in the Old Kingdom (c. 2686–2181 BC), artists painted tomb walls and temple interiors on dry or wet plaster using mineral pigments bound with gum arabic or egg. Compositions adhered to strict conventions: figures in profile with frontal torsos, sized by status, depicting pharaohs, deities, and daily activities to ensure eternal order (ma'at). Surviving examples include the tomb of Nakht at Thebes (c. 1425–1350 BC), showing Nile scenes and offerings.[34][35]In Mesopotamia, painting appeared on palace walls and pottery from the Sumerian period (c. 3500 BC), though fewer examples survive compared to relief sculpture; pigments included lapis lazuli blue and red ochres applied in tempera-like mixes. Minoan Crete (c. 2700–1450 BC) produced lively frescoes on palace walls at Knossos, using wet plaster techniques with vibrant blues, reds, and yellows from minerals, illustrating bull-leaping, marine life, and landscapes in a dynamic, naturalistic style reflecting thalassocratic culture. Greek painting, known mainly through literary descriptions by Pliny and vase parallels, employed encaustic (wax and pigment heated) and tempera on wood panels for mythological and historical scenes; originals are lost, but vase paintings from the 6th–4th centuries BC demonstrate black-figure and red-figure techniques using slip clay fired in kilns.[36]Roman painting built on Greek foundations, favoring fresco secco and true fresco on villa and public walls, as preserved in Pompeii and Herculaneum after the 79 AD Vesuvius eruption. Techniques involved layering plaster with pigments like cinnabar red, Egyptian blue, and bone black, creating illusions of architectural vistas, still lifes, and landscapes with improved perspective via orthogonals and vanishing points, surpassing some later European efforts in spatial coherence. Examples include the Villa of the Mysteries' Dionysiac ritual scenes, executed in multiple campaigns for depth and narrative flow.[36]
Classical and Medieval Developments
![Pompeii wall painting][float-right]
In ancient Greece, painting flourished alongside sculpture, though few panel paintings survive, with knowledge derived primarily from literary descriptions and surviving vase decorations. The black-figure technique on pottery, developed around 700 BCE, involved incising figures into black-slipped clay to reveal red underneath, used for narrative scenes on vases from the Geometric to Archaic periods.[37] Red-figure vase painting, invented circa 530 BCE in Athens, reversed this by painting black outlines on red clay, allowing finer details through added incision and dilution for shading.[37] Panel paintings on wood, often using encaustic (wax-based) or tempera media, depicted mythological and historical subjects; Pliny the Elder describes Zeuxis (active c. 464–400 BCE) creating grapes so realistic that birds attempted to peck them.[38][39]Greek painters advanced illusionism, as evidenced by the legendary contest between Zeuxis and Parrhasius, where Zeuxis's draped figures deceived birds, but Parrhasius's painted curtain fooled Zeuxis upon closer inspection, highlighting superior trompe-l'œil effects.[40]Apelles (fl. 4th century BCE), court painter to Alexander the Great, refined techniques like layering thin glazes for subtlety and developed the "veil" method to depict figures from multiple angles, concealing flaws such as in portraits of one-eyed subjects.[38] Hellenistic painting continued these innovations, incorporating wet-on-dry secco techniques with binders like gum arabic or egg tempera for marble and final wall details.[41]Roman painting, influenced by Greek models, is best preserved in frescoes from Pompeii and Herculaneum, buried by Vesuvius in 79 CE. These employed the buon fresco method, applying water-based pigments to wet lime plaster for chemical bonding, often in multiple layers over preparatory mortar coats.[42] Four stylistic phases emerged: the First Style (late 3rd–1st century BCE) mimicked colored masonry blocks for architectural illusion; the Second Style (c. 80 BCE onward) featured expansive architectural vistas and open landscapes; the Third Style (c. 20 BCE–20 CE) introduced delicate candelabra motifs and Egyptian influences; and the Fourth Style (c. 20–79 CE) combined ornate fantasy elements with crowded figural scenes.[42] Examples include the House of the Vettii frescoes depicting mythological narratives with advanced perspective rivaling later Renaissance attempts.[43]During the early Medieval period, following the Western Roman Empire's fall circa 476 CE, painting shifted toward Christian themes in both Byzantine East and Western Europe. Byzantine icons, painted in egg tempera on wooden panels from the 6th century, emphasized frontal, symbolic figures for devotional contemplation, as in the 6th-century Christ Pantocrator at Saint Catherine's Monastery in Sinai.[44] The Iconoclastic Controversy (726–843 CE) banned religious images, leading to destruction, but post-restoration art revived with hierarchical compositions and gold grounds, influencing Orthodox traditions.[44] Western Medieval painting featured church frescoes and illuminated manuscripts; Romanesque frescoes (10th–12th centuries) used secco and fresco techniques for biblical cycles, as in the Tau frescoes at Cluny Abbey (c. 1100), while Gothic innovations (12th–14th centuries) introduced narrative clarity and naturalism in works like the White Angel fresco (c. 1235) at the Mileševa Monastery in Serbia.[45] Manuscript illumination, dominant due to portability, involved mineral pigments on vellum, peaking in the 12th-century Paris Bible tradition with intricate historiated initials.[46] Panel painting remained limited until late Medieval Italy, where tempera on wood presaged Renaissance developments. Medieval representations of painting techniques also appeared in sculptural reliefs, such as Nino Pisano's "Apelles or the Art of Painting in Detail" (1334–1336) on Giotto's Bell Tower in Florence, depicting a bearded man reaching up with draped clothes over his body.[47]
Renaissance and Early Modern Innovations
The Renaissance, from the early 15th to the late 16th century, marked a profound shift in painting through the systematic application of linear perspective, anatomical precision, and advanced pigmentation techniques, driven by renewed interest in classical antiquity and empirical observation. Filippo Brunelleschi pioneered linear perspective around 1415 by using optical devices to accurately render the recession of space, as demonstrated in his depiction of the Florence Baptistery, enabling artists to construct illusory depth with mathematical consistency.[48] This method was codified by Leon Battista Alberti in his 1435 treatise Della pittura, which outlined vanishing points and horizon lines, fundamentally altering compositional logic from medieval flatness to naturalistic spatial representation.[49]In parallel, the transition to oil painting began with the Early Netherlandish painting tradition in northern Europe, where painters refined oil as a medium, with Jan van Eyck achieving mastery by the 1420s through thin glazes that enhanced luminosity and texture, evident in works like the Ghent Altarpiece (1432), where layered oils mimicked the translucency of jewels and fabrics.[50] Unlike tempera, oil's slow drying allowed for wet-on-wet blending and corrections, fostering intricate details and vibrant color saturation that spread southward, influencing Italian masters by the mid-15th century; by the height of the Renaissance, oil painting techniques had almost completely replaced tempera paints in the majority of Europe.[51] Techniques such as chiaroscuro—contrasting light and shadow to model form—emerged prominently, with artists like Masaccio applying it in frescoes like The Tribute Money (c. 1425) to convey volume and emotional depth.[52]Early Modern developments extended these foundations into the 16th and 17th centuries, with Mannerist distortions challenging Renaissance harmony and Baroque artists amplifying drama through tenebrism, as in Caravaggio's intense light contrasts from the 1590s onward. The transition to canvas supports gained traction in Italy during the 1500s, replacing wooden panels for larger-scale, portable compositions that facilitated patronage and export, while innovations in underdrawing and preparatory cartoons, refined by Raphael and Michelangelo, ensured precision in fresco cycles like the Sistine Chapel ceiling (1508–1512).[53] These evolutions prioritized causal depiction of light, anatomy, and environment, grounding painting in observable reality over symbolic abstraction.[54]
Enlightenment to 19th-Century Realism
During the Enlightenment period spanning roughly the late 17th to early 19th centuries, European painting transitioned from the dramatic intensity of Baroque styles toward more refined and rational approaches, reflecting philosophical emphases on reason, empiricism, and classical antiquity. Rococo, prominent in the early 18th century, featured elegant, playful compositions with pastel colors, intricate ornamentation, and themes of leisure among the aristocracy, as seen in works by Antoine Watteau around 1717. This gave way to Neoclassicism by the mid-18th century, inspired by archaeological rediscoveries of Greco-Roman art and theorists like Johann Joachim Winckelmann, who advocated for noble simplicity and calm grandeur in 1755.[55] Neoclassical paintings prioritized clarity of form, sober color palettes, shallow spatial depth, and heroic or moralistic subjects drawn from history and mythology, aiming for timeless universality over emotional excess.[55]Key Neoclassical artists included Jacques-Louis David in France, whose Oath of the Horatii (1784–1785) exemplified stark linearity, geometric composition, and stoic figures to evoke civic virtue amid the French Revolution's ideals.[56] In Britain, Joshua Reynolds and Thomas Gainsborough advanced portraiture with balanced proportions and naturalistic yet idealized depictions, aligning with Enlightenment empiricism while serving elite patronage; Reynolds's Mrs. Siddons as the Tragic Muse (1784) integrated classical drapery and dramatic lighting.[57] These styles dominated academies, such as the French Royal Academy, which enforced hierarchical genres—history painting above portraiture and still life—based on perceived intellectual merit rather than market demand.[58]The early 19th century introduced Romanticism as a counter-reaction, emphasizing individual emotion, sublime nature, and exotic or turbulent subjects, influenced by the Napoleonic Wars and industrial upheavals; J.M.W. Turner's atmospheric landscapes, like The Fighting Temeraire (1839), captured evanescent light and human transience through loose brushwork.[59] Francisco Goya's works, such as the Disasters of War series (1810–1820), documented war's horrors with raw, unflinching detail, bridging Enlightenment rationality and Romantic intensity while critiquing absolutism.[60] By the 1840s, Realism emerged in France as a direct response to Romantic idealization and academic constraints, prioritizing unvarnished observation of contemporary life, laborers, and urban scenes amid the 1848 revolutions and positivist philosophy.[61] The Paris Salon's jury selections had provoked significant discontent, exemplified in 1863 when Emperor Napoleon III established the Salon des Refusés to exhibit paintings rejected by the Paris Salon. Gustave Courbet, self-proclaimed founder of Realism, rejected mythological fantasies in favor of empirical depiction, as in The Stone Breakers (1849), which portrayed rural poverty with thick impasto and earthy tones to assert art's role in representing social reality without embellishment.[62]Realists like Honoré Daumier (1808–1879) extended this to satirical lithography and genre scenes critiquing bourgeois society and legal inequities, with over 4,000 prints produced between 1830 and 1870 emphasizing caricatured yet truthful human conditions, as well as oil on panel paintings like The Painter featuring visible brushstrokes that exemplify Realism's empirical focus on the artist's labor.[61]Jean-François Millet focused on peasant life in works like The Gleaners (1857), using subdued palettes and monumental figures to elevate mundane labor, reflecting rural depopulation from industrialization—France's agricultural workforce fell from 70% in 1800 to 40% by 1850.[59] This shift democratized subject matter, challenging the academy's elevation of elite narratives and fostering plein-air sketching precursors, though Realism coexisted with lingering Romantic elements until the rise of Impressionism—the inaugural modern painting movement—post-1870. Impressionism initially focused on en plein air painting outdoors rather than in studios, emphasizing the perception of light itself rather than discrete objects; despite internal divisions among its practitioners, the movement gathered adherents and became increasingly influential.[63] The name Impressionism derived from Claude Monet's 1872 painting Impression, Sunrise, which prompted critic Louis Leroy's derisive review in 1874; rejected by the government-sponsored Paris Salon, the Impressionists responded by organizing yearly group exhibitions in commercial venues during the 1870s and 1880s, timed to coincide with the official Salon. Extending these optical interests, Post-Impressionist Georges Seurat advanced color theories in works like Circus Sideshow (Parade de cirque, 1887–88), using Pointillism to disperse color dots for perceptual mixing. Technical continuity relied on oil on canvas, with innovations like pre-mixed tube paints in 1841 enabling outdoor work, though traditional glazing and layering persisted for depth.[64] Overall, these developments marked painting's evolution toward causal fidelity to observed phenomena, prioritizing evidentiary representation over symbolic abstraction.[62]
Modernism and 20th-Century Abstraction
![Piet Mondriaan, 1921 - Composition en rouge, jaune, bleu et noir.jpg][float-right]Modernism in painting arose from wide-scale and far-reaching changes to Western society in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, representing a revolt against the conservative values of realism and the traditional forms of art, architecture, literature, religious faith, social organization, and daily life, which were viewed as outdated amid the new economic, social, and political conditions of an emerging fully industrialized world. Encompassing both a set of cultural tendencies and an array of associated cultural movements, Modernism was marked by self-consciousness, often leading to experiments with form along with work that draws attention to the processes and materials used, and exhibiting a further tendency toward abstraction. This shift marked a departure from representational traditions, emphasizing experimentation with form, color, and composition to reflect the rapid changes of industrialization, urbanization, and scientific advancements in the early 20th century. Artists sought to capture subjective experience and inner realities rather than objective depiction, influenced by philosophical ideas like Theosophy that posited art as a spiritual medium beyond material representation.[65] This shift culminated in abstraction, where paintings abandoned recognizable subjects entirely, prioritizing non-figurative elements to evoke universal truths or emotional states.[66]Cubism, developed by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque from 1907 to 1914, initiated this fragmentation of form by presenting multiple viewpoints simultaneously, challenging Renaissance perspective. Picasso'sLes Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907) exemplified proto-Cubism through angular, mask-like figures, drawing from African art and Cézanne's geometric simplifications.[67] The subsequent Analytical Cubism (1908–1912) reduced objects to interlocking planes and muted palettes, while Synthetic Cubism (1912–1914) incorporated collage elements like newsprint, expanding painting into three-dimensional illusion.[68] These innovations dismantled illusionistic space, paving the way for pure abstraction by demonstrating that meaning could arise from abstracted visual language.[69]Wassily Kandinsky pioneered non-objective painting around 1910–1913 with works like his Untitled (First Abstract Watercolor), where colors and lines expressed inner spiritual necessities independent of external references.[70] Kandinsky's theory in Concerning the Spiritual in Art (1911) argued that abstraction mirrored cosmic vibrations and human emotion, influenced by synesthesia and scientific theories of vibration.[71] Concurrently, Piet Mondrian's De Stijl movement (founded 1917) pursued neoplasticism, employing orthogonal lines, rectangular forms, and primary colors to achieve universal harmony and equilibrium, as seen in Composition en rouge, jaune, bleu et noir (1921) and Composition with Red, Blue, and Yellow (1930).[72] Mondrian viewed this reduction as a purification reflecting dynamic natural laws, rejecting decorative excess for ascetic purity.[73]Surrealism emerged from Dada activities during World War I, led by André Breton, who positioned it as a revolutionary philosophical movement above all, with paintings and other works serving as artifacts expressing its principles. Centered in Paris, the movement spread globally from the 1920s onward, influencing visual arts, literature, film, and music, as well as political thought and practice, philosophy, and social theory.[74]Post-World War II, Abstract Expressionism in the United States emphasized gestural freedom and scale, combining emotional intensity and self-denial from the German Expressionists with the anti-figurative aesthetic from European abstract schools such as Futurism, Bauhaus, and Cubism; the movement was often perceived as rebellious, anarchic, highly idiosyncratic, and nihilistic by some observers. This encompassed action painting, also known as gestural abstraction and occasionally used interchangeably with Abstract Expressionism by critics, widespread from the 1940s to the early 1960s, in which paint was spontaneously dribbled, splashed, or smeared rather than carefully applied, emphasizing the physical act of painting as an essential aspect of the work. Jackson Pollock's drip technique from 1947 onward created all-over compositions like Number 1A, 1948 that embodied action and subconscious expression.[75][76] This movement reacted to wartime trauma and existential philosophy, prioritizing process over product to convey raw emotion through chance and improvisation.[76] Despite criticisms of cultural promotion via institutions, these developments solidified abstraction's dominance, influencing subsequent styles such as Color Field, Lyrical Abstraction, Hard-edge painting, Pop art, minimalism, and conceptual art by prioritizing perceptual experience over narrative.[77] Hyperrealism, a genre of painting and sculpture resembling a high-resolution photograph, considered an advancement of Photorealism, primarily developed in the United States and Europe.[78]Jean Metzinger's La danse (Bacchante) (1906), housed at the Kröller-Müller Museum, exemplifies early modernist experimentation with a mosaic-like Divisionist technique employing divided brushwork to produce iridescences and chromatic versification—treating color strokes as syllabic units—rather than the objective rendering of light, as Metzinger described around 1907 to translate the diverse emotions aroused by nature.
Postmodernism and Contemporary Evolution (1945–2025)
Following World War II, painting transitioned from modernist abstraction toward postmodern pluralism, emphasizing irony, pastiche, and cultural appropriation over purity or progress. In the 1960s, Pop Art marked this shift, with Andy Warhol's Campbell's Soup Cans—a series of 32 acrylic paintings on canvas produced from November 1961 to June 1962—replicating commercial soup labels to interrogate consumerism and reproducibility.[79] Parallel to these developments, the Feminist art movement began in the 1960s during the second wave of feminism, seeking equal rights and opportunities for female artists internationally.[80] Warhol also produced the Oxidation series in the late 1960s and 1970s by covering canvases with metallic paint and having his assistants and friends urinate on the still-wet paint to create abstract oxidation patterns, using bodily fluids as a painting medium. Exhibited at Los Angeles' Ferus Gallery in July 1962, the works faced initial ridicule but established painting's engagement with mass media, subverting elite art conventions by treating everyday icons as subjects.[81] Roy Lichtenstein's comic-strip-derived canvases, such as Whaam! (1963), similarly enlarged Benday-dotted panels to mimic mechanical reproduction, highlighting painting's capacity for simulation rather than authenticity.[82]The 1970s introduced broader eclecticism, as artists rejected conceptual dematerialization for revived materiality, paving the way for 1980s Neo-Expressionism—a raw, figurative backlash against Minimalism and Conceptualism. This movement, prominent in New York, Berlin, and Italy, featured oversized, gestural works infused with personal mythology and social critique; Jean-Michel Basquiat, transitioning from 1970s graffiti under the pseudonymSAMO, produced text-scrawled paintings like Untitled (1982) addressing racial inequities and commodification.[83] Basquiat's career peaked with gallery shows in the mid-1980s before his death from overdose in 1988 at age 27, yet his market endurance is evident in Untitled fetching $110.5 million at Sotheby's in May 2017—the highest for any U.S. artist at auction then.[84] German painters like Anselm Kiefer incorporated lead and ash for historical reckonings with Nazism, while Italians such as Francesco Clemente layered erotic symbolism, collectively prioritizing emotional immediacy over ideological abstraction.[85] Neo-Expressionism's commercial success, fueled by booming 1980s art markets, underscored painting's resilience amid skepticism of grand narratives.From the 1990s onward, contemporary painting embraced globalization and hybridity, incorporating non-Western influences amid digital proliferation. Hyperrealism developed as an independent art movement and style since the early 2000s, primarily in the United States and Europe, advancing Photorealism to produce paintings and sculptures resembling high-resolution photographs.[86] Artists like Luc Tuymans in Belgium blurred historical imagery in muted palettes, as in Gegenlicht (2009), to evoke memory's fragility, while Chinese painters such as Zeng Fanzhi blended socialist realism with market-driven abstraction, achieving sales exceeding $20 million per work by 2013.[82] The 2010s saw a figurative resurgence, with painters like Njideka Akunyili Crosby layering photo-transfers to explore diaspora, reflecting empirical shifts toward identity-infused narratives amid institutional emphasis—though sales data prioritize visual potency over didacticism.[87] By the 2020s, trends included surreal blurring and residue effects responding to image overload, alongside nature motifs in earthy tones, as seen in emerging artists' outputs.[87][88]The art market has profoundly shaped this evolution, with paintings comprising 65% of contemporary auction value ($1.4 billion in 2019) and dominating post-2000 sales through speculation on scarcity.[89] Basquiat alone generated 12% of global contemporary turnover alongside figures like Jeff Koons by 2020, driven by high-net-worth collectors amid low interest rates.[90] Ultra-contemporary segments—works by artists under 10 years post-education—peaked in 2021 but contracted 31% by mid-2024, revealing bubble dynamics where hype, not inherent merit, inflates prices; empirical resilience persists in established painters amid economic volatility.[91] Institutional biases toward politically aligned themes in academia contrast with market empirics favoring spectacle, as auction data from Christie's and Sotheby's affirm painting's preeminence over installation or digital formats through 2025.[92]
Elements and Principles
Color, Tone, and Pigmentation
Pigments consist of insoluble, finely divided particles that impart color to paints by selectively absorbing and reflecting specific wavelengths of visible light, distinguishing them from soluble dyes.[93] In painting, these particles, typically inorganic minerals or synthetic compounds, are ground and dispersed in a binder such as oil or water, yielding opaque or transparent effects depending on particle size and refractive index. Early pigments included natural earths like red ochre (hematite, Fe2O3) and yellow ochre (limonite), sourced from iron oxides and used in cave paintings dating to 40,000 BCE, valued for their stability and availability.[94] Blues such as Egyptian blue (calcium copper silicate), synthesized around 3000 BCE, represented technological advances in pigment production through high-temperature reactions.[95]Key properties of pigments include tinting strength, which measures the amount needed to achieve a given color intensity; opacity, determined by lightscattering; and lightfastness, the resistance to fading under exposure to sunlight or artificial light. Lightfastness is quantified via ASTM D4303 standards, with rating I indicating permanence exceeding 100 years in museum conditions, II for moderate durability (50-100 years), and III for fugitive colors prone to rapid degradation.[96][97] Pigments like alizarin crimson (PR83) often receive lower ratings due to vulnerability to ultravioletlight, prompting artists to substitute with quinacridone alternatives (PR206) for archival works. Permanence also encompasses chemical stability, as some pigments darken or shift hue through reactions with binders or atmospheric pollutants, as observed in lead white (2PbCO3·Pb(OH)2) turning black via hydrogen sulfide exposure.[98]Color in painting breaks down into hue, the perceptual attribute corresponding to wavelength (e.g., red at 650 nm, though the word "red" covers a wide range of variations from the pure red of the visible spectrum of light, as language provides only an abstraction equivalent for color; there is no formalized register of distinct colors); saturation, or chroma, quantifying purity from vivid to grayed; and value, the scale from black to white independent of hue. For painters, who deal practically with pigments rather than abstract perceptual colors, terms like "blue" refer to specific pigments such as Prussian blue, ultramarine, cobalt blue, or phthalocyanine blue, each with distinct chemical compositions and optical properties. Color perception is highly subjective, influenced by physiological and experiential factors. It produces observable psychological effects, such as stimulation from warm hues or tranquility from cool ones, which can vary across cultures—for instance, black is associated with mourning in the West, while white holds that association in the East. Color theories addressing these subjective and psychological dimensions have been developed by individuals such as Isaac Newton, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, and Wassily Kandinsky, as well as by painters, theoreticians, writers, and scientists. While these psychological and symbolic meanings represent derived interpretive layers, the physical properties of pigments form the core means of painting. Tone denotes the specific value within a hue, often adjusted by adding black (shade) or white (tint), or gray for desaturation, enabling nuanced transitions in shading to convey form and depth. In chiaroscuro technique, artists exploit tonal gradations—high-key lights against low-key shadows—to simulate three-dimensionality, as light scatters more on convex surfaces and absorbs in recesses per Lambert's cosine law.[99][100]Pigmentation influences tonal rendering through opacity and layering: opaque pigments like titanium white (TiO2) block underlying tones, while transparent ones like burnt umber allow glazing, where thin veils of color modulate value without altering hue dominance, enhancing luminosity via subsurface scattering. Synthetic organics, developed post-1850s (e.g., phthalocyanine blue, PB15, in 1935), offer superior saturation and lightfastness over historical alternatives, reducing reliance on toxic or fugitive naturals like vermilion (HgS).[101] In pointillism, discrete pigment dots of pure hues optically mix via the viewer's eye, exploiting simultaneous contrast to heighten perceived saturation without physical blending.[102] These elements collectively govern how paintings evoke spatial realism or abstract emotion, grounded in the physics of light-matter interaction.
Composition, Form, and Perspective
Composition in painting involves the strategic placement of visual elements—such as drawing techniques, gesture, shapes, lines, colors, masses, narration, and abstraction—across the canvas to organize the viewer's attention and convey meaning or spatial relationships. Artists achieve effective composition through principles like balance, which counters visual weight via symmetry or asymmetry to prevent imbalance; proportion, scaling elements relative to each other for realism or emphasis; and movement, using lines or contrasts to direct the eye dynamically across the surface.[103][104] Emphasis creates focal points by isolating key subjects through contrast in size, color, or detail, while rhythm employs repetition of motifs to build flow without monotony.[105] Unity binds disparate elements into a harmonious whole, often via consistent style or theme, counterbalanced by variety to sustain interest.[106]Form in painting generates the illusion of three-dimensional volume on a flat surface, primarily through chiaroscuro—modeling shapes with graduated tones of light and shadow to simulate depth and curvature. Geometric forms, like spheres or cubes, rely on precise shading to define edges and highlights, while organic forms in figures or landscapes use softer transitions for natural contours. Techniques such as hatching or cross-hatching in drawing precursors to paint build tonal gradients, and in oil or tempera, layered glazes enhance volumetric realism by mimicking lightrefraction on surfaces.[107][108] This element of form interacts with composition by providing structural weight that influences balance and focal hierarchy, as heavier shadowed masses anchor arrangements.[109]Perspective techniques further integrate form and composition by establishing spatial recession, with linear perspective—pioneered by Filippo Brunelleschi circa 1415 through empirical experiments with mirrors and panels—employing orthogonal lines converging to one or more vanishing points on a horizon line to replicate optical convergence. One-point perspective suits frontal views, as in interior scenes, while two-point accommodates angled facades, calculating foreshortening mathematically for accuracy. Atmospheric perspective, observed in natural vision and applied since antiquity but systematized in the Renaissance, diminishes contrast, saturation, and detail in distant elements, using cooler blues and hazes to evoke aerial depth without geometric lines.[110][111] These methods causally enhance perceived realism: linear enforces precise geometry for architectural fidelity, as verified by Renaissance demonstrations, while atmospheric accounts for particulate scattering in air, reducing edge sharpness over distance.[112] In composition, perspective organizes forms hierarchically, foreground elements dominating in scale and clarity to guide viewer immersion.[113]
Texture, Rhythm, and Non-Traditional Elements
Texture in painting refers to both the physical qualities of the painted surface and the illusion of tactile surfaces created through technique. Actual texture arises from applying paint in varied thicknesses, such as impasto, where thick layers are built up to produce ridges and dimensionality, a method employed by Vincent van Gogh in works like Starry Night completed in 1889. Some modern painters incorporate materials like metal, plastic, sand, cement, straw, leaves, or wood to create texture, as exemplified by Jean Dubuffet and Anselm Kiefer.[114][115] Visual texture, by contrast, simulates tactility through brushwork or patterns, as seen in Jan van Eyck's The Arnolfini Portrait (1434), where fine detailing evokes the fur of a chandelier and the weave of fabrics without physical relief.[116] Palette knife application, prominent from the 19th century, further enhances texture by scraping and layering, allowing artists like Henri Matisse to achieve dramatic depth beyond flat application.[117]Rhythm functions as a compositional principle in painting, guiding the viewer's eye through repetition of elements like lines, shapes, or colors to imply movement and structure, defined as a pause incorporated into a sequence. For Piet Mondrian, pauses in rhythm allow creative force to intervene, adding new creations such as form, melody, and coloration, with the distribution of form or any kind of information holding crucial importance in a given work of art. It manifests in types such as alternating rhythm, where contrasting motifs recur predictably, or flowing rhythm, achieved via curving forms that suggest organic progression, as in Henri Matisse's The Dance (1910), where interlocking figures create a cyclical motion.[118][119] Random rhythm introduces irregularity for dynamism, evident in Piet Mondrian's Composition with Red, Blue, and Yellow (1930), where grid intersections vary to produce subtle visual pulse without strict symmetry; for Mondrian, rhythm held importance in painting akin to its role in music, drawing from musical analogy, where repetition establishes beat, but in visual terms, it relies on proportional spacing to avoid monotony, influencing viewer perception of harmony or tension within the frame.[120][121]Non-traditional elements expand painting beyond conventional pigments and canvases, incorporating mixed media and unconventional applications to challenge planar limits. In the 20th century, artists like Pablo Picasso integrated collage elements—such as newsprint or fabric—into oil paintings, as in Still Life with Chair Caning (1912), blending adhesive attachments with paint for hybrid surfaces.[122] Contemporary practices further diverge, employing spray paint, found objects, or industrial materials; for instance, Aaron Sheppard combines graphite, plaster, and acrylic glass with oils to layer translucent effects over opaque grounds.[123] Techniques like splashing or body-applied paint, popularized in action painting by Jackson Pollock from 1947 onward, prioritize process over precision, using drips and gestures to embed kinetic traces directly into the work.[124] These approaches, while innovative, demand consideration of material durability, as adhesives and synthetics may degrade faster than traditional binders under environmental stress.[125]Pointillism exemplifies rhythmic and textural innovation through dotted color application, as in Georges Seurat's Le Chahut (1889–1890), where optical mixing via repeated dots generates both visual vibration and implied movement akin to musical cadence.[118]
Techniques and Media
Traditional Binders and Supports (Encaustic, Fresco, Tempera)
Encaustic painting involves mixing pigments—such as pure, powdered pigments purchased commercially, oil paints, or other forms—with molten beeswax, the simplest method being adding pigments directly to beeswax, often incorporating other waxes, damar resin, linseed oil, resins, or oils, forming a liquid or paste applied hot using brushes, special brushes, or metal tools, which can shape the paint before it cools, to supports such as prepared wooden panels, canvas, or other materials.[126] Layers are fused by reheating with heated metal implements, which can also manipulate the wax once cooled onto the surface, creating a durable, waterproof surface resistant to aging; other materials can be incorporated by encasing or collaging them into the surface or layering them, using the encaustic medium to adhere.[126] Documented by Pliny the Elder in the 1st century CE, the technique originated in ancient Greece and achieved prominence in Roman Egypt for Fayum mummy portraits dating from 100 to 300 AD; notable surviving early Christian examples include 6th-century encaustic icons such as Christ Pantocrator and Saint Peter at Saint Catherine's Monastery in Egypt, after which its use declined sharply following the 7th-century iconoclastic controversies.[126][127]Fresco, from the Italian word "affresco" deriving from the Latin for "fresh", employs freshly laid lime plaster as the support, which acts as the binder in the buon fresco variant by absorbing waterborne pigments and locking them into calcium carbonate crystals during the curing process of the intonaco—the Italian term for the thin final layer of wet, fresh lime mortar or plaster—eliminating the need for additional adhesives.[128] This method, utilized in Western art for over 4,000 years, features in early examples like Minoan wall decorations around 2000 BCE and later masterpieces such as Giotto di Bondone's Lamentation in the Scrovegni Chapel, completed circa 1305.[128]Fresco secco, by contrast, applies pigments with a binding medium such as egg (tempera), glue, casein, or oil to dry plaster for greater flexibility but reduced longevity, as evidenced in ancient Egyptian tomb paintings and some 1st-century CE Roman sites like Pompeii.[128]Tempera refers to both the painting medium—colored pigment mixed with a water-soluble binder such as a glutinous material like egg yolk or size—and the paintings executed in this medium. It produces a permanent, fast-drying paint that is very long-lasting, with examples surviving from the first centuries CE. Most commonly egg tempera in traditional contexts, it binds pigments with an emulsion of egg yolk and a small amount of water (typically ½ to 1 teaspoon per yolk), applied in fine cross-hatched strokes or glazes to rigid, absorbent supports like gesso-primed wood panels of poplar or birch, copper plates, or vellum leaf. Panel painting on such supports was the normal technique for ancient Greek and Roman paintings, and remained in use in the Eastern Orthodox icon tradition.[129][130] Originating in antiquity across civilizations including ancient Egypt, Mycenaean Greece, and Babylonia, egg tempera served as the primary method of painting until after 1500, when it was largely replaced by the invention of oil painting.[130] The yolk's lecithin and proteins enhance pigment dispersion, viscosity, and opacity, yielding luminous, matte finishes as in Sandro Botticelli's La nascita di Venere (circa 1484–1486). Note that in the United States, paints consisting of pigment and glue size are commonly but incorrectly called tempera, while some American manufacturers refer to them as poster paint.[129]Enamel painting applies powdered glass, colored by mineral oxides known as color oxides, onto metal substrates. The coated substrate is fired at 750–850 °C (1380–1560 °F), fusing into a hard lamination of glass and metal that is durable enough to be handled and wetted, unlike most painted surfaces. Traditionally employed for decorating precious objects, it reached prominence in Renaissance painted enamels, with Limoges serving as the leading center, featuring small religious and mythological scenes in decorated surrounds painted on plaques or objects such as salts or caskets, exemplified by Jean de Court, who is attributed with creating painted enamel dishes.[131] Enamel painting enjoyed a vogue in Europe during the 18th century, especially for portrait miniatures.[132]
Oil and Variant Solvent-Based Media
![Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci][float-right]Oil painting is the process of painting with pigments bound with a medium of drying oil, such as linseed oil or poppyseed oil, the latter widely used in early modern Europe, which serves as the binder and allows for slow drying—in contrast to the rapid drying of most acrylics—that facilitates blending and layering techniques, providing more time to blend colors and apply even glazes over under-paintings, though it may impede the artist's ability to work quickly.[133] The medium's polymerization process, triggered by oxidation, creates a durable film resistant to cracking when applied in thin layers building to thicker ones, following the "fat over lean" principle to prevent adhesion issues.[134]Early evidence of oil-based paints appears in 7th-century Buddhist cave murals in Afghanistan's Bamiyan Valley, where artists mixed pigments with oils possibly derived from walnuts or poppies.[135] However, the technique was refined and popularized in Northern Europe during the 15th century by Flemish artists, with Jan van Eyck credited for advancing its use through meticulous glazing and detail, as seen in works like the Ghent Altarpiece completed around 1432.[51] The transition to oil painting began with the Early Netherlandish painting tradition in northern Europe. This innovation spread southward via trade and Antwerp Mannerists by the early 16th century, and by the height of the Renaissance, oil painting had become the principal medium for creating artworks as its advantages became widely known, almost completely replacing tempera paints in the majority of Europe, influencing Italian Renaissance masters such as Leonardo da Vinci, who employed oil on panel for the Mona Lisa (c. 1503–1506), achieving unprecedented sfumato effects through subtle tonal transitions.[136]Essential materials include finely ground pigments combined with linseed oil, which contains high levels of alpha-linolenic acid enabling oxidative drying over days to weeks depending on thickness and additives.[137] Solvents like turpentine distillate thin the mixture for initial underpainting or washes, evaporating to leave the oil film, while resins such as pine resin or frankincense were often boiled with oil to create varnishes—mixtures prized for their body and gloss—that can be added for faster drying.[138] Common supports are canvas primed with gesso or wooden panels, copper plates, and glass.[139]Variant solvent-based media, such as alkyd paints introduced in the 1930s, modify traditional oils by incorporating synthetic polyester resins dissolved in petroleum solvents, accelerating drying to hours rather than days through quicker solvent evaporation and polymerization. Water-miscible oil paints, also called "water soluble" or "water-mixable," are a modern variety engineered with modified oil mediums where molecular structures incorporate hydrophilic elements, enabling temporary water solubility without compromising traditional oil drying properties; this allows wet paint to be removed from brushes, palettes, and rags using ordinary soap and water, as well as thinning, rather than chemicals such as turpentine, while retaining oil-like handling properties and permitting the same mixing and application techniques as traditional oil paints.[140] Alkyds offer enhanced durability against UV degradation and humidity compared to pure oils, with strong adhesion suitable for overpainting latex surfaces, though they may become tacky prematurely, requiring efficient workflow adjustments.[141] These variants maintain oil-like versatility for glazing and impasto but reduce solvent use in some formulations, appealing to artists seeking faster turnaround without sacrificing luminosity, as evidenced in mid-20th-century adoption by figures like Norman Rockwell for illustrative precision.[142]
Water-Based Media (Watercolor, Gouache, Acrylic)
Water-based media encompass pigments suspended in water-soluble binders, enabling fluid application and rapid drying through evaporation, which facilitates layering techniques while demanding precise control over dilution to achieve desired opacity and flow; paintings made with these fluid mediums may be susceptible to cracking and discoloration from changes in the color, opacity, or dimensions of the medium as it dries. These paints, particularly watercolor and acrylic, are easy to clean up with water, though acrylic requires soap and water immediately following use, while watercolor can be cleaned with just water. These paints originated from ancient practices of mixing natural pigments with water or simple adhesives, evolving into distinct forms suited to paper, board, canvas, glass, pottery, or lacquer supports. Unlike solvent-based oils, water-based paints minimize volatile organic compounds, though they require humidity management to prevent cracking or buckling in supports like paper.[143][64]Ink serves as a water-based medium in painting, comprising a liquid containing pigments or dyes along with solvents, pigments, dyes, resins, lubricants, solubilizers, surfactants, particulate matter, and other materials that control its flow, thickness, and appearance when dry.[144] It is applied using tools such as pens, brushes, or quills to color surfaces and produce images, text, or designs.Watercolor is a painting method in which the paints are made of pigments suspended in a water-soluble vehicle, consisting of finely ground pigments bound with gum arabic and additives like honey or glycerin for adhesion and flow, available in forms such as pan watercolors, liquid watercolors, watercolor brush pens, and watercolor pencils (also known as water-soluble color pencils), which can be used either wet or dry, applied in transparent layers that reveal the underlying support's whiteness for luminosity. Watercolors must be painted onto porous surfaces, primarily watercolor paper, though other supports include papyrus, bark papers, plastics, vellum or leather, fabric, wood, and canvas. Its history traces to prehistoric cave art and Egyptian papyri around 2000 BCE, where water-mixed earth pigments created durable images, with longstanding traditions in East Asia—particularly China, where finger-painting with watercolors originated, Korea, and Japan, featuring brush and scroll paintings often in monochrome black or brown inks—as well as India, Ethiopia, and other countries,[145][146] but it gained prominence in Europe during the Renaissance for preparatory sketches, with oils favored for final works due to greater permanence.[147][148] By the 19th century, tubed watercolors enabled larger-scale paintings, supporting wet-in-wet blending for soft edges and glazing for depth, as seen in British landscapes from 1750–1850 where artists exploited its portability for plein air work, for example in John Martin's "Manfred on the Jungfrau" (1837). Techniques emphasize negative painting—painting around reserves of white—and require archival papers to resist absorption-induced distortion, with dilution ratios often exceeding 50:1 water-to-pigment for veiling effects.[149][64]Gouache is a water-based paint consisting of pigment and other materials designed to be used in an opaque painting method, employing the same gum arabic binder as watercolor but featuring larger pigment particles than watercolor, a much higher pigment-to-water ratio, and inert whites such as chalk or zinc oxide for a heavier body and greater opacity, yielding a matte finish suitable for solid color blocks and illustrative detail; it is diluted with water like other water media and best applied with sable brushes. Documented in ancient Egyptian manuscripts from circa 1500 BCE using honey or tragacanth glue with pigments and employed by artists such as François Boucher, it parallels early tempera in opacity while retaining water solubility for reactivation upon rewetting, allowing corrections unlike fully cured acrylics.[150][151] This medium excels in layering from dark to light without transparency issues, with application on primed surfaces to prevent sinking, and its quick-drying nature—typically 5–10 minutes per layer—supports commercial uses like posters, though it demands even illumination to avoid lightfastness variability in non-professional formulations.[152][153]Acrylic paints are fast-drying synthetic paints containing pigment suspended in an acrylic polymer emulsion, which can be diluted with water during application but form a flexible, water-resistant film upon drying at rates of 10–30 minutes depending on humidity and thickness; a finished acrylic painting can resemble a watercolor or an oil painting depending on dilution or modification, or have its own unique characteristics not attainable with other media. Developed from polymer emulsions, they represent a 20th-century innovation. German chemist Otto Röhm synthesized the foundational acrylic resin in 1934, with Leonard Bocour and Sam Golden inventing solution acrylic paint under the Magna brand between 1946 and 1949 as a mineral spirit-based precursor; artist-grade water-based versions were commercialized in the 1950s, with subsequent water-based acrylics sold as latex house paints, and George Rowney becoming the first manufacturer to introduce artists' acrylic paints in Europe under the brand name "Cryla" in 1963 (part of Daler-Rowney since 1983), offering versatility for thin washes mimicking watercolor or impasto textures rivaling oils through mediums that retard drying or add body.[154][155] Advantages include adhesion to diverse substrates—glass, metal, or plastic—without yellowing, and pH stability resisting chemical degradation, though early formulations suffered from brittleness until cross-linking agents improved durability by the 1960s. Unlike reactivatable gouache or watercolor, acrylics permit overpainting without dissolution, enabling mixed-media experimentation, with dilution up to 10:1 water-to-paint for fluidity or gel mediums for opacity akin to gouache.[156][157][158]
Pastels
Pastels are a dry pigment medium in the form of sticks consisting of pure powdered pigment—the same pigments used in other colored art media such as oil paints—and a minimal amount of binder possessing neutral hue and low saturation, producing color effects closer to those of natural dry pigments than any other painting process. The resulting surface is fragile and easily smudged. Preservation requires protective measures such as framing under glass or spraying with a fixative. Pastel paintings made with permanent pigments and properly cared for may endure unchanged for centuries. Unlike paintings in fluid media, pastels are not susceptible to cracking or discoloration arising from changes in the color, opacity, or dimensions of the medium as it dries. A notable example is Maurice Quentin de La Tour's Portrait of Louis XV of France (1748), which demonstrates the medium's capacity for detailed and lifelike representation.
Modern and Experimental Media (Digital, Spray, Sustainable Innovations)
Digital painting refers to computer graphics software that provides a virtual canvas and a virtual painting box of brushes, colors, and other supplies, including many instruments impossible outside the computer, such as advanced symmetry tools or particle effects, which contribute to its distinct look and feel from traditional artwork. Unlike computer-generated art, which produces images automatically through mathematical calculations and algorithms, digital painting is artist-driven, relying on the creator's manual techniques applied via digital tools. It utilizes software and hardware to simulate traditional painting processes, originating with early computer-generated art in the 1960s when John Whitney created the first pieces using analog computers and mathematical operations.[159] Practical digital painting tools advanced in the 1980s with the development of paint programs and graphics tablets, such as the first Wacom digitizer in 1984, enabling artists to manipulate pixels with pressure-sensitive styluses mimicking brushes.[160] By the 1990s, software such as Adobe Photoshop, released in 1990, and Corel Painter incorporated layers, brushes, and blending modes, allowing for non-destructive editing and effects unattainable in physical media.[161] Contemporary digital painting often employs tablets like the iPad Pro, introduced in 2015, with apps such as Procreate (2011), which support thousands of brush presets and infinite canvas sizes, facilitating workflows from sketching to final output without material waste; such digital images can be printed onto traditional carriers by means of software driving office printers or industrial robotic machinery if desired.[162]Collage, originating with the Cubist movement around 1912, involves assembling diverse materials such as paper, fabric, and found objects onto a surface; while frequently integrated with painted elements, it is not considered painting in the strict sense due to its emphasis on juxtaposition over pigmentation.Sandpainting is the art of pouring colored sands and powdered pigments from minerals or crystals, or from other natural or synthetic sources, onto a surface to make a fixed or unfixed sand painting.Porcelain enamel on metal has been used as a durable medium for outdoor murals in the late 20th century, involving the application of powdered glass frit with pigments to metal surfaces, fired at high temperatures to create a weather-resistant vitreous coating.Spray techniques in painting leverage aerosol propellants for atomized application, with aerosol paint—also known as spray paint—dispensed from sealed pressurized containers in a fine spray mist upon depressing a valve button, resulting in a smooth, evenly coated surface. Standard sized aerosol paint cans are portable, inexpensive, and easy to store, with commercial spray paint cans patented in 1949 by Edward Seymour for industrial use, later adapted by artists for rapid layering and gestural effects.[163] Aerosol paint's speed, portability, and permanence make it a common medium for graffiti, where in the late 1970s street graffiti writers' signatures and murals became more elaborate, developing a unique style as a factor of the aerosol medium and the speed required for illicit work; graffiti and street art are now recognized as a unique art form, with specifically manufactured aerosol paints made for graffiti artists. Aerosol primer can be applied directly to bare metal and many plastics. In fine art, spray paint diverges from brushes by enabling unpredictable diffusion and stencil precision, as seen in urban art movements from the 1970s where artists like Jean-Michel Basquiat incorporated sprayed elements for texture and immediacy before transitioning to gallery contexts.[164] Innovations include airless spray systems developed in the mid-20th century, which use high-pressure pumps for thicker coatings without compressors, reducing overspray and improving control in studio applications.[165] Techniques such as dry spraying for matte finishes, layering for depth, and stenciling—where a stencil protects a surface except the specific shape to be painted, and which can be purchased or created as movable letters, ordered as professionally cut logos, or hand-cut by artists—for sharp edges have expanded spray's role beyond graffiti to abstract and photorealistic works, though solvent emissions pose ventilation challenges compared to solvent-based oils.[166]Sustainable innovations in painting media prioritize low-impact materials to mitigate environmental harm from petroleum-derived binders and toxic pigments, with non-toxic, plant-based alternatives emerging prominently since the 2010s. Natural Earth Paint, launched around 2008, offers oil paints using mineral pigments and non-petroleum binders, avoiding heavy metals like cadmium and lead found in traditional formulations.[167] Low-VOC acrylics and water-based enamels, refined in the 2000s, reduce volatile organic compound emissions by up to 90% compared to earlier solvent variants, as verified in EPA standards, enabling safer indoor use while maintaining archival quality.[168] Artists increasingly employ recycled substrates like concrete and biodegradable binders derived from agar or plant resins, incorporating mixed materials such as sand, clay, paper, cardboard, newspaper, plaster, gold leaf, and even entire objects for texture, conceptual depth, and sustainability, as in experimental gels tested in 2022 for conservation treatments that minimize synthetic additives.[169] These developments, driven by regulatory pressures like the EU's REACH framework since 2007, support causal reductions in pollution without compromising pigmentation durability, though scalability remains limited by higher costs—often 20-50% above conventional media.[170] Digital tools further enhance sustainability by eliminating physical waste, as exemplified by artists like Zach McCraw who produce eco-focused works solely on tablets since 2019.[171]
Styles and Traditions
In art, the term "style" is used in two main senses: the distinctive visual elements, techniques, and methods that typify an individual artist's work, and the movement or school that an artist is associated with, which may involve conscious affiliation with a group.
Western Traditions
Western painting traditions trace their roots to ancient Greece and Rome, where artists employed fresco techniques on wet plaster and encaustic methods using heated beeswax as a binder.[36] Roman wall paintings, preserved in sites like Pompeii following the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 CE, demonstrate four distinct styles: the First Style mimicking marble panels, the Second Style creating architectural illusions, the Third Style with delicate ornamental motifs, and the Fourth Style blending fantasy landscapes with intricate details.[42] These works prioritized illusionistic depth and narrative scenes from mythology or daily life, influencing later European decorative arts.[172]During the Medieval period from approximately 500 to 1400 CE, Western painting shifted toward Christian iconography, with illuminated manuscripts and panel paintings featuring flat, symbolic figures in Byzantine-influenced styles emphasizing spiritual hierarchy over naturalism.[173] Gothic advancements around 1150-1400 introduced elongated forms and increased emotional expressiveness in altarpieces and frescoes, as seen in the works of Italian masters like Giotto di Bondone (c. 1267-1337), who began bridging symbolic representation toward volumetric realism.[173]The Renaissance, spanning the 14th to 17th centuries, marked a revival of classical antiquity through innovations like linear perspective, formalized by Filippo Brunelleschi around 1415 and theorized by Leon Battista Alberti in 1435, enabling three-dimensional illusion on two-dimensional surfaces.[52] Artists such as Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) advanced sfumato for subtle tonal transitions in works like the Mona Lisa (c. 1503-1506), while Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564) and Raphael (1483-1520) excelled in anatomical precision and balanced compositions on frescoed ceilings and panels.[174]Oil painting, refined by Northern Europeans like Jan van Eyck (c. 1390-1441), allowed for finer detail and glazing techniques, spreading southward and dominating the medium. In Western cultures, oil painting and watercolor painting have developed rich and complex traditions in style and subject matter.[175]Baroque painting in the 17th century emphasized dramatic chiaroscuro and dynamic compositions to evoke religious fervor, with Caravaggio (1571-1610) pioneering tenebrism—intense light-dark contrasts—for heightened realism and emotional intensity in biblical scenes.[176]Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640) exemplified Flemish Baroque with exuberant, fleshy figures and vibrant colors in large-scale historical and mythological canvases.[177] Transitioning into the 18th century, Rococo adopted lighter, asymmetrical forms and pastel palettes for intimate, secular themes of leisure and romance, as in Antoine Watteau's (1684-1721) fête galante scenes.[178]In the 19th century, Realism emerged around the 1840s, led by Gustave Courbet (1819-1877), rejecting romantic idealization for unvarnished depictions of contemporary labor and rural life, as in The Stone Breakers (1849).[179]Impressionism, coalescing in the 1870s with artists like Claude Monet (1840-1926), prioritized fleeting atmospheric effects through loose brushwork and en plein air practice, capturing light's optical phenomena over fine detail, as evidenced in Impression, Sunrise (1872).[180] This paved the way for Post-Impressionism's structural explorations by Paul Cézanne (1839-1906) and color theories of Georges Seurat (1859-1891).[59]Twentieth-century modernism fragmented traditions: Cubism, initiated by Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) and Georges Braque around 1907, deconstructed forms into geometric facets from multiple viewpoints, challenging single-point perspective; Surrealism, beginning in the early 1920s, featured elements of surprise, the uncanny, the unconscious, unexpected juxtapositions, and non-sequiturs in its artistic and literary productions.[74] Abstract Expressionism in the 1940s-1950s, centered in New York, embraced spontaneous gesture and scale, with Jackson Pollock's (1912-1956) drip technique embodying action painting's emphasis on process over representation; Photorealism, emerging in the late 1960s and early 1970s in the United States, evolved from Pop Art as a counter to Abstract Expressionism by using photographs to create paintings that appear as realistic as photographs.[181] These evolutions reflect causal shifts from technological advances, like synthetic pigments in the 19th century, to socio-political upheavals, including two world wars, driving abstraction as a response to representational disillusionment.[182]
East Asian and Islamic Traditions
East Asian painting traditions originated in China during the Warring States period (475–221 BCE), when paintings began to appear beyond geometric pottery patterns, primarily created by anonymous craftsmen for royal and feudal courts. In the East, ink and color ink historically predominated the choice of painting media. These traditions are equally rich and complex in style and subject matter as those in Western cultures. These early works evolved through the Tang Dynasty (618–907 CE), which saw advancements in figure and landscape painting, into sophisticated ink wash techniques, known as shui-mo or gongbi for meticulous styles and xieyi for expressive freehand approaches, using brush, ink, and water on silk or paper supports; a notable example of traditional East Asian ink monochrome techniques is Liang Kai's Drunken Celestial (12th century), executed in ink on Xuan paper, exemplifying the expressive splashed-ink style within xieyi.[183][184] In East Asia, watercolor painting with inks is referred to as brush painting or scroll painting. By the Song dynasty (960–1279 CE), landscape painting in the shan shui ("mountain and water") style and hua niao (bird-and-flower) painting emphasized natural harmony, philosophical introspection influenced by Taoism and Confucianism, and formats like handscrolls and hanging scrolls designed for temporary display rather than permanent exhibition.[185] In the Ming dynasty, the Southern School emerged as a major literati tradition emphasizing expressive, amateur brushwork, with sub-schools including the professional Zhe School, which revived Song academic styles, and the Wu School, focused on scholarly landscapes and poetry; Chen Hongshou (1598–1652) produced notable album leaf paintings, such as the Leaf album, exemplifying detailed and archaistic figure styles.[186] In the 17th century, Yun Bing created album leaves in ink and color on paper, showcasing refined Chinese court painting traditions.In Japan, painting traditions adapted Chinese influences while developing indigenous forms, such as yamato-e during the Heian period (794–1185 CE), which featured native themes, vibrant colors, and narrative scenes on screens and scrolls distinct from imported Chinese ink styles, including emakimono handscrolls depicting epic stories.[187] Suiboku-ga, a monochrome ink painting technique introduced via Zen monks in the 14th century, paralleled Chinese methods but integrated Japanese aesthetics of minimalism and asymmetry; the Kanō school, established in the 15th century, dominated professional production of ink landscapes and screens in this style, for example Sesshū Tōyō's Landscapes of the Four Seasons (1486), executed in ink and light color on paper. Later, ukiyo-e emerged in the Edo period (1603–1868 CE), depicting everyday life, actors, and landscapes through woodblock prints and paintings, with artists like Hishikawa Moronobu pioneering single-color prints in the late 17th century before multicolor refinements; contemporaneous developments included the decorative Rimpa school with its nature motifs and gold-leaf applications, and the late Edo Shijō school blending ukiyo-e realism with traditional ink techniques, alongside contemporary movements like Superflat.[188][189] In Korea, painting traditions were influenced by Chinese ink techniques, developing literati landscapes and figures alongside indigenous minhwa folk paintings featuring vibrant motifs of nature, daily life, and auspicious symbols. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Eastern painting continued a long history of stylization, without undergoing an equivalent transformation to the Western art movements that challenged the Renaissance view of the world.Islamic painting traditions, shaped by aniconism prohibiting idolatrous images in religious contexts, elevated calligraphy as a primary art form due to aniconic principles, often executed as painted scripts on architectural surfaces, manuscripts, and objects, emphasizing geometric and floral motifs alongside script. These traditions prioritized non-figurative elements like calligraphy, geometric patterns, and arabesques since the 7th century CE, yet permitted detailed figurative miniatures in secular manuscripts, including Arabic, Persian, and Ottoman types.[190]Persian miniature painting, tracing roots to cultural exchanges in the early Islamic era and flourishing from the 13th century under Ilkhanid patronage, featured vibrant colors, intricate compositions, and illustrations of epics like the Shahnameh, with artists employing fine brushes on paper for courtly and literary works.[191] Ottoman miniatures, influenced by Persian styles, depicted historical events, sultans' lives, and battles from the 15th century onward, as seen in illuminated chronicles like the Süleymanname, using gold leaf and opaque watercolors while adhering to stylized, non-perspectival representations to avoid realism's potential for idolatry.[192] These traditions emphasized illumination (tezhib) with gold and lapis lazuli, serving didactic and decorative purposes in books rather than standalone canvases.[193]
African, Indian, and Other Non-Western Traditions
Indian painting traditions feature ancient Buddhist frescoes in the Ajanta Caves, executed between the 2nd century BCE and the 6th century CE using tempera on mud plaster, illustrating Jataka tales with intricate human figures, animals, and architectural details achieved through layering of natural pigments like red ochre and lapis lazuli. In pre-colonial India, miniature paintings were the primary form of painting, executed on special wasli paper using mineral and natural colors and encompassing a group of several styles and schools, including Mughal, Pahari, Rajasthani, Company style, Sikh, and Deccan. The Mughal school of miniature painting emerged in the 16th century under Emperor Akbar (r. 1556–1605), developing in the Mughal imperial courts through the 18th century from Persian miniature traditions—which drew partial origins from Chinese influences—synthesizing these with indigenous motifs to produce detailed miniatures either as book illustrations or single works for albums (muraqqa), depicting court life, battles, and dynastic histories on wasli paper supports with fine squirrel-hair brushes for precision; it differed from Persian styles through greater emphasis on realistic portraiture and more lifelike representations of animals and plants in album compositions.[194] Regional Rajasthani (Rajput) and Pahari styles evolved and flourished mainly in the 17th century in the royal courts of Rajputana in northern India, with artists trained in the Mughal miniature tradition dispersing from the imperial court to develop localized styles influenced especially by traditions illustrating the Sanskrit epics, the Mahabharata and Ramayana; subjects varied, with portraits of ruling families often engaged in hunting or daily activities generally popular alongside narrative scenes from the epics or Hindu mythology and genre scenes of landscapes and humans, characterized by flattened perspectives, vibrant mineral colors, and gold leaf enhancements in schools such as Mewar, Bundi, and Kishangarh, where Nihâl Chand served as master, creating works like "Krishna and Radha"; Pahari painting, also known as Punjab Hills painting, features major sub-styles including Kangra, Guler, and Basohli, with Kangra painting—the pictorial art of Kangra in Himachal Pradesh, a former princely state that patronized the art—becoming prevalent in the mid-18th century following the fading of the Basohli school, its focal theme being shringara (the erotic sentiment) through depictions of the love between Radha and Krishna adopted from the bhakti-driven poetry of Jayadeva and Keshav Das, while exhibiting the tastes and traits of the societal lifestyles of that period. Another Indian tradition is Pichwai painting, consisting of large-format paintings on textile usually depicting stories from the life of Lord Krishna, serving to narrate tales of Krishna to the illiterate and often used as backdrops to the main idol in temples or homes, with temples possessing sets featuring different images changed according to the calendar of festivals celebrating the deity; primarily produced in Rajasthan, India, where they continue to be made, such paintings are extremely rare in the Deccan region.[195] Madhubani art is a style of Indian painting practiced in the Mithila region of India and Nepal, characterized by complex geometrical patterns and famous for representing ritual content used for particular occasions like festivals and religious rituals. Warli is another folk tribal art form from India. Pattachitra, in Odisha, is closely linked to the worship of Lord Jagannath and limited primarily to religious themes, known for its intricate details as well as mythological narratives and folktales; it employs all natural colors and is made fully in the traditional manner by Chitrakars, hereditary Odia painters, representing one of the oldest and most popular art forms in the state; the term also encompasses traditional cloth-based scroll paintings in West Bengal. Mysore painting is an important form of classical South Indian painting that originated in and around the town of Mysore in Karnataka, encouraged and nurtured by the Mysore rulers; known for its elegance, muted colors, and attention to detail, it features common themes of Hindu gods and goddesses and scenes from Hindu mythology, as exemplified by the 19th-century Mysore Painting of Goddess Saraswathi. In the colonial era, Company style developed during the 18th and 19th centuries as a hybrid Indo-European painting tradition created by Indian artists primarily for European patrons, such as those in the British East India Company, with three distinct styles emerging in British power centers of Delhi, Calcutta, and Madras; for western patrons, subjects were often documentary rather than imaginative, prompting Indian artists to adopt a more naturalistic approach than had traditionally been usual, blending indigenous techniques with Western influences; an example is "Khan Bahadur Khan with Men of his Clan" (c. 1815) from the Fraser Album. The Bengal School was an avant-garde and nationalist art movement originating in Bengal, primarily Kolkata and Shantiniketan, flourishing throughout the Indian subcontinent during the British Raj in the early 20th century; led by Abanindranath Tagore, it rejected colonial aesthetics by turning to China and Japan to promote a pan-Asian aesthetic, incorporating elements from Far Eastern art such as the Japanese wash technique; it reacted against the academic art styles previously promoted in India by artists such as Raja Ravi Varma and in British art schools, aiming to establish a distinct Indian style celebrating indigenous cultural heritage.In African contexts, painting manifests primarily in ritual and decorative forms rather than standalone canvases, with Ethiopian Christian traditions producing illuminated Ge'ez manuscripts from the 4th century onward, as exemplified by the Garima Gospels dated paleographically to 390–660 CE, which incorporate vivid iconographic panels of saints and biblical scenes using vegetable dyes and gold on vellum; Ethiopian painting more broadly includes church icons and murals.[196] Sub-Saharan practices include body painting with ochre, clay, and plant-based pigments for initiation rites and ceremonies among groups like the Nuba or Maasai, serving protective and identity-signaling functions tied to social structures rather than aesthetic autonomy.[197] Architectural painting, such as the geometric murals on Ndebele homestead walls in South Africa since the 19th century, employs bold patterns in earth tones to denote status and ward off evil, reflecting communal labor and symbolic coding over individualistic expression.[198] Specific African painting styles encompass ancient Egyptian painting, featuring stylized wall and tomb art depicting daily life, religious rituals, and hieroglyphs in flat perspectives; Ethiopian painting as noted; and Tingatinga, a 20th-century Tanzanian popular art style known for bold, colorful depictions of wildlife and daily life using simple forms and enamels on board. African painting traditions continued a long history of stylization into the late 19th and early 20th centuries, without equivalent transformations to those in Western art.Other non-Western traditions highlight adaptive and ceremonial painting modalities, including Southeast Asian contributions such as Indonesian painting traditions featuring wayang kulit-inspired figurative styles depicting mythological narratives alongside modern developments; Australian Aboriginal dot painting on canvas originated in the 1971 Papunya Tula movement, initiated by artists like Geoff Bardon collaborating with Warlpiri and Pintupi elders, translating sacred sand and body designs into acrylic works using dots to encode Dreamtime narratives while concealing esoteric knowledge from outsiders.[199] In Oceania, Melanesian and Polynesian body and bark paintings utilize stencils and freehand applications of charcoal and red pigments for totemic and navigational motifs during rituals, integrating art with oral histories and environmental adaptation.[200] Indigenous American traditions include Mesoamerican murals, such as those at Bonampak (ca. 790 CE), rendered in Maya sites with post-fired lime plaster and organic colors depicting sacrificial ceremonies, underscoring painting's role in political propaganda and cosmological documentation. These practices prioritize functional integration with culture and ecology over the Western fine art paradigm, often employing ephemeral media to emphasize transience and communal validation.
Outsider Art
Outsider art, an English term coined by critic Roger Cardinal in 1972, serves as a synonym for the French "art brut" ("raw art"), a label introduced by artist Jean Dubuffet to describe works created outside the boundaries of official culture, with a particular focus on art by insane-asylum inmates. Dubuffet began collecting such pieces in the 1940s, valuing their unmediated expression. The category has since developed into a successful art marketing segment, including the annual Outsider Art Fair in New York since 1992. However, "outsider art" is sometimes misapplied as a broad label for any art by self-taught individuals or those outside the mainstream art world, irrespective of their specific circumstances or the content of their work.
Global Contemporary Fusion
Global contemporary fusion in painting encompasses the integration of techniques, motifs, and conceptual frameworks from disparate cultural traditions, prominent since the 1990s amid accelerated globalization, diaspora movements, and international art expositions. Artists employ hybrid media such as acrylics, enamels, or layered textiles on canvas or board to synthesize elements like Eastern decorative intricacy with Western compositional depth, often addressing themes of identity, displacement, and cultural hybridity. This trend contrasts with earlier modernist appropriations by prioritizing lived intercultural experiences over exoticism, as evidenced in works circulated through global venues like the Venice Biennale.[201]Japanese artist Takashi Murakami pioneered the Superflat aesthetic in 2000, deliberately flattening the pictorial space to echo the two-dimensionality of Edo-period ukiyo-e prints while infusing contemporary motifs from anime, manga, and Western pop consumerism. His acrylic and oil paintings, such as those in the "And Then And Then" series (1996–2013), feature recurring icons like smiling flowers and wide-eyed figures, critiquing postwar Japanese society's commodification through a lens that equates historical flatness with modern screen-based imagery.[202][203]Kashmiri-born, London-based Raqib Shaw (b. 1974) exemplifies fusion through his meticulous enamel-on-board technique, layering fine lines inspired by Persian and Mughal miniatures with compositions drawing from European Renaissance masters like Tintoretto and Baroque opulence. In "The Departure (After Tintoretto)" (2021–2022), Shaw reimagines a Venetian scene with hybrid elements including Kashmiri carpet patterns, Hindu deities, and fantastical landscapes, blending South Asian narrative density with Western perspectival drama to explore personal exile and mythological reverie. His method involves squirrel-hair brushes for precision, yielding jewel-like surfaces that merge pre-modern Eastern craft with contemporary global iconoclasm.[204]Filipino-American Pacita Abad (1946–2004) advanced fusion via trapunto paintings from the 1980s onward, stitching and stuffing canvases with fabrics from Southeast Asian sarongs and batiks alongside vibrant Western acrylic washes to portray urban migrants and social inequities. Works like her "Social Realist" series depict layered figures in bold, abstracted forms that hybridize folk textile traditions with expressionist figuration, reflecting her itinerant life across Asia, Europe, and the U.S. Similarly, Chinese-American Martin Wong (1946–1999) combined ink-wash precision from Song-dynasty landscapes with gritty New York street scenes in oil paintings of the 1980s, such as those fusing Chinatown architecture with urban grit to evoke dual cultural inheritances.[201][205]These practices highlight a shift toward equitable cross-pollination, where non-Western techniques gain prominence in global markets, though critics note market-driven commodification can dilute authentic cultural specificity. Fusion continues to evolve with digital aids enabling remote collaborations, as in biennial projects merging African masking patterns with Latin American muralism.[206]
Genres and Subject Matter
Examples of naturalistic and representational painting genres include portraiture, still life, and landscape painting, though these genres can also incorporate abstract approaches.
Portraiture and Figure Painting
Portraiture refers to a representation of a person in which the face and its expression is predominant, with the primary intent to display the likeness, personality, and even the mood of the person, often commissioned to commemorate status or preserve memory.[207] In contrast, figure painting refers to a work of art in any of the painting media with the primary subject being the human figure, whether clothed or nude, and also to the activity of creating such a work. It focuses on the human form in general, prioritizing anatomical structure, pose, and movement within compositional or narrative contexts, without requiring identifiable likeness.[208][209] Techniques for both genres evolved from preparatory drawings to layered applications of pigment, with portraiture demanding precise rendering of features like skin texture via glazing in oils, while figure painting often incorporated dynamic proportions derived from classical ideals or live models.[210]The depiction of the human figure in painting dates back to the first Stone Age cave paintings, where it has been one of the central subjects of art, reinterpreted in various styles throughout history. Early portraiture appeared in ancient Egyptian funerary art around 3000 BCE, using flat profiles on tomb walls. The art of portraiture flourished in ancient Greek and especially Roman sculpture, with sitters demanding individualized and realistic portraits, even unflattering ones.[211] but Western painting advanced during the Renaissance (14th–17th centuries), where oil media enabled detailed realism.[212] Jan van Eyck's Arnolfini Portrait (1434) demonstrated innovative use of oil for luminous skin and fabric details, influencing Northern European traditions.[213] Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa (c. 1503–1506), one of the best-known portraits in the Western world and thought to depict Lisa Gherardini, the wife of Francesco del Giocondo, employed sfumato—a soft blending technique—to achieve atmospheric depth and subtle emotional nuance in the subject's enigmatic expression.[214] By the Baroque period (17th century), Rembrandt van Rijn's over 80 self-portraits, such as Self-Portrait with Beret (1658), utilized chiaroscuro—strong contrasts of light and shadow—to reveal inner psychology and aging effects through impasto and glazing.[215] Portraiture expanded beyond nobility to the middle class by the 18th century, driven by growing wealth and secular patronage.[216]Figure painting, rooted in classical Greek depictions of idealized bodies from the 5th century BCE, emphasized proportional anatomy via systems like Polykleitos' canon, revived in Renaissance humanism. Artists well known for figure painting include Peter Paul Rubens, Edgar Degas, and Édouard Manet. Artists studied écorché (flayed) models and live poses to capture musculature, as in Titian's Danaë (1544–1545), which integrated eroticnarrative with realistic flesh tones achieved through successive oil glazes. In Persian Safavid tradition, Reza Abbasi's Two Lovers (1630) depicts entwined figures, emphasizing pose, movement, and emotional intimacy through fluid lines and vibrant pigmentation.[209] In academic traditions of the 19th century, figure compositions like William-Adolphe Bouguereau's The Birth of Venus (1879) prioritized harmonious contrapposto and smooth finishes over photographic accuracy, serving educational and allegorical purposes in salons.[217] Techniques involved underpainting in monochrome (grisaille) for form, followed by color layering to model volume, distinguishing figure work's broader spatial integration from portraiture's facial focus.[218]
The 19th-century advent of photography challenged portraiture's monopoly on likeness, shifting emphasis toward interpretive psychology, as seen in John Singer Sargent's loose brushwork in Madame X (1884), which captured social poise through bold impasto.[219] Figure painting persisted in response to abstraction's rise, with realists like Gustave Courbet using alla prima (wet-on-wet) methods for spontaneous vitality in works like The Stone Breakers (1849), grounding human labor in empirical observation.[220] Both genres declined in avant-garde dominance post-1900, but portraiture evolved through pop art, as in Andy Warhol's, one of the most prolific portrait painters of the 20th century, Shot Marilyn series (1964), depicting Marilyn Monroe, an iconic example of his work, and Orange Prince (1984), depicting the pop singer Prince, both exemplifying his unique graphic style of portraiture, and revived further in contemporary realism, where digital aids supplement traditional methods without supplanting manual skill, as exemplified by Ned Bittinger's Portrait of Abraham Lincoln in Congress (2004), located in the US Capitol, which renders the historical figure in a congressional setting with precise anatomical detail and historical accuracy.[210] Empirical studies confirm that viewer engagement with portraits correlates with perceived authenticity, derived from verifiable anatomical fidelity rather than stylistic novelty.[221]
Landscape and Still Life
Landscape painting is the depiction of natural scenery such as mountains, valleys, trees, rivers, lakes, and forests, emphasizing elements arranged into a coherent composition, especially when the main subject is a wide view. In non-landscape works, landscape backgrounds often play an important role. Almost always including the sky and frequently incorporating weather, these views evolved from background elements in earlier compositions to an independent genre during the Dutch Golden Age in the 17th century, when artists specialized in rendering atmospheric effects and light with unprecedented realism. Detailed landscapes developed as a distinct subject only after sophisticated traditions of representing other subjects existed. The two main traditions of landscape painting, Western and Chinese, extend well over a thousand years.[222] The veduta, a highly detailed, usually large-scale painting of a cityscape or vista and a subgenre of landscape, originated in Flanders in the 16th century with artists such as Paul Bril; later, vedute of familiar scenes like the Roman Forum or the Grand Canal, standardized by the itinerary of the Grand Tour, recalled early ventures to the Continent for aristocratic Englishmen. In the later 19th century, depictions of cityscapes shifted from a desire for topographical accuracy to more personal impressions; painted panoramas satisfied the ongoing demand for topographical accuracy in place of traditional vedute.[223] Dutch painters such as Jacob van Ruisdael (1628–1682) and Meindert Hobbema (1638–1709) captured expansive views of dunes, rivers, and forests, emphasizing empirical observation over idealization.[224] In France, the genre advanced through the Barbizon School from the 1830s, with Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot (1796–1875) pioneering plein air techniques that influenced Impressionism, as seen in Claude Monet's Impression, Sunrise (1872), which prioritized fleeting light over precise detail.[225] Andreas Achenbach's Clearing Up, Coast of Sicily (1847), housed in the Walters Art Museum, exemplifies detailed 19th-century coastal landscapes emphasizing atmospheric effects.[226]Still life painting is a work of art depicting mostly inanimate subject matter, typically commonplace objects such as natural items like food, flowers, plants, rocks, or shells, and human-made objects like drinking glasses, books, vases, jewelry, coins, pipes, and so on. Focusing on such subjects, with origins in Middle Ages and Ancient Greek and Roman art, it emerged as a distinct specialty in the contemporary Low Countries (today's Belgium and Netherlands, then Flemish and Dutch artists) around 1600, where the tradition started and became far more popular than in southern Europe, reflecting the era's prosperity and moral themes such as vanitas—reminders of mortality through wilting blooms or skulls. Particularly before 1700, still life paintings often contained religious and allegorical symbolism relating to the objects depicted. Compared to paintings of landscapes or portraiture, still life offered artists more leeway in the arrangement of design elements within a composition.[227] Subgenres of Northern still lifes included the breakfast piece, augmented by the trompe-l'œil, the flower bouquet, and the vanitas, as well as forest floor still lifes depicting natural elements like plants, shells, and insects, pioneered by Otto Marseus van Schrieck in works such as A Forest Floor Still-Life (1666). Artists like Pieter Claesz (1597–1661) and Willem Claesz Heda (1594–1680) mastered banketje (banquet) compositions, using subtle chiaroscuro to evoke texture and transience in everyday items.[228] Similar hyperrealistic depictions of everyday objects characterized Spanish Baroque still life, particularly the bodegón, a genre depicting pantry items such as victuals, game, and drink often arranged on a simple stone slab, or paintings with one or more figures but significant still life elements, typically set in a kitchen or tavern; despite fewer patrons in Spain compared to other regions, a type of breakfast piece featuring a few objects of food and tableware laid on a table became popular starting in the second quarter of the 17th century, as in Francisco de Zurbarán's Still Life with Pottery Jars (Spanish: Bodegón de recipientes, 1636, oil on canvas, 46 × 84 cm), housed in the Museo del Prado, Madrid. Pronkstilleven, or sumptuous display still lifes, featured exotic imports like Chinese porcelain, as in works by Willem Kalf (1619–1693), symbolizing wealth amid the Dutch Republic's trade dominance.[229]Women artists, including Rachel Ruysch (1664–1750), excelled in floral still lifes, achieving lifelike detail through meticulous layering of petals and dew.[230]Both genres underscored technical virtuosity in Northern Europe, where Protestant aversion to religious imagery shifted focus to secular subjects, fostering innovations in composition and illusionism that prioritized observable reality over narrative.[231] Later developments, such as Romantic landscapes by Caspar David Friedrich (e.g., Monk by the Sea, 1808–1810), infused emotional sublime with vast, untamed vistas.[232] In still life, 19th-century artists like Paul Cézanne shifted toward structural abstraction, as in The Basket of Apples (c. 1893), dissecting form through geometric planes; some modern still life works employ techniques to break the two-dimensional barrier, including three-dimensional mixed media, found objects, photography, computer graphics, as well as video and sound.[233] These traditions highlight painting's capacity to elevate mundane motifs through precise depiction, countering earlier hierarchies that favored history painting.
Allegorical, Historical, and Illustrative Types
Allegorical painting utilizes symbolic figures, objects, and narratives to convey abstract ideas, moral lessons, or political messages beyond literal depiction. Allegory need not be confined to language but can be addressed to the eye, often in realistic painting; a simple visual example is the image of the grim reaper symbolically representing death.[234] This approach, rooted in classical antiquity and revived during the Renaissance, personifies concepts like virtues or emotions through human forms and attributes, as seen in Artemisia Gentileschi's Self-Portrait as the Allegory of Painting (c. 1638–1639), where the artist embodies La Pittura with tools like a brush and palette, emphasizing painting's deceptive yet revelatory nature.[235] Such works proliferated in Baroque Europe, serving patrons' desires for edifying or propagandistic content, with artists drawing from Cesare Ripa's Iconologia (1593) for standardized symbolic motifs.[236]Historical painting, deemed the pinnacle of the artistic hierarchy by 17th-century academies, focuses on grand narratives from ancient history, mythology, scripture, or literature to inspire moral and civic virtue.[237] Examples include depictions of mythological figures on ancient pottery, Biblical scenes on the Sistine Chapel ceiling, and scenes from the life of Buddha or other Eastern religious imagery. Originating in RenaissanceItaly with large-scale frescoes like those by Raphael in the Vatican Stanze (1508–1511), the genre emphasized dramatic composition, noble figures, and historical accuracy to elevate viewers' understanding of human endeavor.[238] By the Neoclassical era, painters like Jacques-Louis David produced works such as The Oath of the Horatii (1784), 3.86 meters wide, portraying a Roman tale of fraternal sacrifice to parallel contemporary revolutionary ideals, though later critiqued for idealizing events over empirical fidelity.[239]Illustrative types in painting bridge fine art and narrative utility, rendering scenes from literature, fables, or daily life to elucidate stories or concepts, often commissioned for books, magazines, theater or movie posters, comic books, and other media or moral instruction yet achieving artistic merit through technical prowess. In medieval codices, such illustrations were known as illuminations, individually hand-drawn and painted. Distinguished from pure fine art by purposeful storytelling over autonomous expression, these works gained prominence in the 19th century with Romantic and Pre-Raphaelite artists; John Martin's Manfred and the Alpine Witch (1837), inspired by Byron's poem, exemplifies vast, theatrically lit compositions illustrating supernatural drama on a 1.4 by 2.1 meter canvas.[240] In America, the late 19th to early 20th century represented a golden age of illustration, during which highly successful illustrators including Howard Pyle and N.C. Wyeth of the Brandywine School, J.C. Leyendecker, Maxfield Parrish, and Jessie Willcox Smith produced painted illustrations for books and magazines that captured American aspirations of the time. Honoré Daumier's lithographic-style oils, like those satirizing French society (1830s–1870s), further demonstrate illustration's role in fine art by combining caricature with social critique, influencing later graphic traditions despite initial commercial origins.[241] Illustrators have sometimes been considered less important in the visual art world compared to fine artists and graphic designers, but there is growing interest today in collecting and admiring original illustration artwork, with various museum exhibitions, magazines, and art galleries devoting space to illustrators of the past. The growth of the computer game and comic industries has elevated illustrations as popular and profitable artworks, enabling them to acquire a wider market than fine artists and graphic designers, particularly in Korea, Japan, Hong Kong, and the United States.[242]
Aesthetics and Theory
Aesthetics is the study of art and beauty.[243]
Philosophical Underpinnings of Representation
The concept of representation in painting originates with the ancient Greek notion of mimesis, defined as the imitation of nature or human actions through artistic depiction. This foundational idea posits that paintings achieve their effect by replicating perceptible reality, thereby engaging the viewer's recognition and cognitive faculties.[244] In Plato's Republic (c. 375 BCE), mimesis is critiqued as a secondary imitation: painters copy the sensible world, which itself imperfectly reflects eternal Forms, producing illusions that distance observers from truth and potentially corrupt moral judgment, leading Plato to advocate restrictions on such arts in the ideal state and to compare painting to a craft similar to shoemaking or iron casting, as it imitates appearances without utility or insight into ideals.[245] Aristotle, in contrast, defended mimesis in his Poetics (c. 335 BCE) as a natural human instinct for learning through representation, where painting and poetry evoke pleasure via universal patterns rather than mere particulars, fostering catharsis and intellectual insight without Plato's ontological hierarchy.[246]These classical debates established representation's dual role as both epistemically limited and psychologically potent, influencing subsequent theories that balanced imitation with interpretive depth. Mimesis, as the earliest systematic aesthetic theory, evaluates painting by its fidelity to observable phenomena, prioritizing accuracy in form, proportion, and action to mirror causal structures of the visible world. This framework persisted through antiquity, where Roman writers like Horace reinforced imitation as a means to instruct and delight, though subordinated to rhetorical utility.[247]The Renaissance revived and mathematized these underpinnings, transforming mimesis into a precise optical science. Leon Battista Alberti's Della Pittura (1435) argued that painting should project visual istoria—narrative scenes—using linear perspective to simulate the eye's pyramidal projection of three-dimensional space onto a flat surface, grounding representation in Euclidean geometry and verifiable observation rather than mere craft.[248] Leonardo da Vinci further emphasized painting's intellectual dimension, stating "La Pittura è cosa mentale" ("Painting is a thing of the mind"), which positioned it as a mental science superior to mere imitation. These Renaissance advancements, including linear perspective and anatomical studies, enabled painting to achieve a closer representation of perceptual truth than in ancient Greece.[248] Alberti's method, demonstrated empirically by Filippo Brunelleschi's 1410s experiments with mirrors and vanishing points on Florence's Baptistery, enabled paintings to evoke the same perceptual cues as direct sight, such as diminution and occlusion, thus causal realism in depiction: the artwork triggers viewer responses akin to encountering the original object.[249] This empiricist turn aligned with emerging scientific paradigms, where representation's validity rests on reproducible fidelity to light, shadow, and proportion, as evidenced in works like Masaccio's The Tribute Money (c. 1427), which applies Alberti's rules to achieve spatial coherence.[250]Enlightenment thinkers further embedded representation in sensory epistemology, viewing painting as an extension of empirical knowledge. John Locke's empiricism (1690) implied that accurate depiction reinforces ideas derived from sensation, countering innate or abstract ideals with data from observation, while 18th- and 19th-century philosophers such as Immanuel Kant and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel treated aesthetics as a central issue. Kant, in his Critique of Judgment, distinguished between judgments of beauty—disinterested pleasure in harmonious form—and the sublime, an overwhelming response to vastness or power, prioritizing beauty in his analysis though without specific reference to painting.[251] This distinction influenced Romantic painters like J.M.W. Turner and Caspar David Friedrich, who emphasized the sublime in landscapes to evoke awe beyond mere beauty. Hegel, in his Lectures on Aesthetics, classified painting, poetry, and music as the three "romantic" arts for their symbolic, highly intellectual purpose expressing subjective spirit and acknowledged the historical failure to attain a universal concept of beauty, viewing it as evolving dialectically without absolute fixity.[252] This principle was realized in 19th-century Realism's rejection of romantic distortion for unvarnished transcription of everyday scenes.[253] Philosophers like Ernst Gombrich later analyzed representation's success through schema and correction—iterative perceptual matching—affirming that effective paintings exploit innate psychological mechanisms for object recognition, rooted in evolutionary adaptations to visual cues rather than cultural convention alone. Iconography, the study of the content of paintings rather than their style, complements this by focusing on depicted subjects; Erwin Panofsky and other art historians first seek to understand the literal things depicted, then examine their meaning for the viewer at the time, and finally analyze their wider cultural, religious, and social meaning.[254] Thus, representation's philosophical core endures as a causally grounded mimicry, verifiable by its capacity to elicit veridical perceptual judgments across observers.
Debates on Realism, Abstraction, and Conceptualism
The debates on realism, abstraction, and conceptualism in painting center on the fundamental purpose of the medium: whether it should prioritize faithful representation of the observable world, evoke subjective experience through non-literal forms, or convey intellectual ideas where execution is secondary. These tensions emerged prominently in the 19th and 20th centuries, as painters reacted against academic traditions of idealized depiction, with realism asserting empirical observation as art's core, abstraction seeking liberation from mimesis to explore pure visual elements, and conceptualism elevating dematerialized concepts over craftsmanship. Modern and contemporary art shifted away from the historic value of craft and documentation in favor of concept emphasis. Painters, theoreticians, writers, and scientists like Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Wassily Kandinsky, and Isaac Newton have developed their own color theories, influencing artistic applications of pigmentation.[255][256]Realism, revived in the mid-19th century by artists like Gustave Courbet, demanded depiction of subjects as they appear, emphasizing technical mastery of anatomy, light, and proportion to mirror causal realities without romantic distortion—as in Courbet's Burial at Ornans (1850), which portrayed ordinary rural life on monumental scale to challenge elite conventions. Proponents argue this approach enables verifiable skill assessment and broad accessibility, as representational works facilitate immediate recognition and emotional engagement grounded in shared human experience. Empirical studies support this, showing non-expert viewers consistently rate representational paintings higher in appeal and understanding than abstract ones, with preferences linked to cognitive familiarity rather than elite training.[257][258][259] Critics of abstraction counter that its departure from likeness invites subjective interpretation without objective benchmarks, potentially reducing painting to arbitrary marks anyone could produce, thus eroding standards of proficiency.Abstraction, gaining traction around 1910 with Wassily Kandinsky's series of ten Composition paintings, rejected literal representation to focus on color, line, and rhythm as direct conveyors of inner states, positing that forms could transcend physical reference to achieve universal emotional resonance. This built on earlier insights, such as Parisian painter Maurice Denis's 1890 assertion that a painting—before representing subjects like a warhorse, a naked woman, or a story—is essentially a flat surface covered with colors assembled in a certain order. Prior to many 20th-century developments like Cubism, painting's core subject was the external world—nature, whereas these developments reflected on the means of painting itself. Painter and writer Julian Bell has offered recent contributions to thinking about painting. In his book What is Painting?, he discusses the historical development of the notion that paintings can express feelings and ideas. In Mirror of the World, he writes that a work of art seeks to hold your attention and keep it fixed, while a history of art urges it onwards, bulldozing a highway through the homes of the imagination. Painters such as Kandinsky and Paul Klee authored theoretical works on painting; in his essay Concerning the Spiritual in Art, Kandinsky maintained that painting has a spiritual value, attaching primary colors to essential feelings or concepts, a linkage previously attempted by Goethe and other writers. Kandinsky drew from music's abstract nature—abstract by nature, it does not represent the exterior world but expresses inner feelings of the soul in an immediate way—influencing the birth of abstract painting; he viewed music as the ultimate teacher, termed his most spontaneous works "Improvisations" and more elaborate ones "Compositions." As a child, he began learning the piano and cello in 1871, and he created a stage design for a performance of Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition. Kandinsky's synaesthetic concept entailed a universal correspondence between forms, colors, and musical sounds, where he claimed to hear tones and chords while painting; he associated specific colors with musical notes, such as yellow for middle C on a brassy trumpet, and regarded black as the color of closure and the end of things, with combinations of colors producing vibrational frequencies akin to chords played on a piano. Jean Metzinger contributed to this theoretical framework by conceptualizing pictorial phraseology, wherein brushstrokes serve as syllables variable in quantity but not in dimension—alterations in dimension modifying the rhythm—destined to translate the diverse emotions aroused by nature. Advocates, including Clement Greenberg, championed it as formal progress, arguing that flatness and opticality purified painting from illusionistic pretense, aligning with modernist autonomy.[260] Yet detractors, such as representational artists, contend abstraction often masquerades as innovation while evading the discipline of observed reality, leading to works criticized as "unrealistic" dilutions that prioritize novelty over enduring aesthetic criteria. Public data reinforces skepticism, with surveys indicating widespread preference for figurative art among untrained audiences, who find abstract pieces less informative or beautiful absent contextual priming. Philosopher Roger Scruton attributed this to a broader "cult of ugliness" in modernism, where shock supplanted harmonious representation, diminishing art's role in affirming human order.[256][261][262]Conceptualism in painting, intensifying from the 1960s with figures like Robert Rauschenberg blending readymades into canvases, subordinates technique to idea, as Sol LeWitt asserted in 1967 that "in conceptual art the idea is the machine which makes the art." This shift, per Tom Wolfe's analysis, transformed painting into theoretical illustration by the 1970s, where critics' doctrines—rather than visual merit—dictated value, sidelining skill for ideological novelty.[263][264] Critics argue this demotes painting to prosaic commentary, as execution becomes dispensable, enabling banality under conceptual guise; for instance, Wolfe documented how abstract expressionism's theory eclipsed craft, fostering market-driven esotericism over substantive creation. Such views highlight institutional biases, where academia and galleries promote conceptual works as avant-garde despite public disinterest, evidenced by persistent demand for representational art in non-elite contexts. Recent revivals of figurative painting, like hyperrealism, reflect pushback, prioritizing measurable verisimilitude against conceptual abstraction's perceived evasions.[265][266][267]
Social, Economic, and Cultural Impact
Patronage, Markets, and Economic Realities
Throughout history, patronage has been the primary mechanism sustaining painters, with wealthy individuals, religious institutions, and monarchs commissioning works to display power, piety, or prestige. In Renaissance Florence, the Medici family exemplified this system, funding artists like Sandro Botticelli for pieces such as The Birth of Venus around 1485, which advanced humanist themes and technical innovation in tempera on canvas.[268] Church patronage dominated earlier periods, commissioning altarpieces and frescoes to propagate doctrine, as seen in the Vatican commissions for Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel ceiling between 1508 and 1512.[269] Royal support, such as Francis I of France's employment of Leonardo da Vinci from 1516 until his death in 1519, integrated painting into courtly splendor and scientific inquiry.[270] These arrangements often imposed thematic constraints but provided financial stability absent in independent production.The transition from feudal patronage to a commercial art market accelerated in the 17th century, particularly during the Dutch Golden Age, where a burgeoning merchant class drove demand for genre scenes and still lifes sold via dealers and auctions rather than direct commissions.[271] This shift democratized access, with painters like Rembrandt initially thriving on speculative production for public sale, though market saturation led to declines by the late 1600s.[272] By the 18th and 19th centuries, academies and salons formalized exhibitions, fostering competition and value determination through critical reception and buyer interest, reducing reliance on singular patrons.[273] The 20th century saw further market evolution with auction houses like Christie's and Sotheby's dominating high-end transactions, where paintings by modern masters fetch records, such as Picasso's Les Femmes d'Alger selling for $179 million in 2015.In contemporary times, the global art market, encompassing paintings as a core segment, reached an estimated $57.5 billion in sales value in 2024, reflecting a 12% decline from prior peaks amid economic pressures, though transaction volumes increased slightly indicating broader participation.[274] Private collectors and institutions continue patronage-like roles, with groups like MoMA's Modern Circle supporting acquisitions, yet market dynamics prioritize speculative investment over traditional commissioning.[275] Economic realities for painters remain precarious; U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data shows median annual wages for fine artists at $56,260 in May 2024, with many supplementing via teaching or unrelated jobs due to inconsistent sales and high production costs.[276] Income disparities are stark, as top-tier works dominate value—82% of dealer sales in paintings, sculptures, and works on paper—while emerging artists average $5,000 to $25,000 annually, underscoring the market's winner-take-all structure.[277][278]
Painting as Propaganda and Cultural Influence
Paintings have long served as instruments of propaganda, commissioned by rulers, institutions, and elites to legitimize authority, promote ideologies, and shape public perceptions of power dynamics. In ancient Egypt, for instance, Ramesses II's mortuary temple at the Ramesseum featured monumental relief paintings depicting his victories, such as the Battle of Kadesh in 1274 BCE, exaggerating pharaonic triumphs to divine rule and deter rivals.[21] These works functioned not merely as decoration but as state-sanctioned narratives reinforcing the king's semi-divine status and military prowess, influencing subjects' loyalty through visual repetition in public spaces. Similarly, medieval church frescoes, like those by Giotto di Bondone in the Scrovegni Chapel (completed circa 1305), illustrated biblical scenes to propagate Christian doctrine amid feudal hierarchies, blending religious fervor with temporal control by the Catholic Church.[279]During the Renaissance, Florentine banking families such as the Medici leveraged painting patronage to construct dynastic legitimacy amid republican pretensions. Cosimo de' Medici and his descendants commissioned artists like Sandro Botticelli to produce works such as The Birth of Venus (circa 1485), which evoked classical antiquity to symbolize cultural revival under Medici oversight, subtly embedding family emblems and allusions to their role as civic guardians.[280][281] This strategic use of allegorical and portraiture painting—evident in over 90 documented Medici portraits from 1518–1570—served as visual propaganda, portraying rulers as enlightened patrons while masking oligarchic ambitions, thereby influencing Florentine identity and extending Medici influence across Europe.[282] Such commissions fostered a feedback loop where art burnished patronage prestige, attracting further artists and solidifying economic-political dominance.![Sandro Botticelli's Birth of Venus, symbolizing Medici cultural patronage][float-right]In the 19th and early 20th centuries, historical paintings glorified national leaders to rally support, as seen in Jacques-Louis David's Bonaparte Crossing the Grand Saint-Bernard Pass (1801), which mythologized Napoleon Bonaparte's 1800 Alpine campaign, omitting logistical realities to depict him as a heroic successor to Hannibal and Charlemagne.[284] Totalitarian regimes amplified this through state-mandated styles: Nazi Germany's approved art, including Hermann Otto Hoyer's In the Beginning Was the Word (1937), portrayed Adolf Hitler as a messianic orator to unify the volk under Aryan ideals, with such works reproduced en masse to counter "degenerate" modernism deemed culturally corrosive.[285] In the Soviet Union, socialist realism—codified in 1934 under Joseph Stalin—dominated from 1932 to the 1980s, mandating depictions of proletarian heroism and industrial progress, as in Yuri Pimenov's New Moscow (1937), which idealized urban transformation despite famines and purges, serving as ideological indoctrination in public exhibitions and schools.[286][287] These regimes censored alternatives, with over 16,000 "degenerate" works confiscated by Nazis in 1937 and Soviet avant-garde suppressed post-1932, illustrating painting's role in enforcing monocultural narratives.[288]Beyond overt propaganda, paintings exerted subtler cultural influence by framing societal norms and identities. 19th-century American landscapes and historical scenes, such as Benjamin West's The Death of Wolfe (1770), shaped perceptions of indigenous peoples as obstacles to manifest destiny, embedding colonial justifications in canonical art.[289] In the Cold War, the U.S. Congress for Cultural Freedom covertly promoted abstract expressionism—via funding for Jackson Pollock and others—from the 1950s, positioning it as emblematic of Western individualism against Soviet collectivism, with exhibitions reaching over 200 venues globally by 1962 to sway intellectual elites.[290] This instrumentalization highlights causal mechanisms: elite funding selects motifs that align with geopolitical aims, perpetuating influence through museum acquisitions and education, where empirical analysis reveals discrepancies between depicted ideals and historical realities, such as socialist realism's omission of the Holodomor famine (1932–1933, claiming 3–5 million lives).[291] Overall, painting's propagandistic utility stems from its visceral appeal, enabling long-term cultural embedding despite verifiable distortions.
Controversies and Critiques
Technical Skill vs. Conceptual Novelty
The debate in painting centers on whether technical mastery—encompassing precise draftsmanship, mastery of light and shadow, color harmony, and compositional balance—holds greater value than conceptual innovation, where the underlying idea or provocation supersedes execution. Historically, painting prized skill as essential for conveying realism and emotion, as seen in Renaissance practices where apprentices spent years honing techniques under masters like Leonardo da Vinci, whose Mona Lisa (c. 1503–1506) exemplifies sfumato blending and anatomical accuracy achievable only through rigorous training.[292] In contrast, 20th-century shifts, accelerated by Marcel Duchamp's Fountain (1917)—a readymade urinal submitted as art—prioritized intellectual challenge over craft, culminating in conceptual art's emergence in the 1960s, where Sol LeWitt's 1967 essay "Paragraphs on Conceptual Art" asserted that "in conceptual art the idea or concept is the most important aspect of the work" and execution is "perfunctory."[293] This transition reflected broader modernist rebellions against academic traditions, but critics argue it democratized entry by sidelining measurable proficiency, allowing ideas alone to claim artistic legitimacy. Modern and contemporary art has moved away from the historic value of craft and documentation in favor of concept, yet this shift has not stopped the majority of living painters from continuing to practice painting as a whole or part of their work.[294]Proponents of technical skill contend that painting, as a visual medium, demands competence to effectively realize concepts; without it, works fail to engage perceptually or endure scrutiny, akin to literature requiring grammatical fluency to convey narrative. Art critic Tom Wolfe, in The Painted Word (1975), lambasted this evolution, portraying post-war American art as dominated by theoretical jargon from critics like Clement Greenberg and Harold Rosenberg, where "the word was painting" and actual brushwork became secondary to manifestos.[295] Similarly, British critic Brian Sewell repeatedly dismissed contemporary conceptual pieces for their "infantile" execution, arguing in reviews that true painting requires "the skill to draw and paint with conviction," not mere provocation, as evidenced by his critiques of Young British Artists like Damien Hirst whose spot paintings—grids of colored dots produced by assistants—fetch millions despite formulaic simplicity.[296] Empirical market data underscores the tension: Hirst's The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living (1991), a shark in formaldehyde with minimal painted elements, sold for $8 million in 2004, prioritizing shock value over technique.[297] Such valuations, often driven by auction houses and collectors, highlight how conceptual novelty inflates prices amid speculative bubbles, yet forgeries like Han van Meegeren's Vermeer imitations (1930s) succeeded precisely because they mimicked irreplaceable skill, revealing technique's causal role in perceived authenticity.[265]Critiques of conceptual dominance emphasize its vulnerability to subjective hype and institutional bias, where academia and galleries—often aligned with theoretical frameworks—favor accessible "ideas" over labor-intensive skill, potentially lowering barriers for ideological conformity rather than merit. Research on artistic quality posits originality and technical skill as intertwined components, with studies showing viewers rate works higher when both align, yet contemporary curation disproportionately elevates the former.[298] Examples include Maurizio Cattelan's Comedian (2019), a banana duct-taped to a wall sold for $120,000 at Art Basel Miami Beach, lauded for critiquing commodification but derided for zero painterly involvement; a 2024 resale attempt escalated to $6.2 million before legal disputes, illustrating market detachment from craft. Defenders of skill, such as representational painters like Odd Nerdrum, advocate "kitsch" realism rooted in apprenticeship, arguing conceptualism's "deskilling" erodes painting's communicative power, as novices can mimic ideas but not replicate centuries-honed optics like chiaroscuro.[299] This persists in 2025 markets, where hyperrealists command niche respect but conceptual auctions dominate headlines, fueling ongoing contention over whether painting's essence lies in verifiable mastery or ephemeral novelty.[300]
Authenticity, Forgery, and Market Manipulations
Authenticity in painting requires verifying that a work originates from the claimed artist, often through a combination of provenance documentation, stylistic analysis, and scientific examination. Provenance traces ownership history, but gaps or fabricated records can obscure fakes, as seen in cases where forged certificates of authenticity accompany counterfeits.[301] Scientific methods have become essential due to the limitations of visual expertise alone, which can be subjective and influenced by market pressures.Forgers employ techniques mimicking historical materials and methods, such as aging canvases with tea or baking paints to crackle, or using period-appropriate pigments sourced from modern synthetics that replicate old formulations. Han van Meegeren, a Dutch painter active in the 1930s–1940s, exemplifies this by forging Johannes Vermeer works, including "The Supper at Emmaus" sold in 1937 for the equivalent of millions today; he baked canvases to simulate craquelure and added phenol formaldehyde resin for hardness, fooling experts until his 1945 arrest for selling to Nazi Hermann Göring, after which he proved his forgery by creating another under supervision.[302][303]Wolfgang Beltracchi, convicted in 2011, forged modernists like Max Ernst using self-made pigments and fake provenances, netting over €50 million before chemical analysis revealed anachronistic titanium white in a purported 1914 Heinrich Campendonk.[304]Detection relies on non-invasive and invasive analyses: X-ray fluorescence (XRF) identifies elemental composition of pigments, revealing modern substitutes like cadmium yellow post-1840; infrared reflectography uncovers underdrawings inconsistent with an artist's habits; and radiocarbon dating detects anachronistic supports or binders.[305][306]Raman spectroscopy distinguishes synthetic versus natural vermilion, while microscopy examines craquelure patterns for artificiality. These methods exposed over 1,500 forgeries in a 2024 European ring involving Banksy, Warhol, and Picasso fakes, seized across multiple countries.[307]Market manipulations exacerbate forgery risks, with auction houses sometimes employing reserve prices—confidential minimums preventing sales below thresholds—to sustain high valuations, potentially masking weak demand.[308] Practices like "chandelier bidding" by house employees can simulate interest, though regulated in some jurisdictions; unregulated art lacks securities oversight, enabling insider price inflation via related-party sales.[309] Forged works facilitate money laundering, as art's subjective pricing allows illicit funds to "wash" through overvalued purchases and resales, with estimates of annual financial crimes in the sector reaching billions.[310][311] Recent cases, such as the 2025 seizure of 21 purported Salvador Dalí paintings in Italy for lacking authentication from the artist's foundation, highlight ongoing vulnerabilities in exhibitions and secondary markets.[312]Discoveries of fakes depress artist market values temporarily, with sellers shifting to top auction houses like Sotheby's or Christie's post-exposure for credibility, but overall, the opaque market structure—lacking centralized registries—perpetuates risks, as forgers exploit hype around blue-chip names.[313] Empirical data from fraud busts, like the 2024 operation yielding 500 seized pieces, underscore that forgeries comprise a significant illicit trade, undermining collector confidence and inflating insurance costs.[314]
Political Instrumentalization and Moral Outrage
Paintings have frequently been politically instrumentalized through confiscation, exhibition, or destruction to enforce ideological conformity, as seen in Nazi Germany's campaign against modernism. The "Entartete Kunst" (Degenerate Art) exhibition, opened on July 19, 1937, in Munich, displayed over 650 confiscated works by artists such as Wassily Kandinsky and Paul Klee, labeling them as symptoms of cultural and racial degeneration under Jewish and Bolshevik influence.[288] Overall, the regime seized more than 16,000 artworks from German public collections between 1937 and 1938, selling approximately 4,000 abroad to generate foreign currency for rearmament while destroying or storing others to suppress artistic dissent.[315] This systematic purge advanced Nazi racial and aesthetic doctrines, prioritizing heroic realism over abstraction or expressionism.[316]Moral outrage has similarly prompted censorship of paintings perceived to violate religious or social norms, often intersecting with political control. Michelangelo's The Last Judgmentfresco (1536–1541) in the Sistine Chapel provoked immediate scandal for its numerous nude figures, which critics like Biagio da Cesena decried as indecorous for a sacred space.[317] Following Michelangelo's death in 1564 and amid Counter-Reformation pressures, Pope Pius IV ordered alterations in 1565, with artist Daniele da Volterra adding draperies and loincloths to over 40 figures to mitigate obscenity concerns.[318] These changes, derisively earning da Volterra the nickname "Il Braghettone" (the breeches-maker), reflected ecclesiastical efforts to align art with emerging moral standards amid broader iconoclastic tendencies.[319]Secular moral panics have also targeted explicit content, as with Gustave Courbet's L'Origine du monde (1866), a close-up depiction of female genitalia commissioned privately but concealed from public view for over a century due to accusations of pornography.[320] Exhibited briefly in 1889 before seizure by French authorities, it remained hidden in collections until its 1995 display at the Musée d'Orsay, underscoring persistent tensions between artistic realism and societal taboos on the body.[320] In contemporary instances, political activists have instrumentalized canonical paintings through vandalism to amplify environmental demands, igniting widespread outrage over risks to cultural heritage. On October 14, 2022, Just Stop Oil protesters hurled tomato soup at Vincent van Gogh's Sunflowers (1888) in London's National Gallery, protected by glass from damage but prompting arrests and debates on the ethics of using irreplaceable art as protest collateral.[321] Similar acts, such as soup thrown at Claude Monet's works in 2023, highlight how such tactics leverage moral revulsion at potential destruction to force policy discourse, though empirical evidence questions their causal efficacy in driving systemic change.[321]
Revisionism, Cancel Culture, and Artist Legacies
In contemporary discourse, revisionist critiques of historical painters often apply modern ethical standards to their personal lives and cultural contexts, leading to demands for reevaluating or diminishing their legacies. This phenomenon, amplified by social media and institutional shifts, has focused on artists whose behaviors—such as exploitative relationships or colonial attitudes—clash with current sensibilities, prompting museums to add contextual warnings, curate counter-exhibitions, or face protests.[322][323] Proponents argue that separating art from artist ignores power dynamics and harm, while defenders contend that anachronistic judgments undermine artistic merit and historical nuance, as personal flaws were common in eras with different norms.[324][325]Paul Gauguin exemplifies this tension, with his time in Tahiti from 1891 onward drawing scrutiny for relationships with underage girls, including 13-year-old Tehura, whom he depicted in works like Spirit of the Dead Watching (1892), and allegations of syphilis transmission and abandonment of families.[326] Exhibitions such as the National Gallery of Australia's 2024 show faced backlash for glorifying a "violent paedophile and serial rapist," per critics, while others highlighted local Polynesian admiration for Gauguin and questioned syphilis evidence as proof of non-sexual interactions.[327][328]The Economist noted in 2024 that despite ripe conditions for cancellation, Gauguin's influence on color and primitivism endures, with auction prices for his paintings exceeding $200 million, like Nafea Faa Ipoipo sold for $210 million in 2015.[329] This persistence underscores how market and aesthetic value resist moral revisionism, though institutions increasingly frame his oeuvre with discussions of exploitation.[330]Pablo Picasso has similarly faced feminist reinterpretations of his legacy, centered on documented misogyny, including affairs that contributed to suicides of partners like Dora Maar and Françoise Gilot's accounts of emotional abuse.[331] The Brooklyn Museum's 2023 "Pablo-matic: Picasso and the Gendering of Creativity" exhibition juxtaposed his works with those of 30 women artists to critique his "animal sexuality" and objectification, drawing both praise for reckoning with canon biases and criticism for ahistorical framing.[332][333] Picasso's granddaughter Marina described him as a "monstrous" figure who destroyed women, yet curators like those at Musée Picasso in 2023 defended exhibitions by emphasizing era-specific attitudes, noting his depictions sometimes subverted male gaze expectations.[325][334] Despite such debates, Picasso's market dominance remains unchallenged, with Les Femmes d'Alger fetching $179 million at auction in 2015, illustrating revisionism's limited impact on established legacies.[335]Broader instances include campus removals of historical paintings deemed offensive, such as a 2021 case at the University of Alabama where a Christopher Columbus mural was covered amid indigenous rights protests, and demands to contextualize old masters like those by Eric Gill (though primarily a sculptor) for pedophilia.[336][322] These efforts reflect a paradigm where source credibility—often from activist-driven academia and media—prioritizes present-day equity over empirical historical analysis, yet empirical data on sales and viewership shows enduring appreciation for canonical works, suggesting revisionism influences discourse more than de facto legacies.[337][338]
Recent Developments
Digital and AI Integration in Painting
Digital painting emerged as a distinct practice in the late 20th century, enabled by software and hardware that simulate traditional painting techniques on computers. Ivan Sutherland's Sketchpad program in 1963 introduced interactive computer graphics, allowing basic drawing with a light pen, laying groundwork for digital creation.[339] By the 1980s, tools like MacPaint (1984) provided bitmap editing for raster-based painting, while Adobe Photoshop's release in 1988 offered layers, brushes, and blending modes that mimicked oil and watercolor effects.[340] Graphics tablets with pressure sensitivity, such as Wacom's early models from 1985, allowed artists to replicate the tactility of physical brushes, integrating digital workflows into professional painting by enabling precise control over stroke opacity, size, and texture.[341]In the 2010s and 2020s, digital painting matured with software like Corel Painter (1991 onward) and Procreate (2011), which emphasize natural media simulation, and hardware advancements like high-resolution displays and styluses with tilt recognition. Artists increasingly hybridize processes, sketching digitally before transferring to canvas via projection or printing UV-cured inks for underpaintings, as seen in concept art for films where digital files are refined iteratively before physical output. This integration expanded painting's accessibility, reducing material costs—digital tools eliminate waste from traditional media—and enabling unlimited revisions, though critics argue it diminishes the irreplaceable physicality of pigment and canvas.[342]Artificial intelligence's entry into painting accelerated post-2020 with generative adversarial networks (GANs) and diffusion models, tools that produce images from text prompts by training on vast datasets of existing art. OpenAI's DALL-E (first version 2021) and Stability AI's Stable Diffusion (2022) democratized image generation, allowing painters to create reference compositions, explore styles, or augment sketches rapidly.[343] For instance, artists like Jason Allen used Midjourney in 2022 to generate and refine "Théâtre D'opéra Spatial," which won a digital art competition after 80 iterations of prompting and Photoshop editing, blending AI output with human curation.[344] By 2023, AI-assisted painting workflows included style transfer—where models like those in Adobe Firefly (launched 2023) apply learned aesthetics to user inputs—and upscaling low-resolution sketches to detailed bases for manual overpainting.[345]Integration peaked in 2024-2025, with AI tools embedded in software like Photoshop's Generative Fill, enabling painters to inpaint missing elements or expand canvases algorithmically before traditional refinement. The AI art market reached $3.2 billion in 2024, projected to grow significantly, driven by hybrid works where painters print AI-generated images on canvas and add physical layers, as in Refik Anadol's data-driven projections informing painted abstractions.[346] However, empirical evidence shows AI lacks causal intentionality, relying on statistical correlations from training data rather than original reasoning, leading philosophers and artists to contend it produces mimicry, not novel art.[347]Controversies center on intellectual property infringement, as models trained on scraped images without consent replicate artists' styles—evident in lawsuits like those from Getty Images against Stability AI in 2023 and class actions by visual artists alleging unauthorized use of billions of works.[348] Traditional painters report market devaluation, with AI flooding stock platforms and reducing commissions; surveys indicate 70% of illustrators fear job displacement by 2025.[349] Proponents counter that AI augments creativity, akin to photography's historical disruption of portraiture, but data from art sales shows hybrid human-AI pieces fetching premiums only when human oversight is transparent, underscoring demand for verifiable skill over pure generation.[350] Regulatory efforts, including EU AI Act provisions (effective 2024), mandate disclosure of AI use in art, aiming to preserve authenticity in painting's physical tradition.[343]
Material and Technique Advancements (Eco-Friendly and Smart Paints)
Advancements in eco-friendly paints for fine artists have emphasized non-toxic, sustainable alternatives to synthetic pigments and binders, driven by concerns over volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and environmental impact. Natural Earth Paint, developed by Leah Fanning, produces pigments derived from earth clays and mineral sources, offering zero-VOC, non-toxic options that eliminate heavy metals like cadmium and cobalt found in traditional artist paints.[351] These formulations, introduced in expanded lines by 2024, use plant-based binders and are fully biodegradable, allowing artists to reduce studio pollution and health risks without compromising vibrancy or lightfastness.[352] Similarly, bio-based paints from companies like Livos incorporate plant oils, resins, and mineral pigments, achieving low environmental footprints through renewable sourcing and minimal processing.[353]By 2025, zero-VOC acrylics and oils have become industry standards for professional painters, with brands like ECOS Paints expanding artist-grade lines that maintain archival quality while emitting negligible harmful fumes during application and drying.[354] This shift correlates with regulatory pressures and artist demand, as studies show traditional solvent-based paints contribute to indoor air pollution and long-term exposure risks for creators.[168] Plant-derived dyes and recycled mineral pigments further enable sustainable practices, though challenges persist in matching the opacity and permanence of synthetic counterparts, prompting ongoing research into hybrid formulations.[170]Smart paints, incorporating responsive technologies, have enabled dynamic artworks that interact with environmental stimuli, expanding painting beyond static imagery. Thermochromic and photochromic pigments, which alter color with temperature or UV exposure, have been adapted for fine art since the early 2020s, allowing pieces to evolve visually over time or under viewer interaction.[355] A 2023 formulation using natural Prussian blue pigment, developed by researchers, shifts from blue to colorless under sunlight, mimicking structural color in nature and offering fade-resistant options for outdoor or performative installations.[355] These materials leverage microencapsulation to embed leuco dyes, ensuring reversibility without degradation, though their longevity in high-humidity art environments requires further empirical validation.[356]Nanotechnology-enhanced smart paints introduce self-healing properties via embedded microcapsules that release repair agents upon cracking, preserving canvas integrity in experimental mixed-media works.[357] Conductive paints, formulated with graphite or carbon nanotubes, enable interactive paintings where touch or proximity triggers electronic responses, as seen in 2025 applications turning static art into sensor-integrated experiences.[358] While primarily industrial, these technologies have crossed into fine art through artist experimentation, though scalability and cost limit widespread adoption, with critiques noting potential overhyping of "smart" features without proportional aesthetic gains.[359]
Emerging Trends and Market Shifts (2020–2025)
The global art market, including paintings, experienced a surge in online sales during the 2020–2021 COVID-19 lockdowns, with galleries accelerating digital platforms to sustain transactions amid physical restrictions.[360] By 2022, fine art auction sales reached peaks driven by post-pandemic demand, but contracted thereafter due to economic uncertainty, inflation, and interest rate hikes, with H1 2025 totals at $4.72 billion, an 8.8% decline from H1 2024.[361] High-end painting sales suffered most, with works over $10 million falling 39% in volume in 2024, while mid-market segments under $10 million gained traction through higher sell-through rates.[362] U.S. fine art auctions, a key venue for paintings, generated $2.2 billion in H1 2025, down slightly by under 1% year-over-year, reflecting stabilized but cautious buyer sentiment.[361]Collectors shifted toward selectivity amid volatility, with 30% reporting more discerning purchases in 2024–2025 due to economic pressures, favoring emerging artists and works under $5,000, where sales volume rose 13% in 2024.[360] Online purchasing persisted strongly, as 59% of collectors bought art digitally in 2024, prompting 43% of galleries to prioritize virtual sales expansions into 2025.[360] Auction houses like Christie's and Sotheby's saw new records for select paintings, such as Remedios Varo's surrealist work fetching $6.22 million in May 2025, underscoring pockets of strength in niche historical and contemporary segments despite broader contraction.[363]In painting aesthetics, the early 2020s marked a figurative resurgence, fueled by pandemic-era introspection and a desire for human representation, coinciding with heightened market interest in works by Black figurative artists amid 2020 social movements.[364] This trend, evident in gallery shows and sales from 2020–2022, contrasted prior abstract dominance but faced critique by 2025 as potentially overhyped, with abstraction regaining prominence through gestural and off-kilter compositions.[365] Contemporary painting trends emphasized responses to digital overload, including blurred figuration evoking memory (e.g., Léa Belooussovitch's forest scenes), residue-marked canvases capturing impermanence (e.g., Ser Serpas's unstretched works), renewed surrealism with dreamlike uncanniness (e.g., Sun Yitian's interiors), and ritualistic sacred themes drawing on myth and spirituality.[87] These shifts, highlighted in 2025 exhibitions like the Venice Biennale's surrealist echoes since 2022, signal painting's adaptation to perceptual saturation rather than technological mimicry. The vitality and versatility of painting in the 21st century defy previous declarations of its demise, with the majority of living painters continuing to practice it either wholly or as part of their work, undeterred by modern and contemporary art's move away from the historic value of craft and documentation in favor of concept. The current epoch in art is characterized by pluralism, with no consensus on a representative style.