I have a small bookshelf in my work space, containing catalogs I've bought in recent years, books that offer me helpful ideas for my work. I was inspired to write this post by the artist and
blogger Lisa Pressman, who has a feature on her blog entitled "What's on your bookshelf?". When I began to think about this selection of my much larger art book library, I realized that I needed some of them near when I began making abstract textiles––artists such as Ellsworth Kelly, Richard Tuttle, and Blinky Palermo gave me compositional ideas––and that now I open them most often for fresh ideas about color.
'Abid, The Inscription of Jamshid, Mughal court, 1605-6 (detail)
The violets and golds and blue, the gray and green, of this Indian miniature are so beautifully harmonious...
Bagta, Kunvar Anop Singh Hawking, ca. 1777 (detail)
while the colors of this painting are more strident and saturated, but gorgeous still. A deep red against a sienna, the warm green against gold and blue, all are surprising and tell me "you can use this". I photographed these images from the
catalog of last year's brilliant exhibition at the Met "Wonder of the Age: Master Painters of India 1100-1900", which I wrote about
here. I titled the blog post "Wondrous Color", and the color of these paintings continues to thrill me.
Harunobu, Visiting a Shrine in Night Rain, late 1760s (detail)
The color of woodblock prints of Japan are very different from those of Indian paintings, having more subtle hues, with drama from strong blacks. I love the oranges, one leaning toward red, as they interact with the soft color of the kimono. The image is a lesson in how color works alongside chromatic grays.
Utamaro, The Engaging Type, ca. 1792-93 (detail)
And here the grayish red and grayish green are in perfect balance; what a wonderful color idea for a print or textile or drawing. These Japanese prints are in the
catalog for a show that was at Asia Society, (I wrote about it
here) "Designed for Pleasure: The World of Edo Japan in Prints and Paintings, 1680-1860".
Sonia Delaunay, Design 1044, textile designs, fabric samples; France 1930
Jumping ahead to the 20th century, there is
Sonia Delaunay, whose fabric designs are endlessly inventive. Looking at the color ranges for the same design, we can see how shifts of hue change the mood of a piece. My Delaunay
catalog is from the Cooper Hewitt exhibition "Color Moves: Art and Fashion by Sonia Delaunay".
Malevich, Suprematism (Self-Portrait in Two Dimensions), 1915
Kazimir Malevich has taught me so much, about shape and form and structure and simplicity, about what is essential. Although his color choices seem pared down, there is still a richness to the deep blue and black, the deep earthy red alongside the dark yellow. My Malevich catalog is
Kazimir Malevich: Suprematism.
Robert Mangold, Three-color X within X, 1981
Many of Robert Mangold's paintings are a single color, beautiful to contemplate with their simple drawn forms; when he makes a multi-colored work, the color interaction, whether strident or subtle, as in this work with grayed colors, is interesting to think about. I have a magazine photo of some Mangold prints hanging on my wall to remind me of the variety of color choices. My Mangold book is simply titled
Robert Mangold.
Richard Tuttle, Waferboard 3, 1996
Richard Tuttle is an art hero of mine; I love his aesthetic of the almost-not-there art made out of everyday materials. His modesty is enlarging. (I've written about his work
here,
here on his clay multiples,
here as an inspiration for prints.) I often open the Tuttle catalog I have from the big retrospective at the Whitney,
The Art of Richard Tuttle, looking for new color thoughts. With this piece I love the grayed blue alongside the yellow; the bit of unpainted waferboard adds a warmer tone, as the yellow is a coolish one.
Richard Diebenkorn, Ocean Park #70, 1974 (detail)
My most recent book purchase––aside from the Albers catalog of the works on paper show, which I recently wrote about
here, and which will be a mainstay of my books on color––is
Richard Diebenkorn: The Ocean Park Series. There are many wonderful thoughts about space, light, and color in these abstract paintings, with lots of interesting grays to explore. I am grateful to all these artist friends and mentors; they feel almost like friends, giving me an idea here, a helping hand there; I'm happy to have their work on my bookshelf. I imagine you too have books at hand that help in your work and in your life.
**I'll be away for a few days; see you next week.