How the Ancient World Used Color

Monday, June 6, 2011

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June 6, 2011

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How the Ancient World Used Color

Creative work is play. It is free speculation using materials of one's chosen form.

- Stephen Nachmanovitch -

How the Ancient World Used Color

Were ancient Greece and Rome filled with dignified white marble statuary? Not a chance. Though we still think of them in terms of white marble sparkling under a hot Mediterranean sun, a new exhibition shows at least one Greco-Roman lady as they really were -- in technicolor. Under Stanford sophomore Ivy Nguyen's skillful watch in the Cantor Arts Center lab, long-dead colors on marble have indeed come alive after two millennia. A team there discovered minute traces of pigments that originally covered the original sculpture but were washed away by the millennia. The team used 3D rapid prototypic technology to create replicas of the artwork, which is painted to look as the sculpture did in ancient times. { read more }

Be The Change

"There is a major distinction between entertainment and art. Both operate in the domain of aesthetics -- but the difference is the depth with which we experience and explore." This passage reflects further. { more }


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