The Color of Ivory: Polychromy on Byzantine IvoriesPrinceton University Press Carolyn L. Connor ISBN: 0691048185 price: $90.00 hardcover
Carolyn Connor shows here that Byzantine ivory carvings--often
assumed to have been monochromatic--were originally brightly
colored. Most ivories today show no obvious traces of paint or
stain, and many scholars believe that the Byzantines preferred
the aesthetic of ivory's natural, creamy color. However, Connor's
close examination of one hundred Late Antique and Byzantine
ivories reveals that artists frequently colored ivories in bright
hues of red, blue, green, and gold.
Intrigued by barely visible traces of paint or stain, Connor
subjected such ivory objects as boxes, plaques, and book covers
to scientific analysis. Under the microscope, she saw that their
surfaces were once ablaze with color, while tests identified the
actual pigments. Her findings, presented here, demonstrate that
the ivories were colored and that the paint or stain--which does
not adhere well to the surface of ivory--either wore off or was
cleaned away. She draws on the work of archaeologists,
classicists, historians, and art historians to show that this
color was almost certainly original and not, as many scholars
have assumed, a medieval or later addition. The author also
locates Byzantine ivories within a long tradition of colored
ivory going back, for example, to a painted chest found in the
tomb of the Egyptian boy-king Tutankhamen. Connor's close study
and contextualizing of a significant group of ivories will
reshape our thinking about color, culture, and art.
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