Pastel is pure pigment, the same pigment used in making all
fine art paints. It is the most permanent of all media when
applied to conservation ground (such as acid-free paper)
and properly framed. Pastel has no liquid binder that may
cause other media to darken, fade, yellow, crack or blister
with time. Pastels from the 16th century exist today, as fresh
as the day they were painted, no restoration needed.
Pastel does not refer to pale colors, as the word is
commonly used in cosmetic and fashion terminology. The
name pastel comes from the French word "pastische”
because the pure, powdered pigment is ground into a paste,
with a small amount of gum binder, and then rolled into
sticks. The infinite variety of colors in the pastel palette range
from soft and subtle to bold and brilliant. Note: Pastel must
never be confused with colored chalk. Chalk is a mineral
substance impregnated with dyes.
An artwork is created by stroking the sticks of dry pigment
across an abrasive ground, embedding the color in the
"tooth" of the paper, sandboard or canvas. If the ground is
completely covered with pastel, the work is considered a
pastel painting. Leaving much of the ground exposed
produces a pastel sketch. Techniques vary with the individual
artists. Pastel can be blended or used with visible strokes.
Many artists favor the medium because it allows a
spontaneous approach. There is no drying time, and no
allowances to be made for a change in color due to drying.
Historically, pastel can be traced back to the 16th century. Its
invention is attributed to the German painter Johann Thiele.
A Venetian woman artist, Rosalba Carriera was the first to
make consistent use of pastel. Chardin did portraits with an
open stroke, while LaTour preferred the blended finish.
Thereafter a galaxy of famous artists... Watteau, Copley,
Delacroix, Millet, Manet, Renoir, Toulouse-Lautrec, Vuillard,
Bonnard, Glackens, Whistler, Hassam, William Merritt
Chase... just to list the more familiar names, used pastel as
finished work rather than preliminary sketches.
Edgar Degas was a prolific user of pastel, and its champion.
His protégé, Mary Cassatt introduced the Impressionists and
pastel to her friends in Philadelphia and Washington, and
thus to the United States. In the Spring of 1983, Sotheby
Parke Bernet sold at auction two Degas pastels for more
than $3,000,000 each. Both pastels were painted about 1880.
Pastel is sometimes combined with watercolor, gouache,
acrylic, charcoal or pencil in a mixed-media painting, but it is
incompatible with oil paint. Today, pastel paintings have the
stature of oil and watercolor as a major fine art medium.
Many of our most renowned living artists have distinguished
themselves in pastel, and enriched the art world with this
beautiful medium.
Article Copyright © Pastel Society of America
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New York, NY 10003