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3.3 Materials, Processes, and Techniques in Early European and Colonial American Art

7 min readjune 18, 2024

Charly Castillo

Charly Castillo

Laurie Accede

Laurie Accede


AP Art History 🖼

34 resources
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The materials, processes, and techniques used by artists in early European and Colonial America were shaped by the availability of materials, the artistic traditions of the time, and the changing technological advances. In this guide, we'll be giving an overview of the materials, techniques, and processes associated with art in Early Europe and Colonial America.

Characteristics of Artistic Movements

Late Antique

Materials
  • Late antique architectures was created using a variety of materials, including stone, brick, and wood.
  • Mosaics were a popular medium, and was made by using small pieces of colored glass or stone.
  • Painted frescoes were also widely used on wall and ceilings, which were created by applying pigments to wet plaster.
Techniques/Processes
Antique architecture had various unique elements.
  • Basilicas have an apse (semicircular projection near the end of the church), transept (aisle in front of the apse), nave (main isle), narthex (area near the entrance), and atrium (open space in a building).
  • Use of spolia (reused architectural elements) from older works
  • Churches either centrally-planned (circular with altar in the center) or axially-planned (long nave like an axis) ⛪
  • Buildings have little exterior decoration because it was associated with paganism.
  • Coffered (sunken panel) ceilings are popular.
https://firebasestorage.googleapis.com/v0/b/fiveable-92889.appspot.com/o/images%2F-480rfhFHw6pW.jpg?alt=media&token=8760df0e-a6dd-4719-882e-8ce34f3a4100

Santa Sabina. Image Courtesy of Wikipedia

Byzantine

Materials
  • Similar to antique art, Byzantine materials and forms included mosaics.
Techniques/Processes
Byzantine architectural elements included:
  • Use of pendentives (curved triangular pieces of masonry) or squinches (curved polygonal pieces of masonry) to attach a dome to flat walls
  • Mosaics (decorations made with tessarae like stones and colored glass) on the walls
  • Architects creates lots of windows to allow light to come in ☀️
  • Circular plan or a combination of a central and axial plan
  • Martyrium (shrine built over the tomb of a martyr that stores their relics) in a church
Paintings on the other hand, (as seen in one of the works below ⬇️), involved the use of religious icons, whose bodies are frontal and symmetrical for the most part.
https://firebasestorage.googleapis.com/v0/b/fiveable-92889.appspot.com/o/images%2F-j7M5TjGZEDa3.jpeg?alt=media&token=5d5332ac-ef80-42fc-a823-322a160a6ba4

Virgin (Theotokos) and Child Between Saints Theodore and George Image Courtesy of Khan Academy.

Islamic

Materials
  • Islamic art was created using a variety of materials including various pigments, metalwork, textiles (to create elaborate carpets), ceramics, and stone masonry.
Techniques/Processes
  • Kufic (an extremely decorative and elaborate type of script) calligraphy is written on walls of religious buildings.
  • The use of open, airy interiors which emphasizes the feeling of weightlessness in the overall buildings
  • Use of voussoirs (wedge-shaped stones) to create arches
  • Calligraphy (ornamental handwriting) used as a decoration on walls, just like in Islamic architecture
  • Use of horror vacui (literally the "fear of empty space," filling blank spaces on a work with designs)
  • Arabesques, which are elaborate geometric patterns
https://firebasestorage.googleapis.com/v0/b/fiveable-92889.appspot.com/o/images%2F-OFantjBilCsA.jpg?alt=media&token=6281c574-024f-47cb-bdb0-2379208a5539

Pyxis of al-Mughira. Image Courtesy of Wikipedia.

Medieval Art

Materials
  • During the medieval period, the primary materials used in art were pigments made from natural sources that were applied to surfaces such as vellum, which is similar to parchment.
Techniques/Processes
  • Use of two scripts: half-uncial (a type of script used for writing in Latin) and Anglo-Saxon minuscule (a medieval writing system native to Ireland and Anglo-Saxon England)
  • Mix of Celtic and Christian motifs
  • Sculptures included different metalworking techniques, including cloisonné (putting metal around colored areas) and chasing (hammering designs into metal 🔨)
  • The sculptures also included zoomorphic (animal) motifs
  • Medieval artists were also known for illuminated manuscripts which combine text and images, and were decorated with intricate designs, gold leaf, and pigments.

Romanesque

Materials
  • Romanesque architecture primarily used different types of stone like marble and limestone.
  • Textiles were also used. (see the Bayeux Tapestry)
Techniques/Processes
  • Architectures used rib vaults (diagonal vaults that cross onto one another and create a rib-like appearance) to support the buildings' roofs
  • Paintings used vibrant colors and was then outlined in black. Human heads and hands are exaggerated and much larger than any other features of the body.
  • Figures across art are sized by importance
  • Other aspects of Romanesque art included: portals (doorways) made up of archivolts (decorative curved band under an arch, a keystone (stone found directly on top of the door at the center), a tympanum (decorated section above the door), a lintel (horizontal stone), a trumeau (vertical bar used as support), and two jambs (side posts)

Gothic

Materials
  • Materials in Gothic art included stone, glass, woodwork and numerous illuminated manuscripts made with vellum and decorated with pigments and gold.
Techniques/Processes
  • There was the use of flying buttresses (arches that connect a wall to another structure) to support the building's roof and evenly distribute weight 🏋️
  • Choirs (a large area in between the apse and the transept) were now included in church plans
  • Pinnacles are now decorated, unlike in previous artistic movements
  • Carvings become more elevated and begin to move further away from the wall they are carved into.
  • The theme of salvation (Christian belief of being saved from sin because of one's faith in Jesus Christ) becomes more prevalent in sculptures
https://firebasestorage.googleapis.com/v0/b/fiveable-92889.appspot.com/o/images%2F-IKqHszCXwoTH.jpg?alt=media&token=2bc32347-e19f-4721-9682-2c23f91fcdef

Chartres Cathedral. Image Courtesy of Wikipedia (CC BY-SA 3.0).

The Renaissance

Materials
  • During the Renaissance, new materials, such as oil paint and tempera, which allowed for a greater range of colors and more realistic representation.
  • Architecture continued to use stone masonry
  • Fresco was also used.
Techniques and Processes
The Renaissance was divided into three main sections in this course: the Northern Renaissance, the Early Renaissance and the High Renaissance.
  • Techniques in the Northern Renaissance include:
    • Printmaking methods like woodcut (using a carved wooden tablet as a stamp to apply ink onto paper), etching (exposing a carved metal plate to acid before putting ink on it and stamping onto paper), and engraving (carving a design into a metal plate, putting ink in the crevices, and pressing it onto paper) become popular 📜
    • More religious themes and symbolism, as well as genre paintings (works picturing domestic scenes and other everyday activities) become popular artistic forms.
  • Techniques during the Early Renaissance include:
    • The growing importance of proportions and the use of light
    • Paintings included the use of linear perspective (making a painting or drawing look dimensional on a 2D surface through 3 elements: a vanishing point, horizon line, and orthogonals)
  • Techniques during the High Renaissance include:
    • Growing popularity of the canvas (a woven cloth used for painting) as a medium 🖼️
    • The use of sfumato (blending colors to create a softer, smoother transition) and chiaroscuro (smoothing the transition between light and dark colors) are widely seen in paintings of the time
    • Arcadian (rustic, rural, and simplistic) appearance to some works
https://firebasestorage.googleapis.com/v0/b/fiveable-92889.appspot.com/o/images%2F-tSjfIkjMKGBD.3%26w%3D1200%26h%3D800%26fit%3Dclip%26crop%3Dcenter%26fm%3Dgjpg%26auto%3Dcompress?alt=media&token=de7da68a-a71f-4b36-9aac-773dfb5f0f78

Image Courtesy of Le Gallerie Degli Uffizi. The Birth of Venus.

Mannerism

Techniques/Processes
Mannerism was primarily an artistic movement that emerged in the 16th century as a response to the ideals of balance and classical idealization of the High Renaissance. Since most materials used during this period was similar to the Renaissance, the unique characteristics of Mannerism art included:
  • Elongated, distorted bodies that are not proportional or anatomically accurate
  • Use of bright, pigmented colors
  • No ground line, which makes seem as if they are ethereal and floating in space 🧚
https://firebasestorage.googleapis.com/v0/b/fiveable-92889.appspot.com/o/images%2F-wuZRDMU8HhEd.jpg?alt=media&token=32c6d870-78fa-42fe-ab89-3f08844e12d2

Image Courtesy of Emma Alana on Pinterest. The Entombment of Christ.

Baroque

Materials
  • The Baroque period considered of similar mediums to the previous artistic movements. However, most sculptures were made from marble.
Techniques/Processes
  • Architecture placed an importance of movement: façades (front of building) have rippling, wavelike forms, shadowing changes as the sun moves
  • Still life paintings with a vanitas theme (emphasizes the shortness of life and people's eventual death) become popular 💀
  • Tenebrism (dramatic contrasts because dark and light colors) adds drama to artists' paintings
  • Oil painters use impasto (heavy application of paint) to make their images stand out
Sculpture
  • Usually made of marble
  • Sculptures were depicted in motion, as you can see in the sculpture below ⬇️
https://firebasestorage.googleapis.com/v0/b/fiveable-92889.appspot.com/o/images%2F-YHzYBQXx6px0.jpg?alt=media&token=7ea7801c-ef22-42e0-ae14-b0b286c45775

The Ecstasy of Saint Teresa. Image Courtesy of Wikipedia (CC BY-SA 4.0).

New Spain

Techniques/Processes
  • Many Baroque materials and techniques were brought to New Spain
  • New Spain was a combination of Spanish and Native American artistic traditions like using oil paint as a media, Catholic motifs, and painting on flat surfaces (syncretism)
https://firebasestorage.googleapis.com/v0/b/fiveable-92889.appspot.com/o/images%2F-993IUgn1vNmx.jpg_attredirects%3D0?alt=media&token=b7e71b2c-3cd6-478d-b067-8b0ff4c3dbba

Spaniard and Indian Produce a Mestizo. Image Courtesy of AP Art History.

Browse Study Guides By Unit
🗿Unit 1 – Global Prehistoric Art, 30,000-500 BCE
🏛Unit 2 – Ancient Mediterranean Art, 3500-300 BCE
⛪️Unit 3 – Early European and Colonial American Art, 200-1750 CE
⚔️Unit 4 – Later European and American Art, 1750-1980 CE
🌽Unit 5 – Indigenous American Art, 1000 BCE-1980 CE
⚱️Unit 6 – African Art, 1100-1980 CE
🕌Unit 7 – West and Central Asian Art, 500 BCE-1980 CE
🛕Unit 8 – South, East, and Southeast Asian Art, 300 BCE-1980 CE
🐚Unit 9: The Pacific, 700–1980 ce
🏢Unit 10 – Global Contemporary Art, 1980 CE to Present
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