


At
the Palais de Justice," gouache on paper by Honoré Daumier; in
the Musée du Petit Palais, Paris Giraudon/Art Resource, NY
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The
Use of Gouache
Gouache
is a form of watercolor that uses opaque pigments rather
than the usual transparent watercolor pigments.
It is thinned with water for applying, with sable- and hog-hair
brushes, to white or tinted paper and card and, occasionally, to
silk. Honey, starch, or acrylic is sometimes added to retard its
quick-drying property.
Gouache paints
have the advantages that they dry out almost immediately to a matt
finish and, if required, without visible brush marks. These
qualities, with the capacities to be washed thinly or applied in
thick impasto and a wide colour range that now includes fluorescent
and metallic pigments, make the medium particularly suited to preparatory
studies for oil and acrylic paintings, offers great
versatility to the fine artist and designer and is an unparallelled
tool for teaching color
theory.
Before transparent
water color, gouache or tempera color was used from the Middle Ages
to the Renaissance as the favoured medium of the great Masters of
the time. It
is the medium that produces the suede finish and crisp lines characteristic
of many Indian and Islamic miniatures, and it has been used in Western
screen and fan decoration and by modern artists such as Rouault,
Klee, Dubuffet, and Morris Graves. Even today, they remain the favourite
medium of designers and illustrators around.
Materials Required:
Also:
- See links
to artists and sites using gouache [1
2
3 ]
- See link
to colour mixing
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