The French Impressionist painters discovered new means for painting
light - they used a "solar palette", the pigments matched to the colors
the eyes see. They are the colors of a ray of light.
This little book reproduces palettes by several of the plein-air
painters, describes the pigments they used, and includes short excerpts
by the scientists whose work was the foundation of this new kind of
painting - complementary colors, optical mixing, and pigment-color
correspondences. It closes with color swatches of the pigments, provided
by the London artists' colormen, L. Cornelissen & Son. This book will be
of interest to art historians, collectors, students, conservators, and
museum-goers.