Rand's patent drawing
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Few of us know the name, but every artist who paints owes a tremendous debt to
John G. Rand. He was an American portrait painter living in England in the early
1840s. However virtually no one recalls his work. He was also an inventor. And
if he was forgotten as an artist, he's hardly any better remembered as an
inventor either. Yet every day, every painter among us uses his invention. In
1841, John G. Rand invented the collapsible zinc paint tube. It had a "stopper"
rather than the twist-off cap ours do today, but otherwise was virtually
identical. Before that, paint manufacturers sold their pigments to artist in dry
form, or in soft bladders made of skins. Of course the painter had to puncture
the skin somewhere in order to squeeze the paint out, and in doing so, often
caused it to split, or at least, the paint near the hole had a tendency to
harden, and in digging out the dried paint, the hole often grew larger and
larger as the contents were used over a period of months. Attempts were even
made to sell oil paints in brass syringes lined with tin (much like our old
metal cake decorators) but that was hardly any better.
Being a painter became easier. |
Immediately, Winsor & Newton of London started using Rand's tubes made
of thinly rolled metal, and in the process set off something of a chain reaction
of more inventions designed with the artist in mind. The paint tubes made it
convenient for artists to begin painting outdoors so along came portable,
folding easels, then folding palettes, and portable paint boxes. And in that the
mass-produced paint was more "buttery" in consistency than what artists used to
make themselves, they began using stiff, hog's-hair brushes and palette knifes
with which to apply paint to their canvases, which created a whole new line of
"inventions."
Today pre-stretched canvases come in virtually any size an shape. |
And speaking of canvases, about the same time Winsor & Newton and others
began manufacturing pre-stretched canvases in standard sizes already primed with
white gesso and ready for painting. The Impressionists in France especially took
to these new developments. They loved the consistent, brilliant colours of the
tube paints and the brilliant whiteness of the pre-stretched, pre-primed
canvases. They felt it added luminosity to their work. Moreover, all these
technical developments also added a good deal of convenience for artists, while
virtually eliminated the need for studio assistants (or for artists to have to
do these menial tasks themselves).
An artists' trade catalogue, 1890 |
A short time later, for those starving artists whom could ill-afford the
luxury of pre-stretched canvas, manufacturers began applying gesso to heavy
paper and later, stiff cardboard. Eventually a thin muslin was stretched over
the cardboard first to give it a familiar canvas texture, and the mainstay of
every amateur artist on earth became what we now call canvas board.
Surprisingly, with a good, sturdy frame, these humble painting grounds have
stood the test of time remarkably well. Matisse and Picasso both used them at
times, especially in forming a rigid base for their collaged works, while at the
same time proving to the art world that painters didn't necessarily even need
paint to "paint."
Magna Paints developed the first artists' acrylics during the early 1950s. |
And after the Second World War, as the world became familiar with polymers
(plastics) of all kinds, so did artists. Sam Golden and Leonard Bocour developed and manufactured the first line of artist-grade acrylic paints about 1947. During the 1950s, major artists such as
Picasso, Jackson Pollock, and David Hockney all explored and embraced acrylic
paints with their brilliant, fast-drying, and color-fast qualities, allowing
them to develop new and different painting styles and techniques while
maintaining many of the most attractive attributes of oils. More recently,
artists have turned to various industrial paints if for no other reason than
economy. With painted works often exploding to building-size murals, traditional
artists' pigments in tubes, or even gallon buckets, were no longer practical. I
know it's hard, but can you imagine buying your paint in 55-gallon drums? I
think I'll stick to our friend Mr. Rand's soft, metal tubes, though personally,
make mine acrylics with a spry synthetic bristle on the side.
Jackson Pollock's work table (early 1950s) where can be found spent tubes of Bocour's Magna acrylics. |
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