Michel Pastoureau is een vooraanstaande Franse historicus wiens werk diep ingaat op de geschiedenis van visuele symbolen, met name kleuren en dieren. Zijn onderzoek verkent hoe deze symbolen zijn geëvolueerd en welke impact ze hebben gehad op het westerse denken en de cultuur. Pastoureau benadert zijn werk met een opmerkelijke eruditie, waarbij hij het ingewikkelde web van betekenissen ontleedt die in deze visuele elementen zijn ingebed. Zijn geschriften bieden lezers een nieuw perspectief op onderwerpen die vaak als vanzelfsprekend worden beschouwd, en onthullen hun diepgaande culturele fundamenten.
Traces the history of yellow around the world, telling the story of the color's evolving place in art, religion, fashion, literature, science, and everyday life, and revealing how its meaning has changed profoundly over millennia and varied among cultures
Praise for Michel Pastoureau's Green :[S]umptuously illustrated. . . . These
are books to look at, but they are also books to read. . . . Individual colors
find their being only in relation to each other, and their cultural force
depends on the particular instance of their use. They have no separate life or
essential meaning. They have been made to mean, and in these volumes that
human endeavor has found its historian. - Michael Gorra, New York Review of
Books
What remains of the colours of our childhood? What are our memories of a blue rabbit, a red dress, a yellow bike – and were they really those colours? What colours do we associate with our student years, our first loves, our adult lives? How does colour leave its mark on memory? In an attempt to answer these and other questions, Michel Pastoureau presents us with a journal about colours that covers half a century. Drawing on personal recollections, he retraces the recent history of colours through an exploration of fashion and clothing, everyday objects and practices, emblems and flags, sport, literature, museums and art. This text – playful, poetic, nostalgic – records the life of both the author and his contemporaries. We live in a world increasingly bursting with colour, in which colour remains a focus for memory, a source of delight and, most of all, an invitation to dream.
"In this beautiful and richly illustrated book, the acclaimed author of Blue and Black presents a fascinating and revealing history of the color green in European societies from prehistoric times to today. Examining the evolving place of green in art, clothes, literature, religion, science, and everyday life, Michel Pastoureau traces how culture has profoundly changed the perception and meaning of the color over millennia--and how we misread cultural, social, and art history when we assume that colors have always signified what they do today. Filled with entertaining and enlightening anecdotes, Green shows that the color has been ambivalent: a symbol of life, luck, and hope, but also disorder, greed, poison, and the devil. Chemically unstable, green pigments were long difficult to produce and even harder to fix. Not surprisingly, the color has been associated with all that is changeable and fleeting: childhood, love, and money. Only in the Romantic period did green definitively become the color of nature. Pastoureau also explains why the color was connected with the Roman emperor Nero, how it became the color of Islam, why Goethe believed it was the color of the middle class, why some nineteenth-century scholars speculated that the ancient Greeks couldn't see green, and how the color was denigrated by Kandinsky and the Bauhaus. More broadly, Green demonstrates that the history of the color is, to a large degree, one of dramatic reversal: long absent, ignored, or rejected, green today has become a ubiquitous and soothing presence as the symbol of environmental causes and the mission to save the planet. With its striking design and compelling text, Green will delight anyone who is interested in history, culture, art, fashion, media, or design"--Publisher's description
Presents a fascinating visual, social, and cultural history of the color white in European societies, from antiquity to today. Illustrated throughout with a wealth of captivating images ranging from the ancient world to the twenty-first century
Black, favorite color of priests and penitents, artists and ascetics, fashion designers and fascists, has always stood for powerfully opposed ideas: authority and humility, sin and holiness, rebellion and conformity, wealth and poverty, good and bad. In this book, the author of Blue now tells the fascinating social history of the color black in Europe. In the beginning was black, he tells us. The archetypal color of darkness and death, black was associated in the early Christian period with hell and the devil but also with monastic virtue. In the medieval era, black became the habit of courtiers and a hallmark of royal luxury. Black took on new meanings for early modern Europeans as they began to print words and images in black and white, and to absorb Isaac Newton's announcement that black was no color after all. During the romantic period, black was melancholy's friend, while in the twentieth century black (and white) came to dominate art, print, photography, and film, and was finally restored to the status of a true color. For the author, the history of any color must be a social history first because it is societies that give colors everything from their changing names to their changing meanings, and black is exemplary in this regard. In dyes, fabrics, and clothing, and in painting and other art works, black has always been a forceful and ambivalent shaper of social, symbolic, and ideological meaning in European societies.
. . . a rich volume, intelligently illustrated. . . . With sure-footed
scholarship, trenchant opinions, Michel Pastoureau goes beyond a perfunctory
visit: he makes us realize the importance of this material and avoids the
errors of a number of other historians.--Le Monde
From antiquity to the Middle Ages, the bear's centrality in cults and
mythologies left traces in European languages, literatures, and legends.
Michel Pastoureau considers how this once venerated creature was deposed by
Christianity and continued to sink lower in the symbolic bestiary before
rising again in Pyrrhic triumph as the teddy bear.
What do prostitutes, referees, and Renaissance clowns have in common? They all
wear stripes, and The Devil's Cloth tells us why. Pastoureau's lively study of
stripes offers a unique perspective on the evolution of fashion, taste, and
visual codes in Western culture. schovat popis
The book explores the rich and evolving significance of pink throughout history, revealing its transformation from a masculine hue in the eighteenth century to its modern feminization linked to the Barbie doll. It details the development of pink pigments, the cultural symbolism attached to the color, and its associations with various themes such as softness, pleasure, and sexuality. With captivating illustrations, it offers a comprehensive visual and social history of pink in art, fashion, literature, and everyday life from antiquity to the present.