This month, rather than focusing on a particular artist, we are featuring art that is monochromatic, or grisaille, or greyscale, or just “black and white.” Technically, black and white are shades rather than colors, but thanks to “black and white” television, pretty much everyone understands the reference.
Whatever you choose to call it, creating in grisaille challenges the artist to work with a palate of just one color. It is a way of studying value, or the lightness and darkness of a color. Shades of grey are different values of black and white.
In two-dimensional art like drawing, painting, or photography, value allows the artist to create light and shadow, foreground and background, and images that look three-dimensional. Without value, a drawing will look flat and cartoon like, a painting will have no depth or form, and a ball would be a circle.
In three dimensional art, grey scale can be used to draw attention to form and texture.
Three dimensional art can also interplay with natural sunlight to create value.
Beyond the technical aspects and application, art is about creating images and objects that engage an audience. Grisaille can intensify the sacredness; the idea being that if color pervades daily life, the absence of color might suggest something more otherworldly.
Black and white can be used to represents contrasts such as physical and spiritual, as done by Shannon Nakaya below. In the foreground is a representation of a physical pua'a or wild boar, and in the background a representation of pua'a aumakua, an ancestral spirit that can assume the form of a wild boar.
View these local works of art and more, on display throughout the month September 2024, at our gallery on historic Ali’i Drive in Kailua Kona on the Big Island of Hawaii.
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