Send Message to C4LEB
Chiascuro • Into the shadows, or parting the light
Chiaroscuro, tenebrism, and sfumato are used by artists for different purposes: to create an air of mystery, private intimacy, psychological complexity, to evoke nightmarish realities, to produce haunting dramatic encounters, or to suggest the metaphorical battle of light and darkness playing out in a variety of contexts.
What Is Chiaroscuro?
Chiaroscuro is an artistic technique that creates pronounced contrast between areas of light and dark within an artistic composition, originally from Renaissance painting. Chiascuro became an artistic method using gradations of light and shadow to create convincing three-dimensional scenes where figures and objects appeared as solid forms.
The term chiaroscuro comes from the Italian words chiaro, meaning 'clear' or 'light', and scuro, meaning 'obscured' or 'dark'. The definition of chiaroscuro as it relates to painting has varied over time, but it almost always corresponds with high-contrast sections of light and dark within a single canvas.
Tenebrism
Tenebrism, derived from tenebroso, an Italian word meaning "dark, murky, gloomy," used dramatic contrasts between light and dark, as paintings with black areas and deep shadows would be intensely illuminated, often by a single light source. While tenebrism developed from chiaroscuro, unlike that technique, it did not strive for greater three-dimensionality, but was compositional, using deep darkness as a kind of negative space, while intense light in other areas created what has been called "dramatic illumination." The term tenebrism was often associated with the 17th century "candlelight tradition," a term describing night scenes illuminated by a single candle, and carried across to other artistic disciplines.
Sfumato
Sfumato (from Italian sfumare, “to tone down” or “to evaporate like smoke”), in painting or drawing, is the fine shading that produces soft, imperceptible transitions between colours and tones with subtle gradations, without lines or borders, from light to dark areas, for atmospheric effects.
Chiascuro and sfumato
Sfumato
By way of saying goodbye...