Isabel Heijne
@heijne
Isabel Heijne
@heijne
Before publishing his Atlas in 1915, painter and art teacher Albert Henry Munsell (1858–1918) had spent decades seeking to compress the totality of human color experience into a simple and elegant three-dimensional graphical model. In 1879, after reading physicist Ogden Rood’s Modern Chromatics, he devised a pair of twirling triangular color pyramids joined at the base. In 1898, he painted a child’s globe in subtly shifting shades, only to find that the globe’s perfect symmetry could not sufficiently map the differences in strength — which he called “chroma” — between colors or “hues”. By 1905, in his A Color Notation, Munsell had moved to a tree as model, since its unequal length branches could accommodate different hues, chroma, and “value”, the third axis of his…
pdimagearchive.org“There is a certain shade of red. In order to see it, you would need to purge your brain of the millions of years of evolution commanding you to pay special attention to red, plus the millennia of culture telling you that red is the only color worthy of a name, plus the past few centuries of deposed, “garish” red. I have no idea what this shade of
... See more