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YANNY PETTERS'
PAINTINGS ON GLASS
INTRODUCTION
Yanny
Petters has been painting on glass using a technique known
as back painting or Verre Églomisé since she trained as a
signwriter in the early 1980s. Her continued fascination for
the technique has led her to explore its origins and to
develop her own style and application.
Here
she gives a brief history and explanation of an art form
which has all but disappeared since its heyday in the late
18th and early 19th centuries.
ORIGINS
The
earliest known examples were made in the 3rd to 5th
centuries when the Egyptians and Romans decorated the bases
of vessels with religious and secular decorative motifs. The
design was protected between two fused pieces of clear
glass.
The technique was first named to differentiate it from
stained glass in
Augsburg
,
Germany
, around 1684. It was prevalent in
Bohemia
and
Bavaria
among farmers who produced work on glass to supplement their
farming income. It became a folk art form with religious
icons as a popular subject during the 18th and 19th
centuries in
Central Europe
. It was known in the Canton province in China
where non-professional artists painted copies of Old
Masters and mirrors for export to Northern Europe,
especially Britain, as
well as highly detailed work for the home market. Other
examples of high quality painting on glass can also be found
in
India
and
Indonesia
. The term ‘Verre Églomisé’ comes from the name of an
artist and collector of glass paintings in the 18th century
called Jean Baptiste Glomy.
The technique was explored by the Blue Rider group of
artists in the 1920s who turned what had been a folk art
into fine art. Artists of the calibre of Kandinsky, Marc,
Klee and Münter produced glass paintings.
Examples of painting on the back of glass are to be found in
various collections. The most significant of these is the
Udo Dammert collection at the Schloßmuseum in
Murnau
,
Bavaria
.
Painting
on glass was also a common technique among signwriters who
used it to create fascia signs, decorated windows and
mirrors. It is still being done in the present time though
nowhere near as much as in Victorian and Edwardian times.
Nowadays, there are very few artists using the technique as
a fine art.
TECHNIQUE
Backpainting
(also referred to as Underglass painting) / Verre Églomisé
/ Hinterglasmalerei involves painting on the back of glass
using opaque colours and sometimes goldleaf. This means that
the details and highlights of the painting must be applied
first. Decorative mirrors are produced in a similar fashion,
either by removing the silvering in the areas to be painted
or in masking off the design before the glass is silvered.
In
the past the paint used by artists was a mixture of ground
pigment, linseed oil and varnish. The colour range was very
limited being mainly white, black, ochre, brick red, olive
green, brown and gold. The colour was applied pure and flat,
without mixing colours . Black or brown was used to outline
the design and
the rest of the colours were used to fill in the
shapes.
Today,
special paints in strong, lightfast colours have been
developed for the signwriting trade. Yanny uses these
paints when working on glass.
While
being trained as a signwriter she came across the technique
through doing decorative pub mirrors and panels. She
developed a fascination for Verre Églomisé and is now
working with the technique to produce fine art paintings.
Yanny also engraves the glass giving the artwork a soft line
and sparkle. She paints mainly Irish Wild Plants all of
which are done from life.
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