Dictionary Definition
silverpoint n : a drawing made with on specially
prepared paper with an instrument having a silver tip (15th and
16th centuries)
Extensive Definition
Silverpoint (or metalpoint) is a method of
drawing using a piece of
sterling or pure silver wire held in a lead holder or handmade
holder. The medium of metalpoint includes the use of gold, copper,
brass, platinum and aluminium, as well as silver. Silverpoint
pre-dates the use of graphite as a drawing medium
and was used by old masters
such as Jan Van
Eyck, Leonardo
da Vinci, Albrecht
Durer and Raphael. The
technique is commonly associated with the Renaissance but
enjoyed a revival in the late 19th and
20th
centuries. Renaissance artists used silver and occasionally
leadpoint for underdrawings of their
paintings and for separate studies on paper.
Rembrandt's best known silverpoint drawing is a
portrait of his wife Saskia dated 1633. However, by the 17th
century, use of metalpoint was rare. By the 18th
century, silverpoint was completely supplanted by the more
versatile and immediate medium of graphite.
The discovery of the manuscript for Cennino
Cennini's 1390 "Il Libro dell'Arte" in the Laurentian Archives led
to silverpoint's rediscovery. There was a chapter on this drawing
medium in "Il Libro", and when the first printed edition appeared
in 1821, artists began to experiment.
Alphonse
Legros, the Pre-Raphaelites, Thomas
Wilmer Dewing and Joseph
Stella helped revitalize the medium. Perhaps the best known
modern silverpoint portrait is the 1920 portrait of Marcel
Duchamp by Joseph Stella (69 by 53cm)in the collection of the
Museum
of Modern Art New York from the Katherine S. Drier bequest. Silverpoint underwent a
second renaissance after a groundbreaking exhibit, "The Fine Line.
Drawing with Silver in America" was curated for the Norton Museum
of Art, West Palma Beach, FL,in 1985 by Dr. Bruce Weber. Since
then, increased interest, both on the part of the public and
artists alike, has led to a resurgence in silverpoint's fortunes.
There have been several museum exhibitions of silverpoint drawing,
with the most recent being "The Luster of Silver" at the Telfair
Museum of Art, Savannah, GA, in 2006.
Some artists simply wrap the wire in a spiral
around a pencil with enough length extending over the tip of the
pencil to make the drawn
line visible to the artist's eyes. The gauge of silver wire used is
somewhat determined by individual preferences of the artists. The
firm paper or lightweight board to draw on needs to be smooth and
coated with thin layers of rabbit skin gesso, acrylic gesso or gouache. The slight tooth made
by the layer of paint takes a little of the silver as you move the
point over the surface to make the drawing. The result is very
delicate. The marks need to be built up carefully. Cross-hatching
is an effective drawing technique for silverpoint. A kneaded eraser
will effectively remove all but the strongest silverpoint lines,
however this should be attempted as little as possible as the
rubbing of the eraser will disturb the underlying layer of paint.
To start with the drawing is silvery but over time the silver will
tarnish to a rusty brown for an old master finish. Tarnish to
deepen the tones can be hastened with a dilute mixture of
delicately brushed-on egg yolk. The
yellow yolk bleaches out in natural
light within a week while the tarnished lines remain a deeper
tone.
External links
- Cleveland Museum of Art site on Metalpoint
- Silverpoint Web Complete silverpoint drawing information
- Scherer and Ouporov artists working with silverpoint
- Victor Koulbak artist working with silverpoint
- Tom Mazzullo professional artist working in silverpoint
- Susan Schwalb abstract metalpoint drawings
- Jeannine Cook artist working in silverpoint
- Stacy Brown, artist working in silverpoint
silverpoint in German:
Silberstift