Acrylic Paint—History and Technique

GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Acrylic paint was developed to meet the needs of the Mexican painters of the 1920s who were creating outdoor murals. Both oil and fresco painting lacked the  durability to withstand outdoor conditions.

Like oil paint, acrylics supply the artist with a wide choice of techniques and effects. It can be applied to canvas, wall board, paper, and building surfaces. Acrylics are mixed with water and applied with a brush or palette knife. They are normally quick-drying; however, the artist can add a gel to slow the drying rate and allow some blending of colors on the surface itself. Thin glazes can be used to build up form and color or an impasto technique can be used with acrylics. Acrylic can also be sprayed onto a supporting surface.   

NOTES
Source- Anne Bromberg, "Painting: Materials and Techniques," DMA research document, Education files, 1986-1987.

Draft routed to Sue in October 2016. Changes made based on GDoc in January 2017. GDoc being moved to Queta's folders and this note is being retagged with #routed so that it can receive the completed tag once updates appear in the GDoc. (EAs, 1/19/2017)
After verifying revisions visible in GDrive, I removed routed tag and added completed tag- 1/24/2017.

As of January 19, 2017- rule reaches 110 objects.

ASSOCIATED CONTENT CHUNKS

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS  

IMAGE ASSETS 
 

This photograph shows tubes of acrylic paint in a box. 
Source: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License, Wikimedia Commons, accessed August 9, 2016.
268417174: UMO

The photograph shows what acrylic paint looks like after it has been squeezed out of a tube. In this example, the acrylic paint is red.
268417448: UMO

Materials and Meaning installation image, C3 2008. This display case shows a selection of powdered pigments, binders, and paints.
12328118: UMO

WEB RESOURCES 

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

FUN FACTS 

TEACHING IDEAS 

RULES
set operator as or
apply to objects where classification_name equals paintings and medium contains acrylic
apply to objects where classification_name equals collages and medium contains acrylic
apply to objects where classification_name equals drawings and medium contains acrylic
rules_operator
OR
General Description
Acrylic paint was developed to meet the needs of the Mexican painters of the 1920s who were creating outdoor murals. Both oil and fresco painting lacked the  durability to withstand outdoor conditions.

Like oil paint, acrylics supply the artist with a wide choice of techniques and effects. It can be applied to canvas, wall board, paper, and building surfaces. Acrylics are mixed with water and applied with a brush or palette knife. They are normally quick-drying; however, the artist can add a gel to slow the drying rate and allow some blending of colors on the surface itself. Thin glazes can be used to build up form and color or an impasto technique can be used with acrylics. Acrylic can also be sprayed onto a supporting surface.   

Fun Facts
 

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes
Source- Anne Bromberg, "Painting: Materials and Techniques," DMA research document, Education files, 1986-1987.

Draft routed to Sue in October 2016. Changes made based on GDoc in January 2017. GDoc being moved to Queta's folders and this note is being retagged with #routed so that it can receive the completed tag once updates appear in the GDoc. (EAs, 1/19/2017)
After verifying revisions visible in GDrive, I removed routed tag and added completed tag- 1/24/2017.

As of January 19, 2017- rule reaches 110 objects.

rules
Apply To
Objects
constituent_id
Equals
paintings and medium contains acrylic
Apply To
Objects
constituent_id
Equals
collages and medium contains acrylic
Apply To
Objects
constituent_id
Equals
drawings and medium contains acrylic
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
acrylic paint (resin): AAT: 300015058
painting (image-making): AAT: 300054216
*Contemporary Art
@Schiller
*American Art
*European Art
impasto (painting technique): AAT: 300053368
murals: AAT: 300182732
glazing (painting technique): AAT: 300404385
268417174: UMO
268417448: UMO
268417174: Image
12328118: UMO
source file
materials_and_techniques-0202.xml.nores