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Color

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This book addresses the subject of color in all media, both fine and applied. It provides an informative introduction to understanding color from the approaches of aesthetics, science, psychology, and history; and includes beautiful illustrations and direct quotes from working artists about their perspectives about color use. The book discusses all facets of color in historic and contemporary paintings, with sections on the psychological and compositional effects of color, theories of color relationships, subtractive notation and light mixtures, color combinations, and color in fine art and applied design. For working artists and employees in the fields of art and design, such as painters, sculptors, crafters, photographers, advertisement creators, cartoonists, commercial designers, computer artists and website designers, architects, landscape designers, interior designers, and clothing designers.

176 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 1988

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About the author

Paul J. Zelanski

4 books2 followers
Paul Zelanski was born in Hartford, Connecticut in 1931. When he was 10, his sister saved up and gave him an oil paint set — the most memorable and important present of his life to that point, as his childhood was during the Great Depression and holidays were for getting socks and underwear. He attended Hartford High, and was the first resident of Connecticut’s capitol city to be accepted to Cooper Union. College was interrupted by two years spent in the Army during the Korean War, but Paul returned and earned his certificate (all that was offered at Cooper in those days) in 1955.

After Cooper Union, Paul went on to study under Josef Albers at Yale University. It was here that Paul began his life-long passion for color theory. When Paul finished his BFA at Yale in 1957, on recommendation from Albers, he attended Bowling Green State University for his master’s degree in painting. Always knowing that he wanted to be an educator, after finishing school he taught at North Texas State University from 1958–62, and then moved north to teach at the University of Connecticut, where he would remain until his retirement in 1995. Paul continued to make collages every day in his studio in Connecticut until his death in July of 2015.

Paul married artist Annette Zelanski in 1965 and they had three children together, one son and two daughters.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Abby.
1,144 reviews5 followers
September 2, 2015
An overview of color, covering various color theories, classifications, uses through the ages, mixing, and many other topics. It is full of full color images and helpful diagrams. As far as textbooks go, this one is well written and decently engaging. There were some chapters, like Physiological Effects of Color, where I found myself reading because of how interesting the material was, not just to get the answers for my class assignment. I learned a lot from this book; color is fascinating.
Profile Image for Karen.
172 reviews4 followers
February 27, 2026
solid textbook for learning some color theory basics, which i read for a class. i read 5th edition which is a little outdated (20 years old), especially the section on computers. some chapters were more interesting than others, which is probably to be expected from a college textbook. i enjoyed the sections on color combinations and applications in fine art and design.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
1,242 reviews8 followers
March 8, 2018
Had to read this for a Color Theory college class, but because I am an Art nut, I rather liked it. And I learned a lot of cool new stuff.
Profile Image for Kay .
742 reviews6 followers
February 5, 2017
This book is intended for art students and the like interested in learning and understanding more about color. There is lots of good information with ample illustrations but this is an introduction only. It's rather dry reading and some things I got, some I did not, and some I even disagreed with (although there wasn't much of that fortunately and it had to do with the perception of color when eyes are shut or one is blind). For those interesting in this topic, it's a good introduction. A wide variety of color uses is covered in art, architecture, interior design, computer graphics and prints, fabrics, textiles, advertising, and commercial design.
Profile Image for Joanna.
137 reviews
May 27, 2008
The second edition of this book was required reading for a color course I enrolled in, and it is an excellent book on color theory as it applies to art and design.
Profile Image for Cecely.
153 reviews6 followers
December 10, 2012
Really rather boring, wordy and, for my purposes, overly technical/scientific. Hope the next book I read on color is more interesting and useful.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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