0% found this document useful (0 votes)
59 views6 pages

The Significance of Egyptian Blue Pigment

Egyptian artists originally struggled to represent gods using common pigments like black, brown, yellow, and red, as blue was considered a noble color for deities. They developed Egyptian blue, the first synthetic pigment, which was a durable calcium copper silicate produced by heating sand, limestone, natron, and copper at high temperatures. This pigment allowed Egyptians to depict gods and pharaohs in blue and was later adopted by other ancient cultures like the Romans, Chinese, and Assyrians. Egyptian blue remained prominently used in Egyptian art for over 2500 years until its production method was eventually lost.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
59 views6 pages

The Significance of Egyptian Blue Pigment

Egyptian artists originally struggled to represent gods using common pigments like black, brown, yellow, and red, as blue was considered a noble color for deities. They developed Egyptian blue, the first synthetic pigment, which was a durable calcium copper silicate produced by heating sand, limestone, natron, and copper at high temperatures. This pigment allowed Egyptians to depict gods and pharaohs in blue and was later adopted by other ancient cultures like the Romans, Chinese, and Assyrians. Egyptian blue remained prominently used in Egyptian art for over 2500 years until its production method was eventually lost.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

B006: Story of Egyptian blue

Story of Egyptian blue


When it came to wall paintings depicting their gods or deities, many early Egyptian artists
had trouble representing the gods. Black, brown, yellow and red pigments could be found
and extracted from ores or soils, so these colours are common. However, they were
considered by the Egyptians as too lowly a colour for depicting their gods.
 Why was blue considered so important?
 Where did they get their blue from?
The colour they wanted was blue, which was rare and expensive. Hence, in many temples
the gods are painted in blue, the pharaoh wears blue in his crown because he is god on
earth, and when dead he is shown as blue because he becomes deified as a god. This idea
continued into Christian times and the colour of the Madonna’s dress is frequently shown in
blue.

Blue minerals
A blue pigment can be obtained from azurite, a weathered form of copper carbonate
(Cu3(CO3)2(OH)2), but over time this changes to green malachite (Cu2CO3(OH)2). In
prehistoric paintings blue was missing because there are few blue minerals and those that
are blue are chemically unstable or too hard to use.
From around 633 CE, blue is again missing in great quantities from the art produced. Where
blue is used, the most frequently used mineral was small quantities of lapis lazuli. This very
expensive mineral pigment from Afghanistan was ground into a powder and mixed with a
binder to make the paint. This gave rise to the price of a painting in the medieval period
being dependent upon the amount of blue in the picture.
In their temples and tombs, the Ancient Egyptians pose an interesting problem. A range of
blue hues can be seen; more than if they just used lapis. So, where did it come from?

A synthetic pigment
From analysis of archaeological evidence the Egyptians and ancient Assyrians did make a
lasting cheap deep blue pigment – but how did they do that?
The clue was found by looking at the earthenware. Sometime around 3100 BCE a deep blue
pigment was manufactured for glazing pots. When this blue glaze was ground into a fine
powder it made a blue pigment. This blue pigment was suitable for painting if mixed with a
binder such as gum arabic or egg, to make tempera paint. This blue pigment is also known
as blue frit. Technically a frit is a ceramic material that has been fused to form a glass,
quenched and granulated. Frits are important in making enamels and ceramic glazes.

1
B006: Story of Egyptian blue

This blue pigment was one of the first synthetic pigments and is calcium copper silicate or
cuprorivaite. In the Ancient Egyptian language it was known as hsbd-iryt, which means
artificial lapis lazuli, indicative of the ancients’ obsession with this precious stone.

The range of blue, from a light to a dark blue colour, depended upon careful changes in the
processing to produce slightly different compositions of the pigment. A lighter colour was
obtained by reducing the grain size during grinding. Egyptian blue can also be produced with
a violet tone, a manufacturing process that was known to the Assyrians who prepared a
purple frit for a glaze, but it is not known if it was ever used as a pigment.
After 2500 BCE, the Ancient Egyptians went into mass manufacture of blue pigments and
produced three different hues of blue. One was manufactured from the mineral lapis lazuli
and was a rich deep blue, a second was a complex silicate or glass compound which could
be used to make blue faience, and a third was a blue silicate complex with natron
contaminated with cobalt, producing a deep blue similar to that of Delft pottery.

Egyptian blue in use


The earliest evidence for the use of Egyptian blue is in the Fourth Dynasty (c.2575-
2467 BCE). It appears on limestone sculptures from that period, as well as being shaped
into a variety of cylinder seals and beads.
In the Middle Kingdom (2050-1652 BCE) it continued to be used as a pigment in the
decoration of tombs, wall paintings, furnishings and statues, and by the New Kingdom
(1570–1070 BCE) began to be more widely used in the production of numerous objects.
The famous crown of Queen Nefertiti and certain stones of the temple of her husband,
Akhenaten, owe their colour to Egyptian blue, as do many other ancient object d'art and in
the famous Pond in a Garden fresco in the tomb of Egyptian 'scribe and counter of grain'
Nebamun in Thebes, amongst other places (Figure 1).

2
B006: Story of Egyptian blue

th
Figure 1: Wall painting with Egyptian blue, from Tomb of Nebamun 18 Dynasty (1567-1320 BCE).
© The Trustees of the British Museum

Chinese blue
Long after the Egyptians had stopped crowning their queens with blue crowns, the Chinese
were also faced with a shortage of blue.
They used some clever chemistry to come up with a synthetic blue pigment. Chinese blue
and purple are chemically related to Egyptian blue, but the Chinese had swapped calcium
for barium. The biggest problem they faced was only certain, rare barium minerals give
satisfactory results. To overcome this they used impure mineral baryte (barium sulfate
BaSO4). Baryte is found with galena (lead sulfide), and the addition of lead salts to the
starting mixture gave a more favourable reaction. The lead salts act as a catalyst, converting
the baryte to give the Chinese blue or purple. Is this an example of parallel development, or
of trading between the Near East and Asia?
Analysis on paint found on the Terracotta army has found Chinese blue and Chinese purple
and other Chinese samples have been dated to about 500 BCE. The process of making
Egyptian blue requires temperatures of 800 to 900 °C, but Chinese blue and purple needs
around 1000 °C.
The fact the Egyptians, Assyrians and Chinese did develop a blue pigment of their own
indicates the advanced nature of their craft skills even though they had no knowledge of the
chemistry. This lack of knowledge about its production leads to a number of slightly different
accounts of how it was made.
The skill had to be based upon the use of the natural minerals they already had available to
them. The mystery of this blue pigment is compounded by the fact that after 660 CE the
deep blue of the Egyptians disappears from popular use; the recipe is lost. In fact the writer
Isidore Sevilla (c.560-636 CE) last mentioned Egyptian blue in his Etymologiae published

3
B006: Story of Egyptian blue

after his death (636 CE). It was to be many years before a solution to the mystery of the
missing blue could even be attempted.

Blue pigments used by the Romans


With the excavation of the ruins of Pompeii in 1814 a sample of a blue pigment was found in
a pot in the ruins of an artist’s shop and people again began to ask the question, ‘What is the
composition of this blue pigment?’
The Romans had imported the manufacture of blue frit from Alexandria. Vestorius set up the
first workshop to make it at Pozzuoli. The Romans knew it by the name caeruleum, and both
Pliny the Elder and Vitruvius describes it. Vitruvius, in his work De Architectura, states how it
was produced by grinding sand, copper and natron, and heating the mixture, shaped into
small balls, in a furnace. Remnants of Egyptian blue have been found on the Parthenon's
statue of the messenger goddess Iris.
Apart from Egypt, it has also been found in the Near East, the Eastern Mediterranean and at
the limits of the Roman Empire.
Although undoubtedly an Egyptian invention, it is unclear as to whether its existence
elsewhere was a result of parallel inventions or whether its technology had spread to these
areas.
A sample of the Pompeii blue pigment was sent to the Royal Institution in London and Sir
Humphrey Davy attempted an analysis of the blue glaze, which was found to be of Egyptian
origin. In the pigment, Davy detected sand, lime and some form of copper compound but
could get no further with what the copper compound was. Later, in the 1880s the French
geologist Ferdinand Fouqué discovered the copper pigment was a complex copper
compound and was essentially calcium copper silicate. The problem was, how had it been
made?

Manufacturing Egyptian blue


Details of its manufacture had been jealously guarded by the Assyrians and the Egyptians,
but it was believed that desert sand (silica) from specific areas, crushed limestone (calcium
carbonate), natron (a mixture of calcium and sodium salts) and fragments of bronze or
copper were heated and fused into a glaze at temperatures between 850 °C and 1000 °C
and the resulting glaze broken up and ground into a powder. It is assumed that scrap bronze
was the main source of the copper, since tin has been found in some samples of Egyptian
Blue.
The glass base obtained in the heating is known as a glass frit. It is chemically very stable in
both acid and alkaline conditions, and this makes it very fade-resistant. Because of its
composition, Egyptian blue shows no reaction with other pigments found in other paints and
objects. Strong light also does not influence its colour, as can be seen by Egyptian blue that
has been exposed for thousands of years to sun and heat on monuments in Egypt.

4
B006: Story of Egyptian blue

Various shades of blue and violet would often result, all of them remarkably durable over the
centuries. A good discussion by Riederer of this pigment can be found in ‘Artists’ Pigments:
A Handbook of Their History and Characteristics Volume 3’ (Edited by West FitzHugh 1997
and reprinted 2012) with the conclusion that the blue pigment principally used in Egypt was a
calcium copper silicate. He does indicate that the Chinese produced a similar blue pigment
during the Han dynasty (208BCE-220CE) known as Han Blue and this was barium, copper
silicate (BaCuSi2O10).
During the past decades (Chase 1971, Tite et. al. 1984), more has been determined about
the chemistry of Egyptian Blue and it is concluded that it was probably made by heating a
mixture of a calcium compound (carbonate, sulfate or hydroxide), copper compound (oxide
or malachite) and quartz or silica gel in proportions that correspond to a ratio of 4 SiO2: 1
CaO: 1 CuO to a temperature of 900 °C using a flux of sodium carbonate, potassium
carbonate or in modern methods, borax or lithium carbonate.
The resulting mixture is then maintained at a temperature of 800°C for a period ranging from
10 to 100 hours. The resulting compound is similar to the rare natural mineral called
cuprorivaite, (CaCuSi4O10). The natural mineral cuprorivaite has a similar chemical formula
but is paler in colour and has a tetragonal pyramidal crystalline structure.

Latest developments
According to comments in New Scientist for 22 January 2000 (Stephanie Pain), the
celebrated Egyptian blue was probably not invented in Egypt at all, but was brought from
Syria or Mesopotamia and adopted by the Egyptian artists.
However Egyptian blue’s story has not finished. It has a new future in the 21st century as the
following article in the Daily Mail (22 February 2013) illustrates:
 Egyptian blue, one of the first pigments known to man, has potential uses in state-of-
the-art medical imaging devices, television remote controls and other
telecommunications technology, new research claims.
 But now researchers from the University of Georgia have found that Egyptian blue
can be rolled into nanosheets so thin that thousands would fit across the width of a
human hair.
 Not only that, but the sheets produce invisible infra-red radiation similar to the beams
that communicate between remote controls and TVs, car door locks and other
telecommunications devices
 The ancient Egyptians held the colour blue in very high regard and were eager to
present it on many media and in a variety of forms.
 Tina Salguero, assistant professor of chemistry at Georgia, and her colleagues
detailed their findings in an article on the pigment published in the Journal of the
American Chemical Society.
 They wrote: 'Calcium copper silicate provides a route to a new class of nanomaterials
that are particularly interesting with respect to state-of-the-art pursuits like near-IR-

5
B006: Story of Egyptian blue

based biomedical imaging, IR light-emitting devices (especially telecommunication


platforms) and security ink formulations.
 'In this way we can re-imagine the applications of an ancient material through modern
technochemical means.'

Websites
[Link]
modern-applications
[Link]
[Link]

You might also like