User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -ɛsəʊ
Noun
gesso- a mixture of plaster of Paris and glue used to prepare a surface for painting
Extensive Definition
"Gesso" ['dʒɛsːo] is the Italian
word for "Board chalk"
(akin to the Greek word "gypsum"), and is a powdered form
of the mineral calcium
carbonate used in art. Gesso was traditionally mixed with
animal glue, usually rabbit-skin
glue, to use as an absorbent primer coat for panel
painting with tempera paints. It is a
permanent and brilliant white substrate, as long as it is used on
wood or masonite. This
mixture is rather brittle and susceptible to cracking, thus making
it unsuitable for priming canvas. In Geology, Italian
"Gesso" corresponds to the English "Gypsum", as it is a calcium
sulphate compound (CaSO4·2H2O).
Acrylic gesso
Modern acrylic
"gesso" is actually a combination of calcium
carbonate with an acrylic polymer medium latex, a pigment and other chemicals that
ensure flexibility, and ensure long archival life. It is sold
premixed for both sizing
and priming a canvas for
painting. While it does
contain calcium carbonate to increase the absorbency of the primer
coat, Titanium
dioxide or titanium white is often added as the whitening
agent. This allows the "gesso" to remain flexible enough to use on
canvas. High concentrations of calcium carbonate, or substandard
latex components will cause the resulting film to dry to a brittle
surface susceptible to cracking. Typically, a canvas should be
sized prior to being gesso'd as a sizing coat will sink into the
substrate to support it as opposed to a gesso coat which is just
put on top of the substrate.
Acrylic gesso can be colored, either commercially
by replacing the titanium white with another pigment, such as
carbon
black, or by the artist directly, with the addition of an
acrylic paint. Acrylic gesso can be odorous, due to the presence of
ammonia and/or formaldehyde which are
added in small amounts as preservatives against spoilage.
Pre-gessoed canvases can be obtained commercially.
Acrylic gesso is a modern art material, and is
used as a primer for oil painting
and acrylics. Many of the solvents used in oil painting, such as
turpentine or
odorless mineral
spirits (OMS), will leach some oil through a thin acrylic
primer coat and damage the canvas underneath just like traditional
hide glue sizing. However, sufficient coverage and penetration of
an absorbent support is archivally acceptable.
Although it is generally believed that it is
acceptable to paint in oils over acrylic gesso, it has been stated
in several painting textbooks such as "The Painter's Handbook" that
is it unwise to paint in oils over acrylic gesso because--unlike
time-tested alternatives such as rabbit skin glue--the oil paint
will eventually delaminate from the acrylic gesso surface. This
effect may not make itself manifest for several decades and then
mostly affecting thick impasto. The cause for this problem it the
inability of oil paint to establish both physical and chemical
bonds with the acrylic base. In a canvas that has been primed with
rabbit-skin glue, oil paint is able to penetrate the ground (which
is porous, unlike acrylic gesso) and establish a permanent bond,
both chemical and physical. Of course, manufacturers of pre-gessoed
canvas will deny this delamination takes place. Unfortunately, the
science is pretty clear. Please refer to "The Painter's Handbook"
for details. Also, another textbook "Artist's Manual" also refers
to the negative effects of using oil paint over acrylic
gesso.
Gesso and sculpture
Gesso is also used by sculptors, to prepare the
shape of the final sculpture (fused bronze) or directly as a
material for sculpting. Gesso can also be used as a layer between
sculptured wood and gold leaf. In this case a layer of red shellac
called "assiette" is used to cover the Gesso before applying the
gold. A collection of gesso sculptures is properly called a
gypsotheque.
gesso in French: Gesso
gesso in Italian: Gesso (materiale)
gesso in Dutch: Gesso
gesso in Finnish: Gesso
gesso in Swedish: Gesso