Zur Farbenlehre

portrait of GoetheIn 1810, Goethe published Zur Farbenlehre, a major work on color theory. In part one, he presents his theory, based in his own experiments; in part two, he attacks the first part of Sir Isaac Newton’s Opticks (1704); in part three, he surveys theories of color from the Greeks to his day and advances a psychology of color. His goals are to disprove Newton’s theory of light and color and to reject his method—one based exclusively on a physical, quantitative approach—in favor of a method based on perception of color by the eye. Exact date of this event is unknown; if you have information about the correct date, please email [email protected] with this information. Image: Angelica Kauffman, Portrait of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 1787 (painting on canvas), Goethe-Nationalmuseum (Weimar). This image is in the public domain in the United States as its copyright has expired.

Articles

Linda M. Shires, "Color Theory—Charles Lock Eastlake’s 1840 Translation of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s Zur Farbenlehre (Theory of Colours)"

Related Articles

Linda M. Shires, "On Color Theory, 1835: George Field’s Chromatography"

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Jan 1810

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