Before the addition of prints, drawings and watercolours in 2016, and sculpture in February 2019, Art UK included works exclusively painted in oils, tempera and acrylic.

Why was this? These are more permanent materials than drawings and watercolours, and so have traditionally been used for more important works, have been more highly valued, and are stored and displayed differently in museums. Paintings in oil and related materials were just the starting point for Art UK’s long-term survey of the country’s art collections, but let's take a closer look at what constitutes a painting.

Paints are coloured pigments suspended in a medium that dries by evaporation or chemical reaction. These materials have been used on a variety of supports such canvas and wooden panels. Paintings can with care be transferred from one support to another, for example from plaster to canvas, for strength and ease of handling.

The commonest materials on Art UK are:

Oil

Oil paint, in which the coloured pigments are suspended in oil, was first used in Northern Europe for panel paintings in the thirteenth century and much later in Italy, where its use parallels the increased use of canvas. Oil paint dries slowly, can be mixed on the canvas, diluted to transparency or given texture. This flexibility has made it a favourite medium for artists for centuries. Originally artists made their own; ready-mixed paints in sealable containers only became available commercially in the 1840s.

Olive Trees

Olive Trees 1889

Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890)

National Galleries of Scotland

Acrylic

Acrylic paints were first commercially available in the 1950s. They are coloured pigments in a suspension of polymers (plastics such as acrylics, vinyl, etc.) in water. These are dilutable with water when wet but are water-resistant, like oil paints, when dry. They also dry much faster than oil paints so are very convenient to use.

We are currently unable to display this image due to copyright restrictions

Jodrell Bank from around Pex Hill, Cheshire 2011

D. Alun Evans (b.1945)

Grosvenor Museum

Canvas

Canvas is the most common support for paintings, light and durable. Woven from hemp or linen, it was used in Northern Europe from the fourteenth century alongside wooden panels.

The Madonna of Humility

The Madonna of Humility about 1390

Lippo di Dalmasio (c.1353–c.1410)

The National Gallery, London

Canvas was originally most commonly used for processional banners such as The Madonna of Humility and was perhaps first used for oil painting in Venice in the late fifteenth century.

Traditionally it is primed, or undercoated, with a neutral or warm colour, to provide a smooth and non-absorbent surface for painting. In the twentieth century unprimed canvas has been used for its textural effects.

Tempera (egg and glue tempera)

The term tempera now generally means pigment mixed with egg yolk. This dries quickly and, as the egg yolk sets, to a waterproof finish.

Virgin and Child Enthroned with Eight Saints

Virgin and Child Enthroned with Eight Saints (triptych, centre panel) 14th C

Nardo di Cione (c.1320–1365/1366) (attributed to)

The Courtauld Gallery

In Italy tempera was used for frescoes and was used for panel paintings until the introduction of oil paints in the fifteenth century.

Hiking

Hiking c.1936

James Walker Tucker (1898–1972)

Laing Art Gallery

There was a significant revival in the use of tempera in British painting in the first half of the twentieth century.

Saint Sidwell (?) (or Saint Juthwara)

Saint Sidwell (?) (or Saint Juthwara) c.1300

British School

The Fitzwilliam Museum

Distemper (sometimes called glue-tempera), in contrast, is pigment bound just with vegetable or animal glue, and although very commonly used on canvas before the introduction of oil paints, is now very rare due to its fragility.

Andrew Greg, National Inventory Research Project, University of Glasgow

You can find out more on the Art UK list of art terms.