Everything
is related to Naples
Further
Adventures of Roy G.
Biv, House Painter.
In
Italian, there is a color named “Terra di Siena
Naturale.” In olden
times it was called Scyricum or Sil
Pressum. In English it is “Raw Sienna Earth”
The highly technical
name for the color is “brownish” or “like, you know,
uh…sorta brown”. It is toxic; that is, if you eat the
paint, you die. (That may
be true of many other colors of paint, as well.) If
you paint your house that color, however, you may
raise fewer eyebrows than if you go with Naples yellow
(something like ochre) or chrome yellow (something
like chrome) or spincervino yellow
(something like the color of the Asian shrub Rhamnus cathartica), which is also
called verde di vescica—bladder
green! Indeed, if you paint your house to make it
resemble a bladder and you live next door to me, you
and my spray-paint cans are not going to get along.
Why
should I care? I’m not sure. I was confused by
Goethe’s Farbenlehre (Theory of
Colors) before I got to page number chartreuse. It’s
just that someone in the newspaper this morning was
moaning about the colors that buildings are painted in
Naples; a “kaleidoscope of anarchy” he called it. Or
maybe it was a “stethoscope of oligarchy”—whatever, it
was bad. There is no attempt, said the whiner, to
adhere to the published and official color guidelines.
Well, there is no attempt to adhere to the published
and official traffic-code definitions of red, green,
and yellow, either, so maybe the whole city is
color-blind. That city color code for painting
buildings, by the way, was published in 1942, and, in
fairness, it wasn’t that restrictive. You could paint
your house white, grey, sand, hazel-brown, straw
yellow, “ancient pink,” salmon, clear terra
di Siena, or Pompeian red.
So when I
look around the city, although I do see a few “outlaw”
shades of electric blue, generally I don’t see a lot
of outrageous, garish colors, except perhaps the
church of Santa
Maria delle Catene (top photo, left).
It was just redone in bright mustard. Also, in
Bagnoli, they have recycled part of the old cement
factory as a public venue and painted it “pimp
scarlet.” White is making a comeback: the entire
300-yard long façade of the Albergo dei
Poveri has been restored to its original
white, and the restored Mergellina
train
station is back to its gleaming white. Pompeian
red is still the default color of regal buildings and
those with regal pretensions, such as the royal palace and the Naples prefecture. The
colors of natural stone—marble, trachyte, tufa—have
always been popular, and the newer and unpainted
“natural” colors of metal are evident in many of the
newer buildings—the Civic
Center, for example.
Some
colors in Naples seem too bright just by comparison
with some of the adjacent buildings that are still
wearing that coat of WWII grime grey. I would rather
see one of the most historic Spanish buildings in
Naples, the palazzo Cellammare (photo, right), any
color than what it is at present—Pompeian red, but
only if you can imagine Pompeii right after Mt.
Vesuvius got through with it. This is because the
condo dwellers within are too tight to pay for a
decent paint job.
back to index
to portal for miscellaneous
entries
|