Red Is More Than A Power Color. This Color Expert Explains Why.

Details

a red-hued artwork of stenciled hands helps explain why red is a power color

From Keith Recker’s book: Deep Color: The Shades That Shape Our Souls (Schiffer Books, 2022). A detail of stenciled hands from Cueva de las Manos.

Expert on all things color, Keith Recker, author of the book Deep Color: The Shades That Shape Our Souls, walks us through the power of red.

Red is a kiss, a caress, a loving embrace. Red is also a warning and sometimes a welcome. Red is a symbol of power and a badge of shame. Red is deeply personal, drawing us into the sensations of our own body as well as toward our attraction to others. It stands for the warmth of the hearth and the scornful flame of vanity. It is beauty. It is violence.

central asian textiles in a red color

From Keith Recker’s book: Deep Color: The Shades That Shape Our Souls (Schiffer Books, 2022). Central Asian textiles.

portrait of a young lady with a rose helps illustrate psychology of color red

From Keith Recker’s book: Deep Color: The Shades That Shape Our Souls (Schiffer Books, 2022). A Red, Red Rose by John William Godward.

a swatch of the color red

From Keith Recker’s book: Deep Color: The Shades That Shape Our Souls (Schiffer Books, 2022). Untitled (Red) by Mark Rothko.

When we “see red,” the flush of anger pushes us to charge like a raging bull and yet bashful blushes are signs of modesty or shyness. On the other hand, the redblooded among us bravely wade into danger in the name of love, duty and justice. And when those fires burn too hot, red can become a smoldering signal of transgression and decadence, like Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter.

A recent study suggesting that athletes wearing red win more often helps explain why, for many centuries, it is the color of kings and captains. Charlemagne even wore red from head to foot to underscore his new authority when crowned Holy Roman Emperor in 800 CE.

Red is also a sign of luxury and until the development of synthetic dyes in the late 19th century, saturated red textiles required great expense and effort, often set aside for the richest members of society. And designers of every era have harnessed its power in dozens of ways to bring the color of human life into rooms of the home. Billy Baldwin created a luxurious, immersive garden of reds for Diana Vreeland’s living room and David Easton deeply infused his adaptation of historical styles with red’s heat.

In a more intimate context, red kindles our passions; think crimson dresses and lipstick. Recent branding for fashion labels like Valentino and Louboutin have used the color to evoke sex and power. In red’s seductive and warming embrace, we revel in its sensuality and potency, and in full doses or as a strategically deployed accent, red kindles the senses and makes us feel alive.

CUEVA DE LAS MANOS PHOTO: JAVIER ETCHEVERRY, ALAMY STOCK PHOTO. TEXTILE PHOTO: KEITH RECKER. JOHN WILLIAM GODWARD PHOTO: ROY MILES FINE PAINTINGS, BRIDGEMAN IMAGES. MARK ROTHKO PHOTO: NATIONAL GALLERY OF VICTORIA, MELBOURNE. © 1998 KATE ROTHKO PRIZEL & CHRISTOPHER ROTHKO / ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK. BRIDGEMAN IMAGES

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