Venetian Red, an iron-oxide earth pigment long used as an invisible ground in Western painting, has underpinned realist image-making for more than five centuries. Technical literature documents its permanence and tonal stability, but its conceptual potential has been overlooked. This essay traces Venetian Red’s role from Renaissance Venice through Rembrandt, Chardin, Turner, and Robert Henri, showing how the pigment served illusion by disappearing. It then repositions Venetian Red as a contemporary strategy of Structural Omission: the deliberate construction of images that build realism only to reveal its limits in the post-certainty era. By reactivating a material once trusted to stabilize representation, Structural Omission makes incompleteness structural rather than stylistic, countering today’s algorithmic drive toward seamless visual closure.Deborah Scott is the originator of Structural Omission, a framework designed for the Post-Certainty Era— a cultural condition where image-saturation has eroded the credibility of visual and narrative closure. Her representational paintings and essays investigate load-bearing absences as a necessary record of perception in an age of algorithmic completion. By formalizing the limits of seeing and knowing, Scott’s practice restores human uncertainty to the architectural foundation of the representational image. Author’s note: This essay approaches Venetian Red from the perspective of an artist rather than a technical pigment historian. It references well-documented historical uses of iron-oxide grounds to support a conceptual argument about Structural Omission, not to provide exhaustive conservation scholarship.
Deborah Scott (Fri,) studied this question.