Why Colors Continue to Be Observed Over Time
A color is not limited to the moment it was made
The completion of a handmade watercolor does not mark the end of its observation.
A color is first documented as it appears at the time it is made. As time passes, however, the same color can be observed again under a different point in its history. Comparing earlier and later observations may reveal subtle differences that were not apparent before.
A color therefore belongs not only to a single moment, but also to an ongoing period of observation.

Time creates another dimension of observation
Observing the same color after a longer period may lead to a different visual impression.
Some differences remain very subtle and become noticeable only when earlier and later observations are viewed together. Others are more immediately visible. These observations are not intended to explain why a color appears differently, but to document that such differences can be observed over time.
Time therefore becomes another condition through which color can be studied.

Comparison connects different moments
A single observation records only one point in time.
When observations made at different times are brought together, they create the opportunity for comparison. Earlier and later records become part of the same continuous observation, allowing the visual development of a color to be explored over longer periods.
The relationship between colors therefore extends not only across space, but also across time.

Long-term documentation enriches the Color Archive
Each repeated observation contributes additional information to the archive.
Earlier records remain valuable because they provide reference points for future comparisons. As more observations accumulate, the archive grows not only through new colors, but also through new perspectives on colors that have already been documented.
The archive therefore develops through continuity as much as through expansion.

Time is part of color observation
Colors can be observed from many different perspectives.
Materials, production methods, painting processes, and relationships between colors all contribute to the observation of color. Time forms another equally important condition, allowing the same color to be revisited repeatedly throughout its existence.
Color documentation therefore records not only how a color appears, but also how it continues to be observed over time.

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