Ephraim Rubenstein: Ruins in Mixed Media

This article on Ephraim Rubenstein, written by Judith Fairly, first appeared in the Auly/August 2012 issue of The Artist’s Magazine.

 

Selinunte I by Ephraim Rubenstein

To get the look of the pitted and weather-beaten stone in Selinunte I (mixed media, 38×50), Ephraim Rubenstein sprinkled salt into the washes when they were wet, As the ink wash dried, each grain of salt pulled a bit of dark ink around it, making a dense texture.

 

Growing up in New York City, Ephraim Rubenstein felt the power of art to transcend time and place at an early age. As a child, living in a loud, crowded urban milieu, he found a refuge among the tranquil galleries at the Brooklyn Museum. “The fact that a painting could create an alternative reality really got to me in an immediate way,” he says. Rubenstein learned how to draw and paint from his grandfather, Edward H. Freedman, a commercial artist and illustrator, and continued his art education at the Art Students League of New York and Columbia University, where he received his undergraduate degree in art history and a master of fine arts degree in painting before embarking upon a career as artist and teacher.

Ephriam Rubenstein has taught at the University of Richmond, the Rhode Island School of Design and the Maryland Institute College of Art. “I teach my students the importance of basic skills and of a thorough knowledge of their materials,” he says. “When students ask me, ‘When will I be ready for better materials?’ I tell them, ‘When you can tell the difference between them.’” Rubenstein also encourages his students to be conversant in as many techniques as possible. “While it is imperative that they feel deeply about things, their feelings cannot be communicated without a language; if they are not intimate with the range, strengths and weaknesses of each medium, they cannot exploit its potential for expression.”

 

Agigento 1 by Ephraim Rubenstein

“Most of these temples have been on the ground at some point,” says Ephraim Rubenstein, “either through sheer entropy or through a cataclysmic event like an earthquake, and then they were rebuilt. So, at any given moment, the stones are moving, ever so slightly. It is this dynamic quality that I have tried to highlight in Agrigento I (mixed media; 38×50).”

 

Working in Series

Ephraim Rubenstein tends to work in series, whether it’s a cycle of paintings inspired by abandoned buildings in rural Virginia, sunny Italian landscapes, urban cityscapes, or a variety of still lifes, drawings, Vermeer-like interiors, or riverscapes inspired by the poems of Rainer Maria Rilke. He sometimes creates more than on work based on the same composition (see “Variations on a Theme” by Ephraim Rubenstein, below).

“On some level, painting all subjects is the same,” says Ephraim Rubenstein. “We do not paint with cloth or flesh or trees or stone; we paint with shapes of colored paint on a flat surface, and if we get it right, it will look like a piece of drapery or a figure or a landscape or a building. I am mostly interested in what I have to say, emotionally. If it takes a figure to say it or a foggy riverbank or a ruined Doric temple, so be it. Jamie Wyeth said that even a bale of hay can be a self-portrait if it is painted with feeling.”

 

VARIATIONS ON A THEME by Ephraim Rubenstein

Cathedral V and VI by Ephraim Rubenstein
Much like a printmaker who inks the plate differently for subsequent proofs, in some instances—for example, in Cathedral V (A) and Cathedral VI (B) (both mixed media, 50×38)—I have taken the same basic drawing and developed it two different ways. Drawing A is of a brighter, clearer day, and I have emphasized the sculptural forms of the gargoyles. In B, I tried to evoke a rainy day by keeping all of the forms softer and wetter, which makes the gargoyles’ function as drain spouts more obvious. The “mapping out” and the first waxing stages were identical for both drawings. But for A, I allowed the ink to spatter on dry paper so that the splashes and drips held their dynamic shapes. Then, for B, I kept the paper wet so that the ink washes dissolved into a more traditional wet-into-wet look. While I was working on these, I went to an art supply store and asked to buy anything that made a black mark. I wanted to find an instrument that could put down the darkest, most velvety black. That material turned out to be a black Nupastel stick.

 

Resisting With Wax, Mixing Media

In his new series, Temples and Cathedrals, Ephraim Rubenstein employs almost a dozen materials to construct dramatic mixed-media portraits of the remnants of lost empires and majestic feats of architecture. “The emotional appeal of the subject matter dictates the medium,” says Rubenstein. The wax-resist technique allows him to unite the classical subject material with the abstract and uncontrollable properties of the medium, resulting in a dynamic chiaroscuro rendering that invests the monumental structures with movement and depth.

Wet and dry techniques collaborate in the creation of multilayered, large-scale works that tread the boundary between drawing and painting. Beginning with sheets of Lenox 100 paper (similar to paper used for printmaking), Ephraim Rubenstein builds up layers composed of graphite, wax, ink, vine charcoal, compressed charcoal, Alphacolor Char-Kole, black Conté crayon, black Nupastel and black pastel that produce a tactile, velvety surface.

 

The great European cathedrals were built over a period of 500 years. “Over that time,” explains Rubenstein, “the relationship between the size of the windows and the walls changed considerably. The cathedral in Cathedral VII (mixed media, 38x50) is particularly massive and fortresslike, and its gargoyles are very old, looking more like ancient animal figures than what we think of as gargoyles."

The great European cathedrals were built over a period of 500 years. “Over that time,” explains Ephraim Rubenstein, “the relationship between the size of the windows and the walls changed considerably. The cathedral in Cathedral VII (mixed media, 38×50) is particularly massive and fortresslike, and its gargoyles are very old, looking more like ancient animal figures than what we think of as gargoyles.”

 

The wax-resist approach plays areas of light, where the paper is glazed with wax, against a wide range of darker tonal spaces. “I am not sure I would have been able to master the wax-resist technique without my experience in printmaking,” says Rubenstein. ”Working up an intaglio plate taught me to think in specific stages, to plan ahead and not to move on until I have done what I need to do at each stage.”

Ephraim Rubenstein’s Complex Approach

Because the drawings are built up in as many as eight to 10 discrete stages, wax-resist is a method that cannot be done alla prima. Ephraim Rubenstein switches between his easel and the floor, where he lays the paper to do the washes (see “My Studio Setup” by Ephraim Rubenstein, below). Some drawings can be finished in a day; others take many weeks.

The complexity of this approach (and the unwieldy size of the paper) requires that the drawings be completed in the studio rather than on location, and he relies on reference photographs, such as those, which he took by the hundreds, of the temples at Paestum and Pompeii. “If you have spent a lifetime painting in front of your subject, you know what nature looks like, and you learn to use the photograph and to compensate for its deficiencies,” he says. “If you have not, you become a slave to the photo and you get into trouble.”

MY STUDIO SETUP by Ephraim Rubenstein

Wax stage of mixed media painting byEphraim Rubenstien
This is the drawing after the first or second wax stage. I do the dry parts of the process—drawing, applying the wax and so forth—with the surface upright on the easel. I do the wet parts—the ink washes—with the board flat on the floor. That way, I do not worry about gravity pulling all of my washes in one direction, and I can move around the image freely, attacking it from all sides.I have everything I may need handy on my taboret because it only takes a couple of seconds for a value to dry and be no longer adjustable. I try to do as much of the work as I can standing up; remember, these are large, expressive drawings that are meant to be read from a distance. I constantly need to back away from them just to see what I’ve done. As you can see, I use clips to hold the drawing to the board; I do not tape the paper down.

 

Perfecting Techniques

It took Ephraim Rubenstein close to 10 years before he felt as if he had achieved some level of mastery of the wax-resist technique. A friend, David Dodge Lewis, a professor of fine arts at Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia, introduced him to the method more than 20 years ago. “Lewis’s work, some of the most powerful and engaging you will ever see, has pushed me to get as much emotional intensity out of my subject matter as possible,” Rubenstein says.

 

Cathedral II by Ephraim Rubenstein

The view in Cathedral II (mixed media, 50×38) has a tremendous amount of architectural information in it—the windows, balconies and all the decorative carvings on the facade. “The richness of the ornamentation was overwhelming,“ says Ephraim Rubenstein, “so the trick was to keep all of the details in balance so as not to lose a sense of the whole. As I worked through the later stages of the drawing, I ended up removing details, not adding them.”

 

He had previously spent another decade making prints—etchings, dry-points and some lithographs—and he also works in oil, pastel, gouache and a variety of mixed media. “All of these processes have taught me something, have added some dimension to my work,” he says. “Many artists I know stopped drawing once they got out of art school. They get preoccupied with painting projects, and drawings do not sell. But I think that is unfortunate. Besides the obvious pleasures of the materials, drawing keeps you honest and keeps your thinking and your hand-eye coordination sharp.”

Many years ago, Ephraim Rubenstein attended an exhibition at the Boston Museum of the works of Camille Pissarro that had a profound effect on the way he thought about color. “It made me realize how brown all of my paintings were and that I had to start to explore warm/cool relationships rather than just value ones.” Though drawings don’t attract as large an audience as paintings do, Rubenstein says he wants to return to the “basic power” of black and white. In this series, he explores the warm and cool nuances of black (and white); while some ostensibly black materials tend toward the warmer brown tones, others veer toward the cooler blues.

Holistic Expression

Ephraim Rubenstein is currently on the faculty of the Art Students League of New York and the National Academy of Design School; he also teaches life drawing to medical students in the Program in Narrative Medicine at Columbia University. The class is part of an innovative program that helps the student “to see the patient in a holistic manner rather than as a sum of separate parts, to humanize medicine,” he says.

 

Paestrum IV by Ephraim Rubenstein

“I sat for hours and watched the sun and shadows move across this wall of pillars for Paestum IV (mixed media, 38×50),” says Ephraim Rubenstein. “The contrast between this ancient building and the fleeting effects of light was so mesmerizing, I hardly knew where to start to capture the subtle differences in tone. This was by far the most complex wax-resist drawing I had ever done.”

 

“During the course of my career, I have gone back and forth between two poles: sometimes drawing and painting in a linear, tighter style with a higher degree of finish, sometimes becoming looser and more painterly, emphasizing the materials and language of painting more expressively,” says Rubenstein. “Even if you have got your technique under your belt at an early age, technique only gets you so far. Struggling with the initial concept for a painting constitutes the greatest challenge for me,” says Rubenstein. “There is always a gap between the depth of your feelings and what comes out on the paper.”

 

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January 2016 Artist of the Month | Susan Brandsema

Congratulations to our January Artist of the Month, Susan Brandsema! Susan was a finalist in The Artist’s Magazine‘s Annual Art Competition! Her painting Almost Home is below. Read more about how the artist how nature, photography and family all inspire her equally!

Babylon, Long Island, NY ~ rsbabylon.fineartstudioonline.com

Almost Home  oil Susan Brandsema

Almost Home (oil, 11×14) by Susan Brandsema

My artistic journey began when I was four-years-old, in a home filled with framed illustrations by my grandfather, Joseph Franke. One morning, upon discovering one of my mom’s paintings, I decided to “help paint” even though I barely reached the easel. With the touch of my fingers in the fresh piles of oil paint, I “painted”, while imagining myself as an artist, marking the beginning of a lifetime passion to create.

Flashes of lightning and the sound of distant thunder, combined with torrential rain pummeling the windshield, inspired Almost Home. The electric sky was luminous and created the misty reflections on the bridge, the roadway and the windshield, which were so interesting to paint.

Most of my work begins with late afternoon plein air sketches and color studies. Nature provides an ever-changing source of inspiration, with pristine untouched woods, snowy mountains, city streets or quiet streams. When working in my studio, I keep a window open and I love to listen to instrumental music. I also enjoy the company, conversation and creativity of friends and family who occasionally paint with me.

My plein air and studio palettes are arranged the same way, starting with titanium white, then adding both cool and warm yellows (cadmium lemon and cadmium yellow deep), reds (alizarin crimson and cadmium red), greens (viridian and sap green) and blues (cobalt blue dark and ultramarine).

A small plein air painting or study can be finished in just one day. Sometimes, if the light and weather conditions are similar, I will continue a plein air painting for several days at the same location. According to the size and detail of the painting, I will then take it into my studio and continue to work, letting each layer dry before adding to the next.

The difficulty faced with Almost Home was that it was primarily painted from my photograph. After painting the bridge perspective, the roadway and the vehicles, the challenge was painting the raindrops on the windshield. This was accomplished by spraying droplets of water onto a pane of glass and painting the drops from this observation, into the dry painting.

My future plans are to continue painting and drawing every day—in the studio and plein air—and to seek the inspiration provided by nature that brings energizing and endless possibilities for a new canvas.

Painting in nature inspires me to observe the amazing minute-by-minute changes in light, weather conditions, seasons and temperature. My goal with each painting is to choose a focal point, then use color and paint strokes that convey the light, charm and emotions unique to just one moment in time.

I am thankful that my husband, family and friends are supportive of my art career. Many of my plein air studies and paintings are painted at the 80-acre home and property of one of my relatives, and I am grateful that they welcome me to spend days at a time painting there.

The post January 2016 Artist of the Month | Susan Brandsema appeared first on Artist's Network.

Draw a Compelling Still Life | Basic Drawing Techniques

Editor’s Note: There’s no better time than now to perfect your drawing skills. Begin with this still life drawing lesson from Steven Levin and The Artist’s Magazine. Then, order your 2016 Drawing-A-Day Collection from North Light Shop–it includes all of the following and everything you need to improve your art:

  • You Can Draw! Simple Techniques for Realistic Drawing (book)
  • Top 10 Art Techniques: Pencil Drawing (DVD)
  • Drawing 365: Tips and Techniques to Build Your Confidence and Skills (eBook)
  • Drawing magazine’s 2015 Annual CD
  • Drawing pad with 24 8×10 sheets
  • Primo charcoal pencil set

Also, The Artist’s Magazine’s Annual Art Competition is open for entries, and the deadline is April 1. Bookmark this link so that you can enter your best drawings and/or paintings for your chance to win publication and up to $2,500. ~Cherie

Draw a Compelling Still Life | Basic Drawing Techniques

Master basic drawing techniques and tips for drawing in charcoal, and you can render an eye-catching still life drawing step by step.

By Steven J. Levin

In the June 2013 issue of The Artist’s Magazine, Steven J. Levin explains his techniques for drawing a softer-focus still life arrangement in charcoal. This is a portion of another article from the earlier July/August 2011 issue of The Artist’s Magazine.

Basic drawing techniques | Steven Levin, ArtistsNetwork.com

After carefully arranging my complex setup of wooden objects, I used basic drawing techniques that I explain below, step by step, to complete “Family Portrait Drawing” (charcoal, 19×25). Pin this drawing lesson!

Start with an Idea

Arranging a still life is largely a matter of experimentation and observation, but the first step is to decide on a concept. I often like to stick with a single, somewhat narrowly defined concept in a still life—rather than a multitude of different objects—as this gives immediate coherence and unity to the design.

For the step-by-step still life drawing chronicled in this article, I settled on a very simple concept: an arrangement of different pieces of wood in varying colors and shapes. The challenge was to find a way to make it interesting. With a trial-and-error approach, I move objects around, discovering interesting relationships and effects and thereby slowly enhance and refine the composition.

The Drawing

After I have my still life setup finalized, I begin the drawing. At this point, keeping in mind that a few simple ideas will go a long way toward a satisfying result, I reduce objects to simple forms and shapes. Because nature is complex, I begin with basic shapes and tones and slowly refine them as I go. Trying not to get ahead of myself, I work to make each step what it should be. I don’t let myself get too eager to make the drawing look three-dimensional—I have to trust that the subsequent steps will get me there.

Basic drawing techniques | Steven Levin, ArtistsNetwork.com

Taking measurements for still life drawing in charcoal

1. Take Measurements

First I placed the drawing board directly alongside the still life and set a vantage point roughly 8 to 10 feet away from the setup. Using the vine charcoal and a string or ruler, I took some basic measurements: top of the frame, top and bottom of the Pinocchio doll, and so on. Walking back and forth from my vantage point to the drawing, I made these indications on my paper.

Basic drawing techniques | Steven Levin, ArtistsNetwork.com

Blocking in the forms for still life drawing

2. Block In Forms

Once I had some basic measurements, I began blocking in all the basic forms of the design, checking them with a ruler or string from my vantage point and erasing with the chamois rag when needed. Then I refined the lines as I kept moving fairly quickly around the drawing, progressing to the same level in each area.

Basic drawing techniques | Steven Levin, ArtistsNetwork.com

Indicating shadows and beginning basic toning step by step

3. Delineate Shadow Edges; Lay In Tone

Here I blocked in the main shadows and began putting in some basic tone with lines at roughly a 45-degree angle. Also I began to lay in some dark halftones.

< Free Download! Click here for 7 Mini-Demos: Step-by-Step Drawing for Beginners >

Basic drawing techniques | Steven Levin, ArtistsNetwork.com

Modeling the form with basic drawing techniques

4. Model the Form

This step always takes me by far the longest—modeling the form, creating smooth transitions and even tones. At this point I began using General Pencil’s charcoal pencil to get the deepest blacks. The tone started out very black, but I gradually lightened it with repeated application of the kneaded eraser.

Basic drawing techniques | Steven Levin, ArtistsNetwork.com

Adding finishing touches to the still life arrangement

5. Refine and Add Detail

I usually concentrate on one small area at a time and model it to its finish, refining tones and adding incidental detail while taking care to compare values, one to another, to judge their relative tones. Adding the wood grain and other incidental details definitely contributes to the finished look of the drawing. I used the vine charcoal for light halftones, charcoal pencil for darks, and quite a bit of kneaded eraser to work the charcoal in. Finally, with a few touches of the white chalk in just the very brightest areas, I completed the drawing.

Basic drawing techniques | Steven Levin, ArtistsNetwork.com

Here’s the painting “Family Portrait Painting” (oil, 16×20) that Steven J. Levin created from the same still life setup.

Levin’s Charcoal Drawing Tips

  • Remember to use a sanding block to keep the charcoal sharp! A dull point takes as much charcoal off the page as it puts on; it acts as an eraser.
  • Charcoal can be a beautiful medium, but it takes time to achieve a real solidity of form by working the charcoal evenly into the fibers of the paper. Remember, the flatter the tones and the smoother the transitions, the greater the illusion of form. I usually roll the charcoal in my fingers to a point, rub out a bit of charcoal, then roll a new point and repeat. It takes a bit of effort and time to get an even tone, but it’s worth it.
  • Be sure to hold off on the incidental details. Suggesting the grain of the wood, for instance, is something that should be done later in the drawing. Getting the proper value relationships and achieving good flat tones will go much further toward producing an effect of three-dimensionality.

Steven J. Levin paints both figurative art and still life, producing work for a one-man show each year. He trained for five years at the Atelier Le Sueur in Excelsior, Minnesota, and continued there seven more years as an instructor. Learn more on his website: www.stevenjlevin.com.

 

The post Draw a Compelling Still Life | Basic Drawing Techniques appeared first on Artist's Network.

Incite 4 Art Competition Winners!

incite 4 logo_rectangle
North Light Books is pleased to announce the winning artists and artwork selected to be featured in Incite 4: The Best of Mixed Media! We look forward to learning more about the stories behind each artwork.
Winners

Listed alphabetically by artist’s last name. Winners have been notified by email; please email info@artistsnetwork.com if you see your name but have not received an email.

First name     Last name        Artwork

Alayne           Abrahams        Wishing on a Star

Lee                Alban               Dreams Are Wiser Than Men

Mark              Allen                Fairy Tale Castle

Melanie         Anderson         Eat, Sleep, Play, Repeat

Melanie         Anderson         Yin and Yang

Nancy           Anderson          Ever Mindful

Nancy           Anderson           Inner Eye

Nancy           Anderson            Within Ourself

Gintare         Bandinskaite        Miss Universe

David            Barclay                Cello I

Marybeth      Barrett                 Pumpkin Patch

Chelsey        Becker                Gold Lining: Myself and Jared

Carolyn         Berry                   Port-A-Cath

Gaye             Boltong                Changing Colours

Kathy            Cameron              Childhood Voyages

Orin              Carpenter             Inspiration

Barb              Carr                     Titanium Buff

Christine       Cetrulo                Mother Earth: Her Evolving Face

Jim                Check                Moonlight aspens

Anannya       Chowdhury         Cheery Festive

Kathy            Constantine        City of My Dreams

Kathy            Constantine         The Reading Room

Lisa L.                Cyr                Juliette’s Song

Lois                DeCastro            Bloom

Lois                DeCastro            RainToday

Gail                Delger                Fish House

Gail                Delger                The Bird Whisperer

Gabriela         Domville            Growing Pains

Gabriela         Domville             Planting

Stephanie       Estrin                Pieces of You

Stephanie       Estrin                The Heart Knows

Janice             Evans                Meditation on a Woman’s Life

Wendy             Fee                   Currents

Kathy              Ferguson           Hamsa

Joyce              Gabiou              August Heat

Sebrina           Gao                   The Returned

Jenny              Germann           Boothbay at Dusk

Jenny              Germann           From the Water

Jean                Griffin                As They Float Away

Sue                  Grilli                  In Hopes of Spring

Mel                   Grunau             Pieces of pieces

Monte               Hallgarth           San Diego Roadster

Joanna              Heller               Atmospheric #6 Lime lake

Stacey               Hogue              Sailing For Home

Cheryl               Holz                   Meditation Mantra: Monarch

Terry                Honstead             Prayer For All

Terry                Honstead             Stand Up And Shine

Terry                Honstead             The Elephant Watches

Jeanette           House                  She Was Such a Deer

Michele            Jackson                Friendship

Peggy              Jackson                Earth Angel

Emanda          Johnson                You are Amazing!i (Quilted QR Code)

Paula               Jones                    Angel of Many Colors

Paula               Jones                    We are all in this together

Therese Lydia   Joseph                IN TOUCH

Bev                Jozwiak                Little Red in Pink

Bev                Jozwiak                The Traffic Cop

Amanda           Judd                    Heart

Jessica             Kovan                The Creative Life

Karishma          Lachhwani        A New Home

Randy                Lagana            The Next Phase

Chris                  Lathrop             Sheep Paddock

Suzanne            LeBeau              Poppy Field

Laura                Lein-Svencner     Cradled in Love

Laura                Lein-Svencner      Embrace the White

Deborah            Lenny                    Not My Fuchsia

Nadiya              Littlewarrior            Hummingbird’s Ladder

Jan                    Lucking                After Midnight We Are Gonna Let It All Hang Out

Jan                    Lucking                Time Alone Will Tell the Story

Sandra              MacDiarmid          Broken Circles

Rick                   Madore                 Imprisoned 3

Dawna               Magliacano           Hungry Red Bear

Dawna               Magliacano           Room Between Waters

Dawna               Magliacano            The Quest

Dawna               Magliacano            Up All Night

Denise Cormier  Mahoney              Awaken

Denise Cormier   Mahoney              Quest

Denise Cormier    Mahoney             Weaving & Harvesting Beauty

Yael                       Maimon                Quick Nap

Yael                       Maimon                Two Orange Cats #3

Ryota                    Matsumoto            Stretched into Infinite Vapor of Spectral Resonance

Ryota                    Matsumoto            Those Who Affirm the Spontaneity of Every Event

Angela                Matuschka                Cats-dala

Angela                Matuschka                Flourishing

Kirstin                McCulloch                Spring on a Cold Winters Day

Raven Skye       McDonough             Urban Meditation

Daarlene Olivia   McElroy                In the Company of Crows

Daarlene Olivia    McElroy                Playing on Key

Denise                 McGill                    Anika

Laly                      Mille                      Flow

Tiffany                Miller Russell         Morning Stretch

Margaret                Minardi                Analyzing

Margaret                Minardi                Bob Our Custodian

Alan                Mirkovich                Energy and The Entrance to Meditation

Sharon                Mirtaheri                Slowly Sifting Up From The Pool Of Intent 2

Vickie                Nelson                Forewarning

Cathy                Nichols                Flow

Margaret                Nisbet                A Wasp and a Rose

Margaret                Nisbet                The Rose and the Dragonfly

Karen                OBrien                Welcome

Annie                O’Brien Gonzales                Patio Table

Annie                O’Brien Gonzales                Tulipmania #3

Jodi                Ohl                The Cul De Chick

Eni                Oken                ZenGems

Barbara                Olsen                A Fragmented Life

Barbara                Olsen                Sedimentary Life

Najia                Omer                Watch Them Roll

Renee                Pasquale                Maiden at Sea

Sandrine                Pelissier                Discovery Walk

Sandrine                Pelissier                Fir

Sandrine                Pelissier                In Oslo

Sandrine                Pelissier                Life Patterns 7

Novita                Permatasari                Cosmos

Kristin                Peterson                Layered Pear

Jane                Philips                Reclamation

Katherine                Pippin Pauley                Season of the Witch

Katherine                Pippin Pauley                The State of the Union

Gail                Postal                Cynthia

Suzy ‘Pal’                Powell                RV Park

Suzy ‘Pal’                Powell                The Caravan

Tom                Powell                Gloriana

Tom                Powell                Made Flesh

Toni                Pullen                Empress

Ella                Reeves-Bailen                Always She Thinks of Him

Ella                Reeves-Bailen                In the Silence

Ella                Reeves-Bailen                Untamed Hearts

Kay                Reinke                Beneath

Jenifer                Renzel                L’fant

Jenifer                Renzel                The Triad

Tricia                Reust                Spirit’s Night

Elizabeth                Rudinica                Mermaid

Tonja                Sell                Coveting Wings

Tonja                Sell                The Audition

Cynthia                Shaffer                Flora and Fauna

Peggy                Shimko                Godai Hitotsu

Donna                Shiver                Estefania – Sense of Place, Common Threads Series

Trudi                Sissons                Journey

Carolyn Owen                Sommer                Of Course

Ryan                Spahr                Proliferation

Cindy                Stapleton                Corey’s Silence

Carol                Staub                Numerology 3

Robert                Stockton                Evidence of Things Not Seen

Deanna                Strachan                Friends

Kelley                Sullivan                Sojourn

Kelley                Sullivan                Those Among Us

Deborah                Swan-McDonald                Butterfly Nebula

Michelle                Trahan Carson                Prayer of the Flowers

Michelle                Trahan Carson                Social Evenings

Sheri                Trepina                Plum Burdock

Alessandra                Ubezio                Laces – Catch of the day

Devon                Urquhart                My Tooth Hurts

Joyce                van der Lely                Beautiful by Scars

Maike                van Wijk                Burgundy Swirl Pendant

Myrna                Wacknov                Ode to Son

Mo                Wassell                Illusory

Lynette                Waters-Whitesell                Seek Asylum

Tori                Weyers                Summer Silence

Dionne                White                Pawleys Island SC Watercolor/Encaustic Art Series

Angelique                Wight                Koi Meeting II

Barbara                Xiong                Self-Portrait

Laura                Yager                Pink Pachyderm

Laura                Yager                Pumpkin, the Party Crasher

Wei                Yan                Late Autumn

If you can’t wait for Incite 4, check out Incite 3: The Art of Storytelling and Incite 2: Color Passions!

 

The post Incite 4 Art Competition Winners! appeared first on Artist's Network.

5 Art Composition Tips: How to Simplify a Busy Painting

Editor’s Note: Join Johannes for a free 90-minute painting demo on January 6, 2016 at 1:00 pm EST. For more info: http://improvemypaintings.com

“Simplify.” We hear this all the time. This is easier said than done. We artists are always concerned that if we leave out too much, the painting doesn’t have enough visual information. If we put too much in, then we give the viewer a mental overload. Think of your viewer’s brain as if it’s a document scanner. When you clutter the painting, his brain will need to process all the pixels, leaving little room for him to daydream. I believe the term “daydream” is an excellent way to convey what is expected by you, the artist, to stimulate your viewer’s participation with his imagination.

Art composition tips with Johannes Vloothuis | ArtistsNetwork.com

The frozen stream ushers you into the painting. Notice how barren the foreground is and how all the goodies are packed in the middle ground. (Pin this!)

The idea is to create a metaphor of a scene and allow the viewer to add her own experience. The worst compliment I can get for a painting is when someone asks if it’s a photograph. On the other hand, the best compliment I can get is when someone says something like, “I see myself sitting on that dock looking into that sunset, having a cool drink with my grandchild next to me.” If you can pretend you’re a children’s movie animator, all the better. Children don’t need detail to enjoy a cartoon because they’re filling in all the left out information with their vivid imagination.

Here are some recommendations to help you simplify your art composition. Take this as good news: You don’t have to work so hard to end up with a winning painting.

5 Art Composition Pointers

1. Leave the very bottom of your foreground alone and just use it to draw in the viewer. This is the most common area to originate a visual path. On the other hand, feel free to add detail to the middle ground. This is the area where the viewer will normally be looking with his head straight. The background should just be a support and mostly can be done with soft edges.

2. Respect the periphery of the eye by subduing anything that can be distracting at the left and right borders. The human eye cannot see detail unless it’s staring directly at a certain point.

Art composition tips with Johannes Vloothuis | ArtistsNetwork.com

There are no hard edges, strong value contrasts or saturated colors at the two sides of this painting.

3. A painting is never finished, but you can sure stop working on it in time. In your final assessment, ask yourself what you can remove rather than add. If the object you depict doesn’t serve a compositional justification, and it’s present for the sheer fact of documenting, out it goes. Consider cropping to zero in.

4. A golden rule of thumb is that the smaller the painting, the more poetic it should be. As the painting gets larger, you can add more and more detail in proportion to the size. If you have a tendency to depict lots of detail, consider working on an 18×24-inch or larger painting. The reason for this is that the eye can’t take in all the visual data in one glimpse, as it does with a smaller painting such as a 9×12. Because a viewer can only see one section at a time, a good portion of visual information is lost in the periphery. If you naturally tend to simplify, then work on small formats because that same painting can look oversimplified if it’s large.

Art composition tips with Johannes Vloothuis | ArtistsNetwork.com

I felt the background was too busy and wasn’t receding enough (left). To fix it, I scumbled a light blue over the background to produce fog (right). Definitely an improvement!

5. One neat way to simplify a painting is by scumbling to produce fog or use a toothbrush (flicking the paint with the bristles) to make it snow.

“Landscape Painting Essentials” and other video courses are available at NorthLightShop.com. North Light has also just released a new eBook written by Johannes titled Landscape Painting Essentials. Join his online art classes at http://improvemypaintings.com.

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A Winter Landscape Painting of Hope

It’s Christmas Eve, and I want to share with you a peaceful, beautiful winter landscape painting. A gesture of peace and calm, if you will. When I came across the painting you see below by Christine Misencik Bunn, I thought, Perfect! It’s peaceful, it’s calm, and it’s a beautiful winter landscape! And then I read the artist’s description, of how this is a symbolic painting of her daughter. Everything changed.

It just goes to remind us how powerful art is–the conceiving and creating of it, and the other side, of viewing it. As you’ll see below, the painting is a hopeful piece, which is why I still feel strongly about sharing it with you today. We all have our difficult times, we all have art, and we all can have hope.

Landscape paintings | Christine Misencik Bunn, ArtistsNetwork.com

Last Mile . . . Almost Home (transparent watercolor on 140-lb. cold-pressed Arches, 15×29) by Christine Misencik Bunn (Pin this)

“This shows a cancer survivor, my daughter, bravely navigating her pathway toward healing,” says Christine. “I was inspired to create the cold, snowy journey of struggle, fear, desperation and finally a positive outlook as the end of the trek drew near. The texture of snow was most important. The changing light, the shadows, the footsteps, the tire tracks and even the pathway were imperative.”

As with each painting featured in the Splash series, the artist goes on to also discuss her painting technique. “My predominant color was ultramarine blue,” she says. “To produce the many textures, I employed washes, glazes, wet-into-wet and an old toothbrush to soften some of the edges. With my own sense of helplessness, I was trying to understand my daughter’s hopeful ‘last mile.’”

I have the very best wishes for Christine and her daughter, as well as for each of you reading this today. I hope that your season is filled with love, art, and hope.

Sincerely,
Cherie
Cherie Haas, online editor
**Free download: Landscape Art: 4 Lessons on Creating Luminous Landscape Paintings
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Sheldon Tapley and the Not-So-Still Life

This article on Sheldon Tapley by Daniel Brown first appeared in the May 2012 issue of The Artist’s Magazine.

Bacchanal by Sheldon Tapley

The Roman god of wine and revelry informs Bacchanal (oil on aluminum, 6×11), in which Sheldon Tapley places a book cover that shows a detail from Titian’s Bacchanal of the Andrians. The general air of abundance celebrates life and its pleasures .

Still life is the most problematic—and most abstract—of genres, as the paintings seem to lack the grandeur associated with landscapes or with figures that can assume allegorical or mythological-religious resonance. Because the objects depicted are taken from ordinary life, however, they intimately speak to our daily existence and to our interior lives. Sheldon Tapley revitalizes, indeed, electrifies the still life genre by combining aspects of contemporary life with painterly constructs derived from the history of Western art. His formalist concerns join with his tendency toward metaphor, and his pleasure in painting ordinary objects reminds us of nature’s bounties and art’s artifices concurrently.

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Sheldon Tapley also frequently utilizes figurative elements—usually copies of famous images from Baroque art—a sly way of putting figures and landscapes in the background, while the still life elements remain at the fore. Such a design is an amusing reversal of the norm in Western painting, for Tapley insists upon the primary importance, indeed the pre-eminence, of the still life. While the artist frequently alludes to Baroque masters and just as frequently incorporates their work into his own, he’s not an appropriator; his many influences and references weave through the work but do not dominate it.

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A Web of Influence

Sheldon Tapley selects which objects to include, then designs the composition and lays in color; in the process, ideas and essences emerge in an erudite yet playful manner. When he describes the “sensuality, abundance and force” that he gets from the Flemish master Peter Paul Rubens, he’s describing Rubens’s essential influence on his own work. “The power and sensuality of Rubens’s images have always attracted me. I also love French painting,” says Tapley. “Some of the masters I’ve returned to again and again include Chardin, Fantin-Latour, Cézanne and Matisse. Richard Deibenkorn admired Matisse, and I admire both of them and treasure that linkage.” Sheldon Tapley’s still lifes are not only a virtuosic study of the history of art, but more palpably a demonstration of texture, dimensionality, spatial relations, perspectival shifts, color relationships and, most significantly, the hallmarks of the Baroque sensibility: theatricality and sensuality.

Still Life With Flowers by Sheldon Tapley

Still Life With Flowers (oil on aluminum, 36×48) shows a theatrical abundance that’s counterbalanced by coiled rope, and, on the top right, with a drawing of “enso,” a Japanese word meaning “circle.” In Zen Buddhism, “enso” suggests a state of mind in which the body is free to let the spirit create.

 

Sheldon Tapley’s Unusual Surface

Although Tapley’s mother is an artist, now retired, who worked in watercolor and taught private lessons in their home, Sheldon Tapley avoided art in his youth. Taking a course with Bobbie McKibbin during his first year at Grinnell College in Iowa, Tapley discovered that he loved to draw (he continues to work with charcoal and pastel). He learned, too, the “amazing and forgiving” properties of oil paint. “I particularly like the way an oily film of wet paint responds throughout a day of work,” he says, “so that it sometimes seems to be alive.”

Spiral by Sheldon Tapley

The swirling surface of Spiral (oil on aluminum, 21½x20) shows the Baroque love of circularity (the pitcher, the plate, the lemon and its peel) and movement (the repetitions and folds of the two fabrics), along with a disorienting bird’s-eye view. Another disorienting Baroque motif is the extension of the blue plate and knife beyond the surface of the table.

Sheldon Tapley paints not on canvas but on aluminum panels, which he cuts and prepares by coating the panel with an oil primer. Once the primer is dry, he sands the surface until it’s smooth. As the painting progresses, he structures each work session according to these steps: (1) He sands away or scrapes off anything he doesn’t like (as long as the surface is dry). “For sanding I use wet-dry 600-grit sandpaper, and I work very gently,” he says. Scraping (much less common) is done with a tiny palette knife or fresh single-edge razor blade. (2) He applies retouch varnish to the area he’s going to work on. “The retouch varnish dries quickly and restores luster, allowing me to see the painting better.” (3) Next he applies glazes to any areas that need it (4) and works with direct application of paint, which can go into the wet glazes if necessary; (5) finishes an area; moves on to the next area; (6) and then repeats the last four steps until satisfied with the painting.

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To be satisfied with the painting—aye, there’s the rub. “It’s always difficult to find the right balance between memorable description and a lively surface,” says Sheldon Tapley . “Some painters label that a dichotomy between ‘tight’ and ‘loose,’ but I find those words too loaded and inadequate. Too much discipline, and the painting will look well wrought but dull; too much freedom, and it will look lively but lack substance. The entire process is challenging,” he concludes, “and I’ve learned to take nothing for granted. The most difficult decisions in the process, however, come at the beginning, before the panel is even primed, when I’m setting up the subject or even just thinking of the subject: What will I paint? What do I want this picture to be? No amount of skillful painting later in the process will save an image if I don’t have confidence in it from the beginning.”

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The Theatre of Excess

It’s the answers to those questions—“What will I paint? What do I want this picture to be?”—that make Sheldon Tapley’s work original. By regularly including images of female nudes from paintings of the past within his still lifes, Tapley intensifies and luxuriates in the sensuality of the objects he’s depicting, while never losing sight of the fact that all their origins are in the history of art. We relish the Baroque sense of movement he adapts—take a look at the swirling drapes, the bird’s-eye focus, the circular plethora that’s almost dizzying in Spiral (above). Tapley makes these qualities of abundance celebratory. Unlike many of his contemporaries who extol austerity, Sheldon Tapley loves to “pack” his compositions—reminding us that he matured under the aegis of Abstract Expressionism. Working in the realist idiom challenged him to flatten the pictorial space to make an object seem “present,” a tactic he learned from looking at Cézanne.

Harvest Table by Sheldon Tapley

How does Tapley handle such a complex subject as Harvest Table (pastel on paper, 38×32)? “My initial underdrawing is in soft vine charcoal, rubbed down with a paper towel so the black pigment won’t mix with the next layer. The first layers of color are also rubbed down to keep the surface receptive to more layers of chalk.”

Sheldon Tapley designs his works as pieces of stagecraft. There’s a flagrant exhibitionism afoot, as well as an exuberant physicality—a veneration of life’s cornucopia of foods, fabrics and fleshes. When he weaves aspects of Matisse and Cézanne into the typologies of the Baroque masters, we know we’re in the presence of an artist who veers dangerously—tilting picture planes towards us, as if the players/objects were walking off the stage into the audience.

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Sheldon Tapley Explores Ways of Approaching the Still Life

In effect, Sheldon Tapley’s work is a case study in how to reinvigorate the still life tradition. His paintings range from the relatively less complex (focusing on single objects) to the nearly all-over compositions reminiscent of the Abstract Expressionists. Radically angled perspectives are common. The tilting forward of the picture plane, which reached its apogee in Cézanne, is pushed farther (towards the viewer and away from realistic space) in a painting as relatively simple as Bacchanal (at top) and as complicated as Waterfall (below). The beautifully designed Bacchanal utilizes the fireplace front in his studio as a kind of framed stage set for those mundane objects so fraught with meaning and emotion when de-contextualized from their ordinary usage. In this variation on le tableau vivant, Tapley chooses a Matissean piece of fabric reminiscent of Persian art as the backdrop, a play on painters’ drop cloths from the mundane/profane world, the colors of which are picked up by each object he lovingly selects and depicts: an apple, a plate with an overlaid knife (doubling the spatial complexities), a carpenter’s claw, a translucent blue pitcher (allowing for further investigation of the play of light), and three types of flowers. An art book with two nudes on its cover complete the scene. The inclusion of tools in so many of his paintings celebrates their shapes and colors as they remind us of the artist’s hand and touch (the work of art).

 

Waterfall by Sheldon Tapley

When working in pastel, Tapley never uses erasers “since they roughen the surface of the paper and leave visible scars.” Instead he rubs with a paper towel or carefully scrapes the surface with a razor blade, which sufficiently diminishes the pastel on the surface to allow for revisions as in the intricate, ornate Waterfall (pastel on paper, 66×45).

In the exquisite, explosive Waterfall (above), a pastel on paper, Sheldon Tapley designs his composition another way, according to an arithmetic arrangement. Four potentially separate still lifes are combined in one painting. A pile of rocks suggests the dialectic between soft/hard, smooth/textural that provides a yin/yang of delight. A vase of flowers inhabits the center, and a basket of contorted gourds dominates the middle ground; a picture of a cascading waterfall is tacked on the wall; an Etch-A-Sketch, as if to comment on that explosion, appears beneath it on the left. On the other side of the waterfall is a hand-held light. The foreground includes tools dramatizing the craft of both art and construction: a sledge hammer and ropes that create diagonal spatial relationships and dimensionality; a ripe melon, a bowl of lemons and eggs, and a vaguely anthropomorphic lobster. Finally, a large saw, angled and arched like a scythe in the foreground, reminds us that within the luxuriousness of these erotically charged symbols of life and sensuality lurks the specter of decay, a reminder of death’s knock upon Eros’s door.

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Eroticism indeed is one of Sheldon Tapley’s primary themes as is its cousin, sexuality. The instinct toward love/sex (Eros) as it’s commingled with death (Thanatos) and is interpreted as and via still life (la nature morte) may be his underlying concern; the sexual climax, we remember, is called “la petite morte.”

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From all this it’s clear that Sheldon Tapley is a theatrical painter. Tapley’s is a kind of vivid hyperrealism, and the very brightness of his colors gives his fabricated objects lifelike qualities, almost in the way a stage director manipulates lighting and the colors of costumes. After years of looking—absorbing ideas and technical lessons from other masters—Tapley has moved into the fertile realms of his own vast imaginative powers.

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LEARN MORE

See a step-by-step demonstration by Sheldon Tapley; read about his studio lighting. For links to these articles plus articles about other artists featured in The Artist’s Magazine, go to the Featured Artists page.


MORE RESOURCES FOR ARTISTS

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Watercolor Artist 2015 CD | The Best of the Year’s Watercolor Painting

Just in time for the gift-giving season! Our CD archive of all six 2015 issues of Watercolor Artist is the perfect tool to keep the creative fires burning throughout the new year—and then some! The searchable index is like having your own personal assistant to track down that article with the excellent Ron Stocke plein air demo (June issue) or find out what kind of watercolor painting surface Carrie Waller uses (February issue). You can also opt for PDF downloads of the entire year instead of a disc.

 

watercolor artist 2015 issues | watercolor painting

 

Six issues on one CD not enough for you? Check out our newly-released 5-year (2011-2015) archive!

Whatever you give or receive this season, we wish you happy watercolor painting, continued inspiration, and peace.

 


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Jamie’s Critique Corner: At the Diner

Pastel artist Karen Howard hasn’t had an official art critique in many years. Thanks, Karen, for putting yourself out there and agreeing to have your work critiqued! Opening yourself up to comments can be a little intimidating, but it is so important take small risks if you’re going to improve your art. Like many artists, Karen has had a lifelong love of art, but has had more time in recent years to concentrate on her painting.

Art Critique of “At The Diner”

Art critique of "At the Diner" by Karen Howard | ArtistsNetwork.com

At the Diner (pastel, 14×18) by Karen Howard (www.zhibit.org/karenhoward)

Karen requested that we talk about composition and focal point and, after looking at a few of her paintings, I thought At The Diner was a great subject for an art critique. The strong contrasts within the painting create drama and the reflections throughout the painting engage the eye. Karen works from photographs and she has no qualms about getting the set up she wants, often taking hours or days to create the best arrangement.

The design of this painting provides movement, creating a triangular route for the eye. The ketchup bottle is obviously the dominant element (it’s red, after all), but the eye travels down to the reflections in the knife and fork, and then up the straw to the lime floating in the glass of water before returning to the ketchup bottle. Along the way, the eye encounters some lovely elements, like the subtle reflections on the table top, the cloudy water in the glass, the reflections in the chrome condiment caddy and the highlights on the ketchup and mustard bottles.

Karen handled these reflections very well, creating a realistic balance between the darks and highlights. One of the keys to creating realistic reflections is to find the shapes, values and colors within the objects you’re painting. It’s useful to stop thinking of the objects (like a glass of water) as objects and start thinking about them as shapes, values and colors. Seeing those parts within the objects and capturing them accurately will help create a convincing painting. Just be careful the shapes are accurately rendered, or your objects will appear unrealistic.

As we talked, it occurred to me that sometimes we can be good at something and not realize it, and that hearing about our strengths can give us confidence to press on and do great work. Karen was interested in how she could create better compositions, but she’s already creating strong, innovative ones. I encouraged her to keep trying different set ups, and to trust her artistic eye when creating her still lifes.

Quick Note: Karen will take photo references of still lifes found in public places and work to find the right composition. It’s always good to get permission to take photos in public, but don’t be shy in asking. Many people are more than happy to accommodate the creative process.


Jamie Markle mixed media artist

Jamie Markle

As group publisher of F+W Media’s fine art community, Jamie Markle oversees the development of fine art magazines, books, videos and websites.

Want to receive a FREE art critique?

Send a link to your website or 6-8 lo-res images to tamedit@fwmedia.com with the subject line “Jamie’s Critique Corner.” If your work is chosen, we’ll be in touch (please do not send follow-up emails). Chosen artists will receive a thank-you gift.

For a more in-depth art critique that includes an overall evaluation of your artwork’s strengths and weaknesses and clear suggestions on how to move forward with your art, visit Artists Network University, where we have more artists on hand to critique your work.

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Break Your Inhibitions and Learn How to Paint: A Proven Method

It’s all fun and games to joke about being a procrastinator, but overthinking some things, such as how to paint a subject, can be a serious roadblock. Sometimes it’s best to just jump in and see what happens when you begin sketching your composition or start putting paint onto the canvas. Craig Nelson, who recently filmed four ArtistsNetwork.tv DVDs on how to paint, explains that painting quickly is the best way to practice–and improve–your art.

“After teaching at two prestigious art schools for the last 26 years, I’ve realized that one avenue of improvement is studies done in short periods of time–quick studies,” Craig says. “Quick studies allow for no overworking or overthinking, but bring basic knowledge to a more intuitive state.”

Painting Tips: Quick Studies | Craig Nelson, ArtistsNetwork.com

Restful (oil, 14×18) by Craig Nelson; completed in 40 minutes (Pin this!)

How to Paint – From Craig Nelson’s 60 Minutes to Better Painting:

By painting quick studies you will:

• Break inhibitions. Painting is often intimidating. The concept of taking a blank surface and creating a finished, pleasing image on it can be overwhelming. It may paralyze the painter and lead to a tentative approach without confidence.

• Deal confidently with mistakes. Whenever doing anything, you will make mistakes. In sports, music or any other endeavor, you must go through some growing pains in order to become proficient or to excel. To be afraid of making mistakes should not keep you from attempting something. That is how we all learn.

• Learn the differences between line and mass. From our earliest memories we have all drawn with pencil, crayon or pen. Generally, when we draw anything, we start with lines. This, however, is not how we see. We see mass and form; therefore, mass and form is how we must paint. Lines are a shorthand for painting.

• Learn brushwork. The way in which a painter wields his brush is much of the beauty of a painting. It may be energetic, careful, soft or crisp. Brushwork often is like handwriting–very distinctive.

• Understand how to see. You must learn how to see in stages. You must not see the detail first, but must see the larger more basic images before studying the smaller and often more interesting areas. It is important to train your eye to see in the proper order so your subject can be approached as if it were a painting.

• Get started. The evil word “procrastination” is the constant enemy of all painters. That blank canvas and the concept of a finished painting can be a burden. The study, as opposed to a finished painting, can eliminate any burden. It’s stated as a study; to learn, to improve, to try something, not a precious final piece of art! When procrastinating on what to do, how big, etc., do a study. ~Craig

When you order Craig’s Quick Solutions to Better Painting collection (only available at North Light Shop), you’ll receive:
1. Quick Studies: Landscape Painting (DVD)
2. Quick Studies: Figure Painting (DVD)
3. Painting Landscapes Day into Night (DVD)
4. Water Painting Solutions (DVD)
5. 60 Minutes to Better Painting (book)

Scroll down to read Craig’s advice for deciding what to include and what to edit when you’re practicing how to paint with your next quick study.

Wishing you all the best,
Cherie
Cherie Haas, online editor
**Subscribe to the Artists Network newsletter for inspiration, instruction, and ideas, and score a free download > Still Life Painting Techniques and Inspiration

How to Paint: Deciding What Is Important

Painting tips - quick studies | Craig Nelson, ArtistsNetwork.com

Photo reference for Venetian Laundry

by Craig Nelson 

The most important aspect of a quick study is the editing that each artist makes. This requires rapid and confident decision making. You must decide what is important to the subject as well as what is important to you. For example, the accuracy of shape and size may be important to the subject, while the mood and lighting may be important to you.

How important is something within a given setting? In a quick study, if something is not essential to capture the subject, then it can be left out. When painting in this abbreviated style, you must leave out unnecessary details. The best way to approach this is to think of your strokes as rapid indications of shapes, values and colors–not details.     

Painting tips - quick studies | Craig Nelson, ArtistsNetwork.com

Venetian Laundry (oil, 16×12) by Craig Nelson, in 60 minutes

 

Simplify the Scene

The powerful design of sky and architecture is simplified from the photograph. Within the short time frame of the study, enough detail is indicated to give believability to the scene. In the study the perspective is important and relatively accurate while much of the detail is understated or deleted.

The post Break Your Inhibitions and Learn How to Paint: A Proven Method appeared first on Artist's Network.