
Thursday, April 30, 2009
View of the City, Alicante Spain

Monday, April 27, 2009
Sunset in Ronda, Spain

The tricky part about sunsets is that the paint dries really slow, because the sun is down and the temperature drops. In this painting, I had to paint the sunset first, let it dry completely, and then put the dark fence and trees on top. It really helped that Granada was about 35C and the air bone dry, causing the paint to still dry fast at sunset. When you are mixing the colours in a sunset scene, remember to tint everything with a deep-red orange tone....even the blues greys and darker tones in this painting are tinted with some salmon-pink to reflect the colour of the sky.
5x7" cold press, 1998
Friday, April 24, 2009
Alumni Hall, University of Western Ontario, Canada

This painting is a good example of how to create luminous shadows. The left side of the tree is in shadow, and so is the brick wall of alumni hall. To make the shadows seem bright, I overlaid some darker highlights to provide contrast. For the tree, I applied some dark brown streaks to look like bark, and for the brick wall I applied outlines of the limestone bricks. Notice that the underlying shadows contain a lot of blue and purple tones. Cereluean blue is very good for putting blue in your shadows, or cobablt blue although this colour is slightly toxic and should not be eaten.
5x7" cold press 2001
Friday, April 17, 2009
Highways, Fort Worth, Texas, USA

Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Stylized image of a Duck

Although small this painting has a lot to it. The blue sky illuminates the ducks form creating light blue highlights. Note some of the techniques I have been describing in the last few blogs: the shrubbery is done with a golden yellow halo of light, the shadow is deep blue and fades into the grass, and the open space in the grass invites the viewers eye into the composition.
2.5x2.5" cold press, 2007
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
All you Can Eat, Dominican Republic

One point that is worth repeating over and over again is that outdoor shadows are filled with blue light from the sky. I have discussed this on other blogs before, and here again is a great example, intensified by the brilliant Caribbean sky. The shadows of the trees are a deep blue-green. In order to create this effect, it was important to minimize the amount of yellow in the shadow. To do this, I first painted the yellow-green lawn, and then put the blue paint in right away, before the yellow dried. In doing so, the shadow gets that deep-blue, and also the edges of the shadow get a chance to bleed a little, making them a little fuzzy on the edges (like a real shadow). What all that dried I put a second coat of a warmer green on top, to make the lawn look natural and not to shockingly bright. Finally, I put on a few dark blue/red highlights near the base of the tree where the shadow is darkest. Notice too, that the side of the tree, and the coconuts are also filled with purple-blue colours, really making the shadows sing.
5x7" cold press paper, 2009
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Reserved, Dominican Republic

Painting a crowded scene like this definitely takes a bit of time, and in this case I chose a slightly larger size paper. Despite all the clutter in this painting I tried to arrange things in a pleasing composition, the umbrellas stretch across the top half of the work while the blue chairs occupy the middle part and the foreground. Also important, is to allow some open visual space in your composition to allow the viewers eyes to have 'access'. In this painting I left a wide section of beach open at the bottom of the painting, and you will notice that there is an unobstructed path that leads to the waterfront and up to the sky. Pay attention to where your eye moves when you look at the painting, and you may find that it prefers to move up and down this unobstructed visual corridor. Controlling where the viewers eye moves it the key to any good composition, the true master of this was Degas, the great French impressionist.
7x11", cold press, 2009
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Lab Book #15: Chameleon Sunset

I really went for a bright colour scheme with this one, aiming for rich rusty-reds and deep candy-yellows, intermixed with tangerine oranges (hence the name of the painting). To get these colours I used some high intensity colour glazing...this is done by laying down a wash of an unmixed colour (right from the tube, not diluted too much to keep it bright), letting it dry, and then overlaying with a thin second wash of neutral gray or green to keep it 'earthy looking'. The second wash can drastically change the appearance of the first wash. For example, the deep purple shadows cast by the character were initially a hot bright-pink, onto which I layered a cool blue to give the final shadow, which is electric and full of life. The main character began as a crimson red, to which I overlayed a thin green (the same combination used extensively throughout the Lab Book 14 mini series). Most of the yellows began as pure aurelian yellow, on which I put greens or browns to make the yellow cool, or warm, respectively.
15x11" cold press 2009
Monday, April 6, 2009
Pina Colada on the Beach, Dominican Republic

Capturing the water was by far the most challenging aspect of the trip (besides the difficulty in getting out of the chair to go to the bar, and the annoying habit of some of the other vacationers to reserve pool-side chairs with their towels). The sea has several distinct phases...near the beach the water is tinted by the cream-coloured sand, and also reflects some of the cool blue sky, creating a puple tone. This fades into a yellow-green with blue highlights, and then becomes a cooler blue closer to the horizon. All over there are purple highlights reflecting from the sky, and bleach-white waves rolling in. I tried to keep it simple by excluding a lot of the waves, and the frothy ripples that come in near the sand, and also not painting a lot of the relfected light from the sky which created difficult highlights. Of all the Dominican paintings this one perhaps captures the sea the best, I used a lot of cobalt blue and cerulean blue, which give that textured effect that simulates ripples and reflections.
5x7" cold press, 2009
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
San Sebastian, Spain

A lot of my paintings depict shrubbery. The importance of a good shrubbery can not be underestimated. If there are any doubts about this fact, one should view Monty Python's Search for the Holy Grail movie and see how shrubberies can become a matter of life and death. But seriously, check out the middle right and you see a shrubbery tucked away behind a stone wall. I use a simple trick to create the golden-halo effect on the shrubs... start by laying down a warm yellow, let it dry just a bit, and then drop in an orangy/green, let that dry a bit and finally put in a cold dark green tinted with a bit of red. For further depth you can put on a few touches of dark purple into the shadow part.
5x7" cold press, 1998
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)