The lack of posts on my blog must make that pretty obvious. It's wonderful to be free of deadlines and committments, but now I'm back in the studio. I have a one-woman show coming up in a couple of months and will need some larger paintings than I've done for a while. I've started a 24x30" canvas depicting a valley in our neighborhood. I have a small 5x7 canvas I'm working from done at the end of spring, just as the hills were turning golden. I'm taking a little license with it, but not too much. I'd like to document it here for those of you who have been asking painting instruction questions.
1. I tone the canvas - in this case with yellow ochre
2. I divide the canvas into quarters, horizontally and vertically - using those squares as guides to transfer the painting. I used burnt sienna to draw the image.
3. The picture above shows the first drawi-in. I'm not happy with the top of the old oak tree, so changed it to this. This is better. The tree now looks like the canvas hasn't sat on it's head.
4. I lay in the beginnings of the trees, using a black green first - with a brush - to build my other and lighter greens on as I begin to shape the clumps of growth with my palette knife. The tulip canvas is 5x7.
I'll continue Tuesday after my just arriving house guests depart. Have a great weekend - and Happy Father's Day!
"The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes." Marcel Proust
My small Paintings and Sculpture are for sale here via PayPal or by contacting me, fayrene@charter.net and when stated thru eBay. The paintings are on stretched canvas or triple primed canvas boards. They are unframed and shipped via priority mail. I'm truly looking forward to your comments and hope you will subscribe to my "Art To You". See the details opposite. Fayrene
Friday, June 15, 2007
NEWS FROM THE STUDIO- I've been on vacation!
Posted by
Fayrene Parrish
at
5:27 PM
Labels: Daily Painting, Marcel Proust, painting instruction, Palette Knife
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2 comments:
Thanks, Fayrene. This is helpful. Although you make it look much easier than I know it is.
I didn't start as a visual artist, but have been drawing for close to 40 years. Drawing is the foundation of all art. Consistent practice of 'life drawing' the best. The human figure teaches us to see, to learn how to portray dimensionality, hardness, softness, and how to direct the eye. The next important aspect is learning perspective. Once you have these two down you will be more at ease with pencil, palette knife, brush or sculpture tools. Your emotional responses and personality will begin to come through in your art. In those rare times when you're really in the groove, you subject will speak too. Happy art making!
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