Wegkapelle mit Serles

June 8, 2007

Here I began copying from a painting inherited in the family. I’m quite sure about the mountain in Tyrol, and I think I can place the actual view. Artist Josef Meng (1887 – 1974) has used an impasto technique with crests of paint often several millimeters thick. Since I have started following other painting weblogs, the red spot in the middle has reminded me of Qiang Huang‘s otherwise different contemporary art. (oil/canvas, 21 x 21 cm, unfinished)

The poor image quality in the last post has bothered me, and I have now (back from a week of vacation) rescanned both pages while allowing the scanner to choose its setup automatically. It’s a bit better now (ultimately the best mode for sharing notebook sketches is perhaps video), and I realize in any case that I should quickly proceed to Loomis’ sections on lips and eyes, for all these faces look very grumpy indeed :)

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Andrew Loomis

May 18, 2007

Yesterday I came across information on Andrew Loomis and his book Drawing the Head and Hands (1956), obviously a long-time classic but hitherto unknown to me. It for instance contains very enchanting portraits of Eisenhower-era girls in its later sections. Early on Loomis insists that all heads should be constructed from round ball shapes, and while keeping their three-dimensionality constantly in mind. This is a welcome step forward from the grid-based technique I’ve been depending on lately, and so I’ve done two pages worth of exercises. Here is one … (pencil/Moleskine notebook, 13 x 21 cm)

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Hopeless (continued)

May 17, 2007

Despite my original practice goal, today I quickly lost patience with copying the multitude of exact original lines. As a result, I was able to finish this work in a single session, which is again a first for this humble painter.

Here I also gave water-miscible oil paint a first try, and experienced them as convenience colors, no more. Especially the titanium white in my basic set had a gum-like quality, which even made the tube burst and leak when I pressed too hard to release some paint. I will perhaps move back to regular oil colors despite of some health concerns about using turpentine in my small apartment. (water-miscible oil/canvas, 19.5 x 19.5 cm)

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Hopeless

May 10, 2007

In looking ahead at continuing my oil painting experiments, I thought it may be fun to take inspiration from a Roy Lichtenstein painting such as Hopeless (1963) next. Its selection of colors is very simple, and since it itself reproduces comics artwork, a lot depends on how the dark lines are drawn, how their widths are varied, etc. All in all this should give ample opportunity for practicing with a fine brush. I’ve now prepared a precursor sketch (pencil/paper, 17 x 17 cm).

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I made some more progress on the painting and added another shot to the original post below. Hurray, looks as if this may become my first complete proper oil painting ever.

I am an admirer of the Hudson River school of painters, and their complex depiction of light in naturalistic landscape paintings. I first encountered this art when seeing Sanford Robinson Gifford’s A Gorge in the Mountains (1862) at the New York Metropolitan Museum, and I remember staying in front of that painting for quite a while.

Now I don’t know yet what exact techniques Gifford and his colleagues were using, and I’m obviously painting at a much more basic level. But I also recently obtained a copy of The Big Book of Painting Nature in Oil, which I find quite attractive and useful. Among its more than hundred lesson topics is one (“Translating a Tree’s Skeleton at Sunset”) that achieves a somewhat reminiscent impression of the sky with simple means.

So far I took step one, i.e. prepared the background. My sky ended up a bit more red (less transparent and yellow) than the painting in the book (and altogether too expressionistic for Hudson River school principles, I would imagine), but the gradient came out well (better than the image actually shows). I’m quite happy with the result so far, because I have learned a new technique with a fan brush. Having had some droplets of color sprayed on my T-shirt and curtain was also part of that lesson, and reminds me that having a separate room as a studio would be nice. Oh well, more to come …

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step 1: background step 2: some foreground

Etzel

April 22, 2007

I feel good about this recent painting, because it’s the result of me heading outdoors with some real painting equipment for the first time ever. On the sunny Saturday all my favorite spots in the little town of Rapperswil were already mildly crowded, and I did not feel comfortable enough practicing with other company. I finally settled down just a little bit outside at the shore of Lake Zurich with Mount Etzel opposite. (13 x 21 cm, watercolor/paper, 2007)

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This is a relatively simple tile pattern from the Alhambra in Spain. I had fun constructing it with a compass and straight ruler only, i.e. without measuring angles. (pencil/paper, 16 x 16 cm, 2007).

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Post production

April 12, 2007

As an exception from the rule (keep digital post processing to a minimum), I played around with some of the filter effects that the GraphicConverter software provides. I most appreciated two that replace white and shades of gray with other single colors. Command names in the German version are as follows:

  • Filter / Farbanpassung / Weißpunkt anpassen
  • Filter / Farbeffekt / Einfarbig
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