Showing posts with label color study. Show all posts
Showing posts with label color study. Show all posts

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Daily Painting Practice- Seascape color study continued

Continued Color Study:

Next stage:  Adding more color and playing with texture.

 I am not an efficient painter. If production were necessary to my making a living, I would definitely  starve. I have not developed a method to turn out paintings in a regular rhythm.  The best explanation (or excuse) I have is that I rely more on my intuition  than I do confidence and procedure when I paint

 
 Confidence, I know comes with knowledge, and knowledge comes from practice, and practice comes from painting and painting and ...painting.
 But I suspect there is also a part of being productive that deals with being settled. Either you settle on a certain style, subject matter, medium, method, or even size of work. 
 I am, or have been up until now,  more of a gypsy painter. Roving from subject to subject, method to method and style after style, I haven't found a home or settled down. Not exactly a formula for increasing productivity is it?

 Still exploring. This is part of  the production slow down. Even though I started this painting with a thumbnail and a color sketch, I am still exploring the scene. Still creating, arranging, re-arranging objects, light, and color as I paint.
 Work in progress


I am enjoying this intuitive method. But someday this gypsy painter would like to settle down.

 
 

 

Monday, December 31, 2012

Daily Painting Practice- Rough Seas -Manicuring Thumbnail Sketches and Growing Ideas

Thumbnail sketches have not been a common practice with me.

I have always been too eager to jump right into painting relying on my photo reference or even the plein air scene in front of me to generate the composition and ideas. However, recently I have started a new habit that not  only keeps me tuned into my creative side  while I am at work but also helps me formulate concepts that make my work more personal.

 Every year, especially at this time of year, you can find these small checkbook size calendars or daytimers. I discarded the calendar and folded some scrap paper (roughly 5 3/4"x6 1/2") and stapled the center.  Sliding them into the  calendar cover,  I have my own thumbnail sketch book.   The ideas flow out during the day and only take about 60 seconds. Then when I get home, I pick which ones I want to develop further into color sketches, like the thumbnail of the ship.
I have no idea or what a schooner actually looks like other than it has sails. I don't have reference for  details of the boat or the sea but I have my imagination. So relying on that,  I am developing the concept " ship at sea, rough water"  I started by reusing an old daily painting canvas board that I covered over with a gray green mix. I originally thought of a night scene but I must have waited too long because by the time I got to adding some color...
 The sun was breaking through the clouds on the horizon.
 I am sticking with a very limited palette to ensure my colors harmonize.
 I also wanted to stay away from white. The details may not be correct, that doesn't matter. It's the feeling and idea that you want to capture.
click on the image to enlarge the painting

"Heading Out"
color sketch 5"x7"
oil on canvas board

Seems an appropriate theme as we start a new year. Happy painting , happy new year! Enjoy the voyage.