This is just the type of scene I want to capture and paint. I love birds and have always been a bird watcher. So now I want to paint them. But how do I start? This sketch is an idea but I need to practice, practice practice.
I started doing bird sketches at night from photos I found on the web. I think this is a great way of getting familiar with their anatomy, form and detail. Rather than just sitting there watching the TV, I can keep busy sketching.
The next step was to start watching the birds outside and taking my own photos for reference. I set up our feeder outside the kitchen window and waited. At first, about 90 percent of the birds at my feeder were house finches. But eventually we started attracting cardinals, blue jays, nut hatches, chickadees and morning doves. You can see the light sketch of an idea for a daily painting in the middle of the sketchbook page above.
Just like my new approach to creating compositions with individual flowers, it is my goal to create compositions for these birds by using multiple references not just copying a photo.
I found I need to keep thinking of form while painting these little guys to prevent things from going flat.
I appreciate artists who detail every feather but I really want to try to paint the personality I see in individual birds.
Early Birds
5"x7"
oil on panel
3 comments:
Lovely....It's so great to see you back at it! We have goldfinches here that are so bright they look like wild canaries. We, too, love our backyard birds...and they are wonderful to paint.
Glad you are back here. And that was a very sensible observation..100 degree heat is not good on the body! Better have you painting than fainting!
I really like this painting! On a side note....did you know blue jays are the jerks of the bird world?
Love this painting, Peter!
I'm a bird watcher/painter too.
Thanks for the progress shots!
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