Friday, July 15, 2011

"The Swimmer"...WIP

I didn't have a lot of time to paint today, but did manage a little time with my brush and paint.  Here is today's progress.
This is turning out to be some pretty tedious painting so things move along rather slowly.  At the moment it is difficult for me to wrap my head around the painting like I should so I just have to paint a little bit at a time.  I paint a little, leave it for a little while, then come back and paint a little then repeat the steps all day long.  Not the most ideal way to paint because I can't really get in the flow of the painting but it is the best I can manage at the time.  Do you ever have to just "make do" with the time you have to paint... and be happy you have that much?

These are some thoughts from Timothy Clark when he was at Watermedia 2003 in Houston. (Gosh that was a long time ago!!)

  • Line inherits shape, shape inherits form, form is enhanced by value, value is enhanced by color.
  • Pattern is 2-D and texture is 3-D.
  • If you deal with shape and value, form will take care of itself.
  • Composition is the way you organize the elements ~ organize with an underlying element (ie - triangles)
  • Be aware of the emotion that you want.
  • Local color + Light + Shadow = fully rounded form.
  • If you paint orange on top of yellow your blue won't turn green in a sky.
Be Still My Art,


Kay



Thursday, July 14, 2011

New Painting

Yesterday I started on a new painting.  I did the drawing and used maskit on the areas I wanted to remain white.  That was pretty tedious work so I didn't get any painting done other than a wash of blue over the entire painting.  Today I have had more time to paint so I have made decent progress on it.



This is one of those paintings where the details will make or break things... IMO!  I don't have a lot of patience so I have to work on the painting a bit, then get away from it for a bit... then go back and work on it some more, and so on.  Slowly, usually very slowly, it begins to pull together.    Do you ever work on paintings with lots of details?  Do you ever get lost in all the little shapes?  Value will be a big key to this painting... that is what will pull the small shapes together into big shapes.

 Color Formulas (in case you don't have them already or have forgotten about them...):
  • Burnt Sienna + Ultramarine = very attractive gray which dries with subtle granular patterns. (An excellent mixture for painting skies)
  • Raw Umber is ideal for dulling blues, yellows and greens.
  • Paint several sequences of colors in areas that move from light to shadow:
                   Red, Carmine, Violet - warm shadow
                   Thalo Blue, Ultramarine Blue, Violet - cool shadow
  • A neutral gray blue - Cobalt Blue + Burnt Sienna
  • Shadows:
                  Dark Shadows- Winsor Blue + Permanent Alizarin Crimson
                  Intermediate Shadows- French Ultramarine Blue + Perm. Aliz. Crimson
                  Subtle Shadows- French Ultra. Blue + Perm. Rose
                  Vary the shadows from cooler (more blue) to warmer (more red)
                  Warmer in foreground, cooler in background

Be Still My Art,

Kay         




            

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Daydreamer... Completed!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Today was a good day for my mom and she slept most of the morning.  Her sleeping allowed me time to paint... I keep a monitor in my studio so I can hear her and know if she needs me.  It felt so good to paint for several uninterrupted hours.  Painting has been my "Saving Grace".


Some things to keep in mind when painting ... from Stephen Quiller:
  1. See the stroke before you paint it.
  2. Variation: light against dark, transparent against opaque, warm against cool, etc.
  3. Rhythm in brush strokes
  4. Create both negative and positive shapes
  5. Create depth with overlapping forms
  6. Decisions on paintings come up again and again, so push through the painting... MAKE THOSE DECISIONS!
Be Still My Art,

Kay


Monday, July 11, 2011

Daydreamer... still in Progress

All of last week I spent at the hospital with my mom who has terminal cancer.  This is a particularly difficult time for me since I have cared for my mom for the past 16 years.  Letting go is never easy.

While at the hospital I used the time to go through old sketchbooks looking for usable hints I might have written down and to go back through some of the books I have that I hadn't looked at in a long time.  I think sometimes it is fun to realize how far you have come or in some cases where you are stuck!!!  One of the books I looked at was Watercolor Wisdom by Jo Taylor.  What a great book... so full of information and exercises to do.  It was in looking through her book that I realized I am sort of stuck  and need to do a little bit more exploring to really find what I have to say.  Time will tell if I really do that or not.  I am pretty big on staying in my comfort zone right now.


I didn't get to do much painting last week, but yesterday and today I have spent doing a little painting just to escape from what is going on with my mom.  Yesterday I spent putting details in the back ground... felt so good to be in control of something!  Then today I spent covering up those details using a technique I found in Alex Power's book Painting People in Watercolor-A Design Approach.



I really have a long way to go on this but am making some progress slowly but surely.  

Judy Morris believes there are five stages to a painting...
  1. idea stage
  2. drawing stage
  3. just paint everything
  4. go back and finish the painting
  5. use magnifying glass or gray cardboard viewing card to look at the finished painting.


Be Still My Art,

Kay

Monday, July 4, 2011

My Color Notebook and More Tips... (Oh! No! Not more on Value!)

The past several days have been especially difficult as we had to put my Mom in the hospital on Saturday.  She apparently has cancer that has spread to several places in her body.  We will know more on Wednesday but until then I am struggling to maintain some control... Mom has lived with us for the past 16 years so it will be especially difficult to let her go.  I sit at the hospital desperate to separate myself from the situation so I work on art related things that can be done on the "fly" with few supplies.  Today I penciled in some quick exercises in one of my sketchbooks so that when I had a minute I could just add the color to them and my samples would be nice and tidy in an actual book instead of "floaties" that tend to disappear.  When I got home tonight I just had to hold a paint brush in my hand for a while (at least I can control that, right?) so I painted a few of the samples.



I can also round up all the "floaties" and put them in the book and everything on color will be in one place.... well, almost everything on color.  What about you?  Do you keep notes on mixing colors and samples of different formulas?  What do you keep yours in?

I hope you are starting a notebook on value... if so, here are even more tips that I found on a handout that I have.
  • Place a middle value first for a better grasp of the whole range of value and to reveal light areas.  Add darks last.
  • Full value range paintings lack a dominance... omit unnecessary values.
  • Take a black and white picture of your painting.
  • A small halo of light accents an edge where it meets a dark.  Conversely, a small gradation of darker value will relax the same edge.
  • Keep middle value paintings in the #4 to #7 range... middle values hold a painting together.  We need middle values in large areas or shapes for cementing.  They are the walls that support your windows of light or upon which darks can be patterned.
  • Dark value paintings should be kept in the #5 to #10 range.  They give punch, drama and like light values can be used for structural unity. 
  • Light value paintings should be kept in the #1 to #5 range.  Light values give life, breath and sparkle to a composition and can be used for structural unity.
  • A photo of a sunlit subject usually blackens cast shadows.  Lighten these and put more color into them.
  • Alternate value contrasts along extended edges.
  • It takes a value change to separate a tree from the sky.  Don't rely on a color change to separate it.  Even worse, don't rely on texture.
  • Most brighter colors come to full intensity in mid-value
  • Give most of your attention to the four to seven largest pieces of value in your painting.  If these few large hunks are not the most distinguished shapes you can make, your painting will fail.
Haven't had a chance to work on "Daydreaming" but maybe soon I will have an update on it.

Be Still My Art,

Kay



Saturday, July 2, 2011

More Color Tips

These color tips come from the same source as yesterday's ... and that is "I don't know where!"  It is another handout that I have had sticking on my bulletin board for longer than I care to admit.

"High Key" - refers to values in the light range, ie. high light, middle light and low light.  No matter what colors are used the effect will be soft and pastel.  Foreground ~ values 0 to 9, Middle ground ~ values 3 to 5.5, Background ~ values 1 to 3.5


"Middle Key" - refers to values in the middle range.  Foreground- values 1 to 10, Middle ground- values 6 to 9 Background ~ values 5 to 7


"Low Key" ~ refers to dark values... makes the painting feel dark, mysterious and dreary.  Foreground- values 1-10, Middle ground - values 6-8, Background- values 7 to 9



  • Mix Burnt Umber with New Gamboge to make a good value 10 "yellow".
  • Mixed grays can be especially useful when you are trying to achieve a warm or cool color dominance in a painting.  If you are using a predominately warm color scheme, you should also use warm grays.  In a predominately cool color scheme, use cool grays.
  • Alizarin Crimson, Phthalo Green and Burnt Sienna is a nice mixed gray.  (Don't use this to gray a color
  • To intensify warm colors, try tempering them with a little Carmine or Opera Pink.
My Mom has been ill and we had to put her in the hospital today... so my painting time today was not to be.  I did find a small amount of time to paint yesterday, so here is the progress on the painting... such as it is.

Soooooooo much work to be done yet....

Be Still My Art,

Kay


Thursday, June 30, 2011

A Few Tidbits on Color and my WIP

These are just a few tidbits on color that you may already know... hope you don't mind a short reminder.

   If you want a color to look:                 Paint next to it:

  • More intense                                   Its complement
  • Less intense                                    A more-intense version of the same or a near-hue
                                                                          (Its neighbor on the color wheel)

  • Darker                                            A lighter value
  • Lighter                                            A darker value
  • Cooler                                            A warmer color
  • Warmer                                          A cooler color
A color that is surrounded by black or a dark value will appear lighter, brighter and larger than it actually is.
A color surrounded by white or a light value will appear darker, duller and smaller than it actually is.

More to come on color at a later time...

I worked on "Daydreamer" today and it seemed that the more I painted on it the more that needed to be done.  Ever get to that point in a painting where you just really have to push yourself to "just put paint on the paper" and not get caught up in all the little details that will come later?  I could have spent all day on just one little section, but I like to paint the entire painting and hold off on the details until last.



Doesn't look like a lot of progress... but any time you are moving forward it is a "good thing", right?

Be Still My Art

Kay

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Work in Progress... values

Things felt good this afternoon as I had some uninterrupted painting time.  As I worked on this painting I was thinking a lot about the values I had planned.  Instead of working the entire painting like I did yesterday in just trying to get some color down, I started working more on individual areas of the painting.  It is difficult to judge the values when you don't have much color surrounding the area you are working on.  So, I pulled out an old value chart that I probably cut out of a book and punched holes in... so I had something to compare the values to.
Value chart on white paper
                           Value chart over the painting... what value would you say
                            the blue is?  It looks like a great middle area value to me...
                                only problem is it is supposed to be a dark value in that area.            





















Here is the painting so far... remember it is a WIP!
Daydreamer.... in progress
I keep a poster on my wall that I made about analyzing a painting.  Of course it comes from some book that is long gone... sorry.  It reads:

All details must be eliminated so each object in the painting
is reduced to its basic shape.  Then the structural skeleton can be seen.

The examples of this are paintings by Grunewald and El Greco:
Altar Triptch by Grunewald

Kneeling Saint by El Greco

































Notice how the paintings are reduced to three values in black, white and grey and then simplified by removing details and combining shapes.  I seem to be able to do that in my planning... now the trick is to carry it out in the final painting.  Sounds so easy, doesn't it???  Do you find it that easy to do?  Not me!

Be Still My Art,


Kay










Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Mr. and Mrs. McAdams and my WIP

I finally got to meet Mr. and Mrs. McAdams today.  They are the couple that I was doing a commission portrait of so their son could give it to them for their anniversary.  What a delightful couple.  Mr. McAdams is 90 years old and still plays racquetball.  Mrs. McAdams is 87 and such a delight to be around... you never know when she may break out into a song, and she has a very nice voice!
Mr. and Mrs. McAdams with their portrait

I began the painting of "Daydreamer" today and got several glazes on.  I am at a point now where I really need to concentrate and think about what I am doing so I had to stop until I can have some uninterrupted time for painting.  Just being able to put paint on the paper was pleasing to me today.
Daydreamer... a work in progress.
How about you?  Did you get a lot accomplished today?  I am looking forward to painting more tomorrow!!

Be Still My Art,


Kay





Monday, June 27, 2011

More on Value and a WIP

My Mom (who is 90 years old) had some medical tests run last week and sitting in the lobby waiting brought back memories of when she had a stroke several years ago.  At that time I was in a critique class led by Polly Hammett.  Polly is a master at design and composition and really emphasized underlying abstract value designs.  She suggested that we take old art show catalogues and look at the value patterns of the winning entries and/or paintings that we liked.  By putting a piece of tracing paper over the photo one could see the larger value shapes in each painting.  I happened to have a sketch book that I had made by putting a sheet of drawing paper and then a sheet of tracing paper, until I had enough pages for the book.  To pass the time while at the hospital I started my Value Patterns Book...

Award winning paintings
Value Patterns of the paintings
Award winning paintings
Value Patterns of the paintings


Stephen Quiller






 I filled an entire sketchbook with the underlying abstract value patterns of winning watercolor paintings and also with the paintings of artist whose work I admire.  It was a very soothing exercise and I think I really learned a lot from doing it.  One thing I began to notice in all the value patterns was the use of large value shapes.

Value Patterns

Arne Westerman
















Today I finished the drawing on my next painting and got the first glaze put on!!  Yea me!  Persistence and perseverance... one little step at a time.  Any progress is good progress... as long as it is progress in the right direction!
Work in Progress



Be Still My Art,


Kay

Thursday, June 23, 2011

On Composition and Design

When I read watercolor books and also when I go to workshops or to demos I always take a few notes... or at least scribble on some note of interest.  Unfortunately I don't always label where I read what I wrote down or where I was when I heard some tidbit of interest.  I have all these "floaties" stuck in various places around my studio to inspire me or to remind me of something I need to be doing.  I'd like to pass them on... and I will give credit when I know for certain where I read or who said whatever it is.  Unfortunately, I don't know where I picked up the following information.  However, I thought it might be of interest to you or someone you know.  Just know that the original credit doesn't belong to me.  (A lady in a class asked me once why I didn't write a book.  My answer was that everything I know I learned from a book that has already been written... why write it again?)

When planning your painting concentrate on the following:

  • Balancing shapes
  • Harmonizing color
  • Making the eye flow through the painting
  • Simplifying forms
  • Giving the painting clarity
Before completion of the painting ask the following questions:

  • What is dominant?
  • What shows repetition?
  • How is it balanced?
  • Do we see gradation?
Do you have "floaties" with bits of wisdom in your studio?  Maybe you'd like to share some with me.

Be Still My Art,


Kay

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Gladiolus

Gladiolus
Watercolor and Pen and Ink
4.5" X 13.5"
I wish I could say that I stepped out into my yard the other day and cut these gorgeous gladiolus from my flower bed... but since I have a major brown thumb I would be fibbing if I said something like that.  The best I can do is pick them up at the store... but they are still gorgeous.  I took a few minutes after breakfast to do a contour line drawing of one of the stems.  I wanted to do a small painting to see if I liked it enough to do a larger one later.  For me this painting wasn't much fun.  That "wow" factor had been missing from the get go so my heart never was in it.  Even though it was a small painting I really had to push myself to stay involved enough to even complete it.  Do you ever find yourself in a spot like that?  Since I had started it I felt like I should follow it through to the end but it was almost like punishment.  So, maybe for me a lot of the "Wow!" factor comes in the "discovery" of the painting and the planning that goes into the painting at the start.  I love to design the paintings and work with the values and most of that preplanning was missing from this painting.  Maybe next time I should work with a better light source and the dazzle that is so necessary for me will be there!! 

Be Still My Art,

Kay



Monday, June 20, 2011

So Many Paintings, So Little Time

It seems to me lately that I go to bed on Monday and when I wake up the next day it is Friday already!!  Time is just whizzing by!  And that creates a dilemma... I have so many watercolor paintings to be painted and so little time to paint them.  Yesterday the grandchildren were all here for Father's Day and everyone went to the community pool to swim... except me and I went to take photos!!  With 3 boys and a girl all ranging in age from 15 to 4 I knew I was bound to get at least one great painting prospect ... and sure enough I got two!
I know you are probably wondering what I see in this photo that is worth painting (besides my granddaughter!)  Look what happens when I put it in photoshop and tweak it a little:

I really like the radial composition and I think that is what makes this work even though her face is right in the center.

And this photo:
becomes this reference for a painting:

Now all I have to do is complete the three paintings I am working on and I have two more ready to start... well almost ready.

How about you?  How many paintings do you have going?  And, more importantly, do you have enough time in the days to do all the paintings you have in your head?  Me either...

Be Still My Art,

Kay




Friday, June 17, 2011

Contour Line Drawings

One of the best ways I know to improve your drawing skills is to do blind, semi-blind and regular contour line drawings.  I haven't always felt that way because I remember back (W-A-Y...back) when I was in college I thought it was stupid that we had to do them... but then I thought everything was stupid.  I didn't really learn to appreciate contour line drawing exercises until I taught them to my students at school.  After standing and demonstrating how to do a blind contour line drawing 7 times a day several days a week I began to notice my own drawing skills were improving.  It didn't take long to convince me of the value of doing contour line drawings.
Blind contour line drawing
A blind contour line drawing is done by looking only at what you are drawing and not the drawing itself.  It is supposed to be done using one continuous line and not ever picking up your pencil.  Obviously the objective is not to produce a great drawing but rather to learn to really look at and thus really see what you are drawing.  It stands to reason then that since drawing is seeing, one's drawing skills would improve proportionately to one's ability to really see objects.  A semi-blind contour line drawing is when you look at the drawing only once in a while to adjust your pencil (without picking it up... just move the line to where you should be).  In doing a true contour line drawing, one is constantly looking back and forth from the object being drawn to the drawing itself.  It is still done in one continuous line without picking up the pencil.

As is the case with many artists, I take my sketchbook with me wherever I go... even to church.  As I listen to the sermons I draw... usually a modified contour line drawing (which means I do it however I want to do it :0}  ).





Yesterday I had a heart fluttering moment as I looked at the light hitting the beautiful cannas blooming outside our backdoor.  I cut them and brought them in to my studio where I took the time to study them just a little.
 I can feel another watercolor painting about to bloom.  (Sorry, I couldn't resist.)

Be Still My Art,
Kay


P.S. To see some really good contour line drawings turned into paintings see Nancy Fleagle .  



Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Two Woo Hoos and a New Product

Today was a two Woo Hoo day for me!!
First I got an email advising me that my painting, "The Prodigal", had been selected for the 48th Annual Membership Exhibit of the Southwestern Watercolor Society.  Woo Hoo!!!  Alex Powers juried this year's show.

The Second Woo Hoo is for completing (well, almost... still have a little tweaking to do yet) the commission portrait I have been working on.  I am close enough to give a shout out anyway!! Woo Hoo!!
Commission Portrait near completion

Have you had any Woo Hoo days lately?  If so, give a shout out yourself!!

Before I started work on this commission I had ordered a new product from Daniel Smith.  It is called Watercolor Ground.  It looks a lot like gesso and it brushes on like gesso.  It is supposed to make any surface paintable with watercolor.  I couldn't wait to try it out so periodically when I was on break from the commission portrait I worked on a canvas that I had brushed with the watercolor ground.
Painting in beginning stages
This is a 12 X 12 gallery wrapped canvas that I am in the process of painting with watercolor!  It has been a lot of fun because it is a different feel and the watercolor handles differently on it than it does regular paper.  To me it seems to be like a cross between gessoed paper and Aquabord.  It is very easy to rub out areas.  I noticed it can be difficult to get a hard line (see close-up of the eye) and also, you can see the texture from  brushing on the ground.  Sometimes it just makes a neat texture on its own. (see close up of hair)  
Notice how the brown of the iris ran at the top?

At the top of the hair you can see fine cracks created by the ground.

Have you tried any new products or colors lately?  If so, what and how did it work for you?  There is still lots of exploring to do with this new ground, but it promises to be much fun... and soon I will have more time to play.  I wonder if it can make my heart skip a beat or flutter with excitement just a little.  

Be Still My Art,

Kay
 

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

The Value of Value

I'm still working on the portrait and suspect I will be for several more days.  Right now it is not fun...grrr... paintings that just seem to paint themselves are so much more fun.  Don't you agree?  I have been struggling with the values in the ladies face all day.  If she were here and I could look at her I would probably have better luck seeing the values, but she isn't and I am working from a photo so I am struggling.  Not long ago I was working on a painting and I knew there was a problem... but for the longest time I couldn't put my finger on it.  Then the light came on... (that happens once in a while cause I think I have a short in my brain somewhere!!) I grabbed my camera and took a photo of the painting, put it in photoshop and turned it black and white and printed it out.  I wanted to compare it to the value study I had done earlier.  As luck will have it sometime, the problem stuck out like a sore thumb... all the values seemed to run together.  Oh that all problems would be so simple to fix...  today I came across a color value chart I made several years ago... you may have one like this...

Since it was made so long ago I couldn't remember if I ever checked the values in black and white to see how close I had gotten with the colors.  So, I checked it... like I do my paintings.

And, another light has come on... so I'm going to take a black and white of the portrait and see if I get a little better perspective on how it is really coming along.  It may be a heart thumping moment after all.

Be Still My Art,

Kay