Showing posts with label swimming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label swimming. Show all posts

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         




            

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 10, 2011

Be Still My Art

 There have been moments in my life when something or someone has been so beautiful that my heart has fluttered and my breath has been short. In my mind, if not aloud, I have muttered a little "be still my heart" and I knew that moment had to be shared.  Ever have one of those moments?  Like when a grandson is born and is crying and the only one who can console him is his great grandmother...
...or when your granddaughter is swimming her heart out determined to win the race...

...or when your grandson is that rock star that he is certain he will be someday...



...or maybe you have a couple of big leaguers in the making...


It may be a moment when the morning sun is shining on a flower that has just bloomed, or the sun is coming through the window creating gorgeous lights and shadows.  Wherever you are and whatever you are doing you stop, grab the camera so you have a photo to jog your memory and the seed for the next painting has been planted.  Ever have one of those art moments?

My blog will be about those art moments that take my breath away and how I capture that moment for others to experience also.  The teacher in me may even come out sometimes and who knows what might happen then... it is said the best way to learn something is to teach it.

 I hope you will join me and share your art moments as well.

Be Still My Art,
Kay