It's been about three weeks since I last picked up a paint brush but I finally managed to get out this afternoon. It was a beautiful summer's day with temperatures in the mid-to-high twenties. I headed out to Torbay Inlet, near Albany, to see what was on offer for painting.
I've only been here once before and knew I'd have to come back one day. Today was that day.
I'm a bit rusty after the break but here's where things ended up.
I was standing in a great spot by the inlet, looking out toward the ocean. There were pelicans and seagulls, jumping fish and I even spotted a bandicoot. The breeze was straight off the sea but it was pleasant – once I weighed my easel down to stop it blowing over.
The water in the inlet is a rich tannin colour but the breeze was disturbing the water surface so there was a lot of reflected light from it. It's a real challenge to try and mix paint for it because some parts of the large expanse of near water seem to be a strong dark blue, other areas a rich red and then, when the breeze blows, other bits are almost sky blue. My main aim was to isolate that bright sunlit strip of sand that snakes across the scene, so I had to keep the water on the dark side.
UPDATE:
I finally got a photo...
I'll take another look at that large expanse of foreground water one day.
Thursday, December 6, 2012
Friday, November 23, 2012
Congratulations Warwick Fuller
I don't know Australian plein air artist Warwick Fuller personally but I can't deny his early influence on my still-evolving style.
Fuller's DVD "Into the Light" represented a turning point in my art career. This video was the first time I'd actually seen someone start a painting with large tonal masses then lay light and detail over the top – and he completed the not-too-small painting en plein air. Suddenly it all made sense.
My first-ever oil painting was a miniature copy of Fuller's landscape painting, a small image of which appeared on the cover of the VHS edition. I still have my version of the painting (below) on a large canvas board with lots of other small painting exercises I did when I took up oils.
Many of my early works were largely attempts at using Fuller's approach and capturing his style with local subjects. Fuller's work has featured regularly in Australian Artist Magazine, for as long as I can remember, so I had no shortage of other examples to learn from.
And now, Warwick Fuller has met with royalty.
I received this news today from the Lost Bear Gallery mailing list:
Fuller's Brush with Royalty
by Caterina Leone
Warwick Fuller, a Hartley-based artist, has had an impressive career. With over sixty solo exhibitions in Australia and internationally, career highlights have assuredly been numerous. Yet his recent week painting as Official Tour Artist for His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales and Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cornwall, during their tour of Australia, would doubtless rank foremost among them.
The Prince of Wales became familiar with Fuller’s work through his London gallery, Panter and Hall, who were contacted by Clarence House back in July. Fuller says, "I was completely overwhelmed when I learnt of the surprising request from The Prince of Wales". A watercolourist himself, the Prince has a policy of choosing an artist to accompany him on tours, appreciating the unique interpretation that an artist can give to the documentation of the tour, and as a way of supporting the arts. Paintings from the tour that are acquired by the Prince of Wales will become part of the Royal Collection when he ascends the throne.
Fuller describes the whirlwind tour as being orchestrated “at a relentless pace, with military precision, planning and timing”, something that is most likely unfamiliar to an artistic temperament. Additional challenges included weather, which at Bondi Icebergs saw an uncharacteristic and sudden deluge ruin a work in progress. Yet he managed to finish with nine paintings, together with a number of sketches.
The tour gave Fuller a unique opportunity to experience places and events usually inaccessible: rarely seen paintings by Roberts, Streeton and Ashton at the Sydney and Melbourne government houses, reminiscing with Prince Charles over memories of trout fishing in the Howqua River and camping and painting in Victoria, and enviable access to the private member’s stand at Melbourne Cup. He fondly recalls painting beside the Flemington racetrack-mounting yard, in a "halo of space and quiet” in the otherwise clamorous throng of people as the Melbourne Cup race commenced.
It was by no means surprising that the Prince should choose Fuller as his Australian tour artist. Fuller’s artworks timelessly and majestically capture the atmosphere of the Australian landscape. His paintings are not a record of its existence, they are a hymn to it, and as such he is able to make evident to all the beauty and nuances that many overlook; and yet his paintings go further; he imbues nature with something more: to borrow from Edward Bulwer-Lytton, “the mind and soul of man”.
During the tour, Fuller was filmed painting at Penfolds Winery and interviewed with the intention of his inclusion in a documentary being made on artists of the Royal family. The documentary will air on British television next year.
In summing up his experience, Fuller enthuses, "This amazing honour has been a career highlight, one I’ll savour when chasing the elusive light of the Australian landscape”.
More here.
Fuller's DVD "Into the Light" represented a turning point in my art career. This video was the first time I'd actually seen someone start a painting with large tonal masses then lay light and detail over the top – and he completed the not-too-small painting en plein air. Suddenly it all made sense.
My first-ever oil painting was a miniature copy of Fuller's landscape painting, a small image of which appeared on the cover of the VHS edition. I still have my version of the painting (below) on a large canvas board with lots of other small painting exercises I did when I took up oils.
My first oil painting. 11x8cm.
I used three water-mixable oil colours, plus white.
I used three water-mixable oil colours, plus white.
Many of my early works were largely attempts at using Fuller's approach and capturing his style with local subjects. Fuller's work has featured regularly in Australian Artist Magazine, for as long as I can remember, so I had no shortage of other examples to learn from.
And now, Warwick Fuller has met with royalty.
I received this news today from the Lost Bear Gallery mailing list:
Fuller's Brush with Royalty
by Caterina Leone
Warwick Fuller, a Hartley-based artist, has had an impressive career. With over sixty solo exhibitions in Australia and internationally, career highlights have assuredly been numerous. Yet his recent week painting as Official Tour Artist for His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales and Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cornwall, during their tour of Australia, would doubtless rank foremost among them.
The Prince of Wales became familiar with Fuller’s work through his London gallery, Panter and Hall, who were contacted by Clarence House back in July. Fuller says, "I was completely overwhelmed when I learnt of the surprising request from The Prince of Wales". A watercolourist himself, the Prince has a policy of choosing an artist to accompany him on tours, appreciating the unique interpretation that an artist can give to the documentation of the tour, and as a way of supporting the arts. Paintings from the tour that are acquired by the Prince of Wales will become part of the Royal Collection when he ascends the throne.
Fuller describes the whirlwind tour as being orchestrated “at a relentless pace, with military precision, planning and timing”, something that is most likely unfamiliar to an artistic temperament. Additional challenges included weather, which at Bondi Icebergs saw an uncharacteristic and sudden deluge ruin a work in progress. Yet he managed to finish with nine paintings, together with a number of sketches.
The tour gave Fuller a unique opportunity to experience places and events usually inaccessible: rarely seen paintings by Roberts, Streeton and Ashton at the Sydney and Melbourne government houses, reminiscing with Prince Charles over memories of trout fishing in the Howqua River and camping and painting in Victoria, and enviable access to the private member’s stand at Melbourne Cup. He fondly recalls painting beside the Flemington racetrack-mounting yard, in a "halo of space and quiet” in the otherwise clamorous throng of people as the Melbourne Cup race commenced.
It was by no means surprising that the Prince should choose Fuller as his Australian tour artist. Fuller’s artworks timelessly and majestically capture the atmosphere of the Australian landscape. His paintings are not a record of its existence, they are a hymn to it, and as such he is able to make evident to all the beauty and nuances that many overlook; and yet his paintings go further; he imbues nature with something more: to borrow from Edward Bulwer-Lytton, “the mind and soul of man”.
During the tour, Fuller was filmed painting at Penfolds Winery and interviewed with the intention of his inclusion in a documentary being made on artists of the Royal family. The documentary will air on British television next year.
In summing up his experience, Fuller enthuses, "This amazing honour has been a career highlight, one I’ll savour when chasing the elusive light of the Australian landscape”.
More here.
Monday, November 12, 2012
Back at the Gap - plein air oil
Green Islands, Albany. Photo by Andy Dolphin.
Date: Monday, November 12, 2012
Weather Forecast: Close to perfect again!
Today delivered another beautiful spring afternoon and plein air painting was back on the agenda. I headed down to the Gap in Albany's Torndirrup National Park to see what was on offer. This place is very changeable and I've witnessed it during storms and on the calmest of days. Today was fine and warm but there was a decent swell slamming waves into the granite cliffs so that's what I decided to paint.
Here's the "gotta have" location shot showing the painting as it was when I put the brushes away. It was getting dark when I packed up so I'll take a look at it in daylight and see if it needs any adjustments.
With this painting I once again chose a distant subject rather than looking for something nearby and ready-made for painting. I've looked at this point many times before and generally ignored it as anything more than potential background material but today, with the sun setting further to the south than on previous visits, I decided it was a worthwhile subject in its own right. One advantage of painting things that are a bit further way is that minor detail is easier to ignore because you just can't see it.
One thing I notice along much of the south coast of Western Australia is that the hills are so high and steep that the sky is often almost hidden from normal view in several directions. With access to many beaches requiring a long walk down rocks, sand tracks or stairways, the overwhelming feeling at sea level is that of being down in a hole. I'm interested in capturing that feeling in future paintings.
UPDATE:
(Point break. Plein air sketch. 34x20cm oil on board. © Andy Dolphin)
Here it is as it came off the easel. At this stage I've made no additions or adjustments in the studio.
Labels:
limited palette,
oil painting,
plein air,
seascape,
sketch
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Rocky coast plein air oil painting
Green Islands, Albany. Photo by Andy Dolphin.
Date: Friday, November 9, 2012
Weather Forecast: Close to perfect!
I didn't get out much last week as it rained for seven days straight. I finally managed to get some painting done in the last couple of days though. Here's yesterday's effort.
This is a spot I've looked at many times but there's always been a reason not to paint it. It's high up on a cliff edge over rocks, exposed to the wind and is usually shrouded in heavy salt spray. And up until yesterday, the shadows always seemed to be in "just the wrong place". With summer just weeks away, the sun is now setting further to the south and the lighting down here was far more interesting.
(Down into the mist. Sketch. 30x25cm, oil on board. © Andy Dolphin)
I'm struggling to come to grips with painting the ocean while looking directly toward the setting sun but this one is better than previous efforts. In order to get it done as fast as possible, I used a limited palette and ignored detail. I was throwing paint on - although I was slowed down quite a bit because I'd left my palette knife behind and I use that for cleaning my brushes. Alternatives proved unsuccessful.I'm happy with the result and can see a few things that need adjusting so I'm going to let this one dry then do a bit of work over the top to try an unify things and enhance the depth a little.
I might go back here a at different times and see what else I can get from it.
Labels:
limited palette,
oil painting,
plein air,
seascape,
sketch,
sunset
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Bluff Knoll - plein air oil
It was very warm yesterday with clear blue skies in every direction. I took the opportunity to head inland looking for something to paint. With one month of spring to go, the paddocks are starting to lose their winter greens and take on the warm, dry colours of summer. I drove around for a few hours before ending up at Bluff Knoll, the highest peak in southwest Western Australia.
I painted here one morning a year ago (see Bluff Knoll) and in January this year (See Bluff Knoll in January) and while I was happy enough with the sketches I'd done on both occasions, I felt it was worth another go to try and capture the essence of the bluff.
By the time I'd set up my easel, there was only about half an hour left until sunset. I decided a thumbnail sketch was in order to ensure I knew where I was headed before the light changed too much.
I tried two formats, each sketch taking less than a minute. I decided that the vertical format gave me a better feeling of the towering nature of the mountain. I was particularly interested in the zig-zag line created where the major shadow area met the sunlit area. There's a very interesting piece of geology up there, where the sandstone forms a turret-like ridge that catches the sunlight, but it would fall almost dead centre in my picture so I couldn't make too much of it and decided, instead, to draw the eye up to the cliff face.
I quickly washed in my major shadow area with a mixture of ultramarine and crimson, thinned with low-odour mineral spirits. Then I assessed the colour of the sunlit areas. This is one of those confusing situations where you know the shrubbery on the mountain is green but the light shining on it leans strongly toward red - green's complement. So what colour is it now? It's a sort of red-green-yellow-orange-brown colour.
I used my handy-dandy oil colour chart to find a starting point and settled on a combination of cerulean blue (a green-blue), mixed with cadmium yellow deep (an orange-yellow) and added permanent crimson (a purple-red) to warm it up. I washed a mix of burnt sienna and permanent crimson on the sunlit area first to provide a warm, earthy base for this "green".
I approached this painting a little differently to how I usually paint on site. I didn't try to take any area toward a finished state and just laid in large areas of general colour until almost all the white primer was covered. I didn't even take these areas up to each other, at first. Once I had it all mapped in, I went back over all areas with heavier colour and closed all the gaps that I'd left in the early stage.
The shadows moved fast and I found the thumbnail sketch an invaluable map of where I was headed. You can see in the thumbnail that I'd noted a small patch of sunlight right at the top of the shaded cliff face. This highlight disappeared soon after I started painting so the sketch was a useful reminder to include it - and it is important to making that area interesting enough to look at.
I finished painting after sunset and had to use a small headlamp to see what I was doing as I added small flashes of colour to break up the large masses. I used a flash to take the location photo, above, just before I finished working on the painting.
Here's how things ended up with almost no work added in the studio...
I painted here one morning a year ago (see Bluff Knoll) and in January this year (See Bluff Knoll in January) and while I was happy enough with the sketches I'd done on both occasions, I felt it was worth another go to try and capture the essence of the bluff.
By the time I'd set up my easel, there was only about half an hour left until sunset. I decided a thumbnail sketch was in order to ensure I knew where I was headed before the light changed too much.
I tried two formats, each sketch taking less than a minute. I decided that the vertical format gave me a better feeling of the towering nature of the mountain. I was particularly interested in the zig-zag line created where the major shadow area met the sunlit area. There's a very interesting piece of geology up there, where the sandstone forms a turret-like ridge that catches the sunlight, but it would fall almost dead centre in my picture so I couldn't make too much of it and decided, instead, to draw the eye up to the cliff face.
I quickly washed in my major shadow area with a mixture of ultramarine and crimson, thinned with low-odour mineral spirits. Then I assessed the colour of the sunlit areas. This is one of those confusing situations where you know the shrubbery on the mountain is green but the light shining on it leans strongly toward red - green's complement. So what colour is it now? It's a sort of red-green-yellow-orange-brown colour.
I used my handy-dandy oil colour chart to find a starting point and settled on a combination of cerulean blue (a green-blue), mixed with cadmium yellow deep (an orange-yellow) and added permanent crimson (a purple-red) to warm it up. I washed a mix of burnt sienna and permanent crimson on the sunlit area first to provide a warm, earthy base for this "green".
I approached this painting a little differently to how I usually paint on site. I didn't try to take any area toward a finished state and just laid in large areas of general colour until almost all the white primer was covered. I didn't even take these areas up to each other, at first. Once I had it all mapped in, I went back over all areas with heavier colour and closed all the gaps that I'd left in the early stage.
The shadows moved fast and I found the thumbnail sketch an invaluable map of where I was headed. You can see in the thumbnail that I'd noted a small patch of sunlight right at the top of the shaded cliff face. This highlight disappeared soon after I started painting so the sketch was a useful reminder to include it - and it is important to making that area interesting enough to look at.
I finished painting after sunset and had to use a small headlamp to see what I was doing as I added small flashes of colour to break up the large masses. I used a flash to take the location photo, above, just before I finished working on the painting.
Here's how things ended up with almost no work added in the studio...
(Spring evening - Bluff Knoll. Plein air sketch.
25x30cm oil on board. © Andy Dolphin)
25x30cm oil on board. © Andy Dolphin)
Labels:
available,
colour chart,
landscape,
oil painting,
plein air,
sunset
Spam in art
I'm getting a lot of spam lately from overseas companies selling cheap reproductions of paintings. I've deleted five comments in two days.
The comments are usually repetitious (the same comment is often posted to several articles on one blog and you'll usually find identical comments on other people's blogs), and have nothing to do with the articles they're posted to – showing that the person (or robot) posting the comment has no interest in the blog articles but is simply hoping to direct blog readers to their own site via free advertising. They hope to trade off the blogger's popularity.
If you get these comments on your own blog, can I suggest that you delete them too so as not to encourage the practice?
UPDATE:
Elizabeth Tyler has a bit more to say about these likely art scammers on her blog.
Friday, October 26, 2012
Lowlands Beach - plein air oil
With clear skies and moderate temperatures forecast, I headed back to Lowlands Beach (near Denmark, Western Australia) yesterday afternoon.
I parked at the top lookout on the eastern side of the main beach. The lookout is about 50m above the sea and offers views across the main bay and to the rocky point below.
I watched the waves for a while, not entirely convinced I was going to get a painting out of it. But then I focussed on one large rock below the lookout and, although it was a reasonable distance away, I thought it was worth a shot at painting.
Here's the scene as the camera saw it at 50mm zoom, which approximates our normal field of view. I'm about 50m up and the clear blue water is about 60m from the cliff I'm standing on - so, according to Pythagoras, that vertical boulder to the right of centre is about 78m away from me.
As you can see, there's a lot going on with all those rocks so my first major decision was to choose the boundaries for the painting. I rarely do thumbnail sketches – I should do them, but I don't – but this time I thought it would be wise to plan ahead a little. I chose to focus on the vertical boulder and small area of white water in the centre of the view (the blunt HB pencil in the photo below is for illustrative purposes only, if you'll pardon the pun. It's not the pencil I used but gives you an idea of scale).
The thumbnail sketch suggested that I should pay attention to the strong contrast between the foamy white water and the adjacent rocks and clear water. I could use the whitewater to draw the eye in to the main rock. I made the decision at this point to alter the relative size of the rocks near the middle and to the left so that they didn't all end up the same size. I also decided that I should keep the two central rocks grouped as a single unit. I was also captivated by the lengthening shadows cast on the white water by the rocks and decided these would help to hold all the rocks together giving me a large interesting dark shape rather than a scattered collection of bits.
That's quite a few decisions from a one-minute sketch - and it's more decisions than I usually make before starting to paint. I really should do thumbnails more often, I'd probably waste a lot less paint!
I began by washing in the major darks on a white-primed panel. I wiped back a couple of highlight areas in the rocks and there's a hint of swell out in the open water.
Next I laid in the the white water using a purple-blue for the shaded parts and a warmer green-blue for where the sun would be hitting. It was important to lock this down fairly early as it wouldn't be long before all the foreground white water would be in shadow. You'll notice I dragged the foam over the clear water to create an interesting transition zone. I was feeling pretty positive at this stage.
Here's the obligatory location shot of the painting as it was when I packed up. It was getting dark by now and although the sunset was beautiful, there's no sunlight shining on the rocks below any more.
Below is the finished painting in daylight. I barely touched it in the studio so it's about 99.9% as it was on site. If you squint, you'll see how the shadow area on the white water becomes part of the dark tone of the rock mass. It can be tough to get that tone right because we tend to perceive even the shadow areas of white foam as very light. Squinting at the scene is the key to getting it right.
I will probably lop a couple of centimetres off the top of this painting as there's nothing of interest up there, plus the image is split almost 50/50 diagonally and the tall rock feels too low in the frame. I knew all this early on (my thumbnail is a better shape) but that's the board I had with me so I just went with it. If I chop it, I'll end up with something like this.
Much nicer proportions, I think.
Of course, sawing a piece off a panel is pretty trivial (unless the saw slips but let's not go there). Real problems arise, however, if you finish a painting then realise you need to make the panel bigger – so try to avoid that eh?
I parked at the top lookout on the eastern side of the main beach. The lookout is about 50m above the sea and offers views across the main bay and to the rocky point below.
I watched the waves for a while, not entirely convinced I was going to get a painting out of it. But then I focussed on one large rock below the lookout and, although it was a reasonable distance away, I thought it was worth a shot at painting.
Here's the scene as the camera saw it at 50mm zoom, which approximates our normal field of view. I'm about 50m up and the clear blue water is about 60m from the cliff I'm standing on - so, according to Pythagoras, that vertical boulder to the right of centre is about 78m away from me.
As you can see, there's a lot going on with all those rocks so my first major decision was to choose the boundaries for the painting. I rarely do thumbnail sketches – I should do them, but I don't – but this time I thought it would be wise to plan ahead a little. I chose to focus on the vertical boulder and small area of white water in the centre of the view (the blunt HB pencil in the photo below is for illustrative purposes only, if you'll pardon the pun. It's not the pencil I used but gives you an idea of scale).
The thumbnail sketch suggested that I should pay attention to the strong contrast between the foamy white water and the adjacent rocks and clear water. I could use the whitewater to draw the eye in to the main rock. I made the decision at this point to alter the relative size of the rocks near the middle and to the left so that they didn't all end up the same size. I also decided that I should keep the two central rocks grouped as a single unit. I was also captivated by the lengthening shadows cast on the white water by the rocks and decided these would help to hold all the rocks together giving me a large interesting dark shape rather than a scattered collection of bits.
That's quite a few decisions from a one-minute sketch - and it's more decisions than I usually make before starting to paint. I really should do thumbnails more often, I'd probably waste a lot less paint!
I began by washing in the major darks on a white-primed panel. I wiped back a couple of highlight areas in the rocks and there's a hint of swell out in the open water.
Next I laid in the the white water using a purple-blue for the shaded parts and a warmer green-blue for where the sun would be hitting. It was important to lock this down fairly early as it wouldn't be long before all the foreground white water would be in shadow. You'll notice I dragged the foam over the clear water to create an interesting transition zone. I was feeling pretty positive at this stage.
Here's the obligatory location shot of the painting as it was when I packed up. It was getting dark by now and although the sunset was beautiful, there's no sunlight shining on the rocks below any more.
Below is the finished painting in daylight. I barely touched it in the studio so it's about 99.9% as it was on site. If you squint, you'll see how the shadow area on the white water becomes part of the dark tone of the rock mass. It can be tough to get that tone right because we tend to perceive even the shadow areas of white foam as very light. Squinting at the scene is the key to getting it right.
(Lowlands rocks. Plein air sketch. 30x25cm oil on board. © Andy Dolphin)
I will probably lop a couple of centimetres off the top of this painting as there's nothing of interest up there, plus the image is split almost 50/50 diagonally and the tall rock feels too low in the frame. I knew all this early on (my thumbnail is a better shape) but that's the board I had with me so I just went with it. If I chop it, I'll end up with something like this.
(Lowlands rocks, edited. © Andy Dolphin)
Much nicer proportions, I think.
Of course, sawing a piece off a panel is pretty trivial (unless the saw slips but let's not go there). Real problems arise, however, if you finish a painting then realise you need to make the panel bigger – so try to avoid that eh?
Labels:
oil painting,
plein air,
seascape,
sketch,
step-by-step,
tips
Sunday, October 21, 2012
Plein air oils in springtime
A few days ago I decided to head down to Denmark in the hope of finding a new painting location. I got distracted along the way and ended up driving down some back tracks for a few hours. It was cloudy, so I didn't mind too much as I still find cloudy days difficult for painting plein air. And I did find some nice areas of filled with wildflowers and some interesting places for future reference.
I eventually made it to Lowlands Beach. The surf was "pumping", more than I'd seen it here before, but it was too late to start painting so I just wandered around with the camera and took it all in.
Yesterday was fine and warm so I headed back to Lowlands Beach.
I got distracted again.
I stopped to take a look at the Youngs Siding General Store because it looks like something I might want to paint. While I was staring at it, and tossing up the possibility of painting it, I noticed a small cottage to my right. The sunlight was hitting it hard - I got the easel out and got to work.
Here's the on-location shot...
...and here's the end result. I'm pretty happy with it as this is not a typical subject for me and I captured the glow of the white picket fence, the thing that caught my eye in the first place...
I made a couple of "executive decisions" on this one. The cottage had a fairly new roof, but I chose to make it older. The shrub on the right is much bigger than I painted it - you can see it in the location shot. I wanted to see a bit more of the roof so I pruned the shrub down a fair bit. I'm happy with both decisions.
It was still fairly early, so I packed up and continued on to Lowlands. This time I took my easel with me, down the steps to the beach. So there was no excuse not to paint something.
It took a while to decide which way to face. I sat and stared and wandered around for quite a while before settling on this view of the semi-permanent creek that flows out of the sand dunes, down to the ocean.
I used a limited palette and almost threw the paint on the primed panel. I think there's about half-an-hour's work here - no time for major "executive decisions".
I'm happy with the feeling of light in this sketch, especially the glow behind the foreground rocks and across the breakers. They were my combined subjects. If I had a little more time, I'd try to do something with the "lump" of rocks on the right. Next time.
I eventually made it to Lowlands Beach. The surf was "pumping", more than I'd seen it here before, but it was too late to start painting so I just wandered around with the camera and took it all in.
Yesterday was fine and warm so I headed back to Lowlands Beach.
I got distracted again.
I stopped to take a look at the Youngs Siding General Store because it looks like something I might want to paint. While I was staring at it, and tossing up the possibility of painting it, I noticed a small cottage to my right. The sunlight was hitting it hard - I got the easel out and got to work.
Here's the on-location shot...
...and here's the end result. I'm pretty happy with it as this is not a typical subject for me and I captured the glow of the white picket fence, the thing that caught my eye in the first place...
(The Blue House. Plein air sketch. 30x25cm oil on board. © Andy Dolphin)
I made a couple of "executive decisions" on this one. The cottage had a fairly new roof, but I chose to make it older. The shrub on the right is much bigger than I painted it - you can see it in the location shot. I wanted to see a bit more of the roof so I pruned the shrub down a fair bit. I'm happy with both decisions.
It was still fairly early, so I packed up and continued on to Lowlands. This time I took my easel with me, down the steps to the beach. So there was no excuse not to paint something.
It took a while to decide which way to face. I sat and stared and wandered around for quite a while before settling on this view of the semi-permanent creek that flows out of the sand dunes, down to the ocean.
(Lowlands. Plein air sketch. 30x25cm oil on board. © Andy Dolphin)
I used a limited palette and almost threw the paint on the primed panel. I think there's about half-an-hour's work here - no time for major "executive decisions".
I'm happy with the feeling of light in this sketch, especially the glow behind the foreground rocks and across the breakers. They were my combined subjects. If I had a little more time, I'd try to do something with the "lump" of rocks on the right. Next time.
Labels:
landscape,
limited palette,
oil painting,
plein air,
seascape
The other, other me...
On this blog I'm an oil painter and sometimes digital artist. The other me is a graphic artist and production manager at a regional newspaper. This article is about the other, other me - the amateur thespian.
When I'm not painting, or working at my "real" job, I spend a bit of time on stage.
I joined the Plantagenet Players repertory group shortly after moving to Mt Barker nine years ago. I soon became the resident artist, working on sets and promotional material.
I've just been working on the poster for our latest production, which opens next month, and it got me thinking back over my "almost decade" with Players - and about the posters I've designed along the way. And then I thought, "why not share them on the blog?".
So here you go. A selection of posters from the last half-dozen years or so. All artwork is original. No clip art here.
Next year, Plantagenet Players celebrate their 60th anniversary. Formed in 1953, they've staged at least one production every year since – making them, I believe, the longest, continuous-running repertory group in Western Australia.
I'll return you to normal programming shortly.
When I'm not painting, or working at my "real" job, I spend a bit of time on stage.
I joined the Plantagenet Players repertory group shortly after moving to Mt Barker nine years ago. I soon became the resident artist, working on sets and promotional material.
I've just been working on the poster for our latest production, which opens next month, and it got me thinking back over my "almost decade" with Players - and about the posters I've designed along the way. And then I thought, "why not share them on the blog?".
So here you go. A selection of posters from the last half-dozen years or so. All artwork is original. No clip art here.
2006
2007
2007 (A joke poster - not used. Pity.)
2008
2009
2011
2011
2012
Next year, Plantagenet Players celebrate their 60th anniversary. Formed in 1953, they've staged at least one production every year since – making them, I believe, the longest, continuous-running repertory group in Western Australia.
I'll return you to normal programming shortly.
Thursday, October 18, 2012
A little about brushwork
When I first switched from commercial to fine art, I tended to paint with almost painstaking attention to detail. I used fine brushes and painted leaves on shrubbery in forest landscapes or feathers on portraits of birds. It was a hangover from my days working as an illustrator.
My style has evolved over the last decade, with small breakthroughs in technique occurring every couple of years. It's taken me a long time to loosen up but the last year has seen me become more comfortable with producing loose-looking brushwork.
This particular breakthrough probably came about as a result of a combination of factors:
I mention all this because I was speaking to a friend last night who was giving me her assessment of some of my work. The paintings that really caught her eye were the more expressive ones, with loose brushwork. She felt they had more "personality" – a bit more of "me".
With that in mind, I thought I'd post a close-up of the karri tree painting I did last week. Here's some of the brushwork in the shrubbery at the base of the main tree.
Those almost-horizontal green strokes near the centre represent bracken ferns. Ten years ago I would have spent hours just on them, while these ferns took mere seconds to paint and, for a painting this size, they are as successful as any of the detailed plants I painted in the past.
These plants are only as detailed as they need to be but they aren't thrown on randomly, without any thought. They have tone, colour and temperature. Some parts are in shadow, other parts in sunlight and they express the umbrella-like flatness of bracken ferns – and, although they sit against a very dark area, they are restrained enough to not steal attention from the rest of the painting.
Those strokes were painted with one brush, about 1.5cm (3/4") wide. I placed the loaded brush flat on the surface and dragged it very slightly to make the main strokes. First the cool green shadow then the warm sunlit area. I used the corner of the brush to make the bright, specular highlights.
In fact, I used two brushes of that size on this painting, one for the sunlit colours and one for the shadow tones. I used a slightly smaller one for some "detail" and, finally, I used a rigger for a few "grassy" strokes here and there. Most of what you see, however, was painted with the two larger brushes.
The thin vertical strokes in the ferns were probably also painted with those large brushes as they are certainly capable of producing sharp lines. It is also possible, however, that I flicked those strokes on with a rigger. The thin, twiggy lines near the bottom are a combination of scratching with a satay stick and painting with the rigger.
The point of all this?
Paint loosely, not carelessly.
My style has evolved over the last decade, with small breakthroughs in technique occurring every couple of years. It's taken me a long time to loosen up but the last year has seen me become more comfortable with producing loose-looking brushwork.
This particular breakthrough probably came about as a result of a combination of factors:
- Painting outdoors far more often
- Forcing myself to simplify
- Doing a lot of small paintings
- Setting time limits on some paintings
- Using three brushes, or less
- Rarely using "small" brushes
I mention all this because I was speaking to a friend last night who was giving me her assessment of some of my work. The paintings that really caught her eye were the more expressive ones, with loose brushwork. She felt they had more "personality" – a bit more of "me".
With that in mind, I thought I'd post a close-up of the karri tree painting I did last week. Here's some of the brushwork in the shrubbery at the base of the main tree.
click to see the detail
Those almost-horizontal green strokes near the centre represent bracken ferns. Ten years ago I would have spent hours just on them, while these ferns took mere seconds to paint and, for a painting this size, they are as successful as any of the detailed plants I painted in the past.
These plants are only as detailed as they need to be but they aren't thrown on randomly, without any thought. They have tone, colour and temperature. Some parts are in shadow, other parts in sunlight and they express the umbrella-like flatness of bracken ferns – and, although they sit against a very dark area, they are restrained enough to not steal attention from the rest of the painting.
Those strokes were painted with one brush, about 1.5cm (3/4") wide. I placed the loaded brush flat on the surface and dragged it very slightly to make the main strokes. First the cool green shadow then the warm sunlit area. I used the corner of the brush to make the bright, specular highlights.
In fact, I used two brushes of that size on this painting, one for the sunlit colours and one for the shadow tones. I used a slightly smaller one for some "detail" and, finally, I used a rigger for a few "grassy" strokes here and there. Most of what you see, however, was painted with the two larger brushes.
The thin vertical strokes in the ferns were probably also painted with those large brushes as they are certainly capable of producing sharp lines. It is also possible, however, that I flicked those strokes on with a rigger. The thin, twiggy lines near the bottom are a combination of scratching with a satay stick and painting with the rigger.
The point of all this?
Paint loosely, not carelessly.
Friday, October 12, 2012
Karri: a plein air landscape in oil
Over the years I've painted a lot of karri trees. I saw most of them as "tree portraits", each painting trying to capture the character of a tree in a particular location. Ive painted them next to winding tracks, streams and bridges and I've had them side-lit, back-lit and front-lit. Almost all of them were painted from photo references.
Yesterday, with near-perfect spring weather, I headed out to the Porongurup Range and took a drive through the karri. I was looking for dancing light on some of the granite boulders that populate many parts of the forest but came around one bend and saw sunlight streaming past a large karri perched on the edge of the embankment. I had to paint it!
I took a few minutes to consider composition options - how high, how wide, what to leave in and what to leave out. Then set to work.
Here's the on-location photo showing the painting almost finished.
Here's the "morning after" shot.
I did very little studio work on this, mainly adjusting a few darks and lights that had gone a little muddy in the plein-air rush. It's painted with a fairly limited palette of French ultramarine, cerulean, permanent crimson, cad yellow light and burnt sienna.
I thought I'd take this opportunity to show why photographs are often poor reference material for painting. Here's a shot I took when I began yesterday's painting.
Other than resizing for the blog, this photo is straight from the camera. It was taken with a Canon DSLR. It's a reasonable quality camera with a decent digital chip and, while I don't consider myself a great photographer, I do have some idea about how to use it. Professional photographers might get better results, but how many of us are professional photographers?
In the photo, everything is either green, "grey" or black. The gravel road, that was positively glowing a rich terracotta, looks dead here. The greens are almost-universally cold and vary more in tone than colour or temperature. There's no hint of the warm spring weather I was enjoying. The shadow from the tree is just a big mass of dark "something" and the sky shows barely a hint of blue.
I stood and stared at this tree for over an hour and can assure you, the photo doesn't come close to how things actually looked. Sure there's some exaggeration in my painting but I'm hardly an expressionist. The scene really was filled with colour and warmth. There was texture and detail visible in the dark lower bark of the main tree and the sunlit area at the left-hand base of that tree glowed with rich reddish earth tones - it's what caught my eye in the first place. The canopy of the distant trees was similarly bathed in sunlight - everything back there seemed to be glowing. In fact, I had to tone some areas down in my painting so they didn't compete with my main area of interest.
It's spring. If you visit the Porongurups at this time of year, you're greeted with reds, blues, yellows and pinks of wildflowers, yet the photo above gives no hint of this. It could just as easily be a clear winter's day. With a painting, we can include the colours of the spring, even if there don't happen to be any flowers visible in the exact spot we're painting.
I can adjust this photo in Photoshop to get it closer to how I remember things but, even then, it lacks useful information. To use it as a photo reference, I'd have to be inventive and to do that successfully, I'd need a lot of experience with the subject matter. And if I didn't look at the photo until month after I took it, would I even remember what caught my eye on the day? History suggests to me that I wouldn't.
In short, if you can possibly get out and paint on location, do it. It doesn't matter if the individual paintings fail (I did another one after this that I scraped off as soon as I got home). What matters is experiencing nature first hand.
Yesterday, with near-perfect spring weather, I headed out to the Porongurup Range and took a drive through the karri. I was looking for dancing light on some of the granite boulders that populate many parts of the forest but came around one bend and saw sunlight streaming past a large karri perched on the edge of the embankment. I had to paint it!
I took a few minutes to consider composition options - how high, how wide, what to leave in and what to leave out. Then set to work.
Here's the on-location photo showing the painting almost finished.
Here's the "morning after" shot.
Karri on the edge.
Plein air sketch. 30x25cm oil on board.
© Andy Dolphin
NOT FOR SALE
Plein air sketch. 30x25cm oil on board.
© Andy Dolphin
NOT FOR SALE
I did very little studio work on this, mainly adjusting a few darks and lights that had gone a little muddy in the plein-air rush. It's painted with a fairly limited palette of French ultramarine, cerulean, permanent crimson, cad yellow light and burnt sienna.
I thought I'd take this opportunity to show why photographs are often poor reference material for painting. Here's a shot I took when I began yesterday's painting.
Other than resizing for the blog, this photo is straight from the camera. It was taken with a Canon DSLR. It's a reasonable quality camera with a decent digital chip and, while I don't consider myself a great photographer, I do have some idea about how to use it. Professional photographers might get better results, but how many of us are professional photographers?
In the photo, everything is either green, "grey" or black. The gravel road, that was positively glowing a rich terracotta, looks dead here. The greens are almost-universally cold and vary more in tone than colour or temperature. There's no hint of the warm spring weather I was enjoying. The shadow from the tree is just a big mass of dark "something" and the sky shows barely a hint of blue.
I stood and stared at this tree for over an hour and can assure you, the photo doesn't come close to how things actually looked. Sure there's some exaggeration in my painting but I'm hardly an expressionist. The scene really was filled with colour and warmth. There was texture and detail visible in the dark lower bark of the main tree and the sunlit area at the left-hand base of that tree glowed with rich reddish earth tones - it's what caught my eye in the first place. The canopy of the distant trees was similarly bathed in sunlight - everything back there seemed to be glowing. In fact, I had to tone some areas down in my painting so they didn't compete with my main area of interest.
It's spring. If you visit the Porongurups at this time of year, you're greeted with reds, blues, yellows and pinks of wildflowers, yet the photo above gives no hint of this. It could just as easily be a clear winter's day. With a painting, we can include the colours of the spring, even if there don't happen to be any flowers visible in the exact spot we're painting.
I can adjust this photo in Photoshop to get it closer to how I remember things but, even then, it lacks useful information. To use it as a photo reference, I'd have to be inventive and to do that successfully, I'd need a lot of experience with the subject matter. And if I didn't look at the photo until month after I took it, would I even remember what caught my eye on the day? History suggests to me that I wouldn't.
In short, if you can possibly get out and paint on location, do it. It doesn't matter if the individual paintings fail (I did another one after this that I scraped off as soon as I got home). What matters is experiencing nature first hand.
Labels:
issues,
landscape,
limited palette,
oil painting,
plein air,
tips
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Plein air to studio
This seascape began life as a plein air oil painting and was finished off in the studio.
You can read a little more about it in a previous article - plein air seascapes; still going - and note that I've taken it to a finished stage since that post.
It is now framed and hanging in my exhibition at West Cape Howe Wines.
(In the bay. 35x25cm oil on board. © Andy Dolphin)
SOLD
SOLD
You can read a little more about it in a previous article - plein air seascapes; still going - and note that I've taken it to a finished stage since that post.
It is now framed and hanging in my exhibition at West Cape Howe Wines.
Exhibition and a win
Two big stories for this blog update so I'll have to choose which one to mention first.
I'll make a decision and start with my exhibition.
The joint exhibition with Sue Hartley opened at West Cape Howe Wines last Thursday night. It was one hell of a day leading up to it. It was cold (snow was predicted on the nearby Stirling Range), wet and windy. So it was a great surprise to see people take the drive out of town to attend.
A couple of red dots got the evening off to a nice start and everyone enjoyed the log fire, the food and the new-release wines that were on offer.
Thanks to West Cape Howe and to everyone who came along and made it a great night.
The exhibition is part of the Southern Art & Craft Trail which includes exhibitions right across the Great Southern.
In other news, I took out first prize at the 2012 Plantagenet Art Prize with my studio painting Knight's Canola.
That's me, on the right, with judge John Greeuw. And here's the painting...
I want to thank the Plantagenet Shire for their continued support of the annual event and the Plantagenet Arts Council who put in a lot effort to get the exhibition together. There's some great work on show, including a wonderful exhibit of art from students of Mount Barker Community College and an amazing display of fantasy pieces from the local pottery group.
I'll make a decision and start with my exhibition.
The joint exhibition with Sue Hartley opened at West Cape Howe Wines last Thursday night. It was one hell of a day leading up to it. It was cold (snow was predicted on the nearby Stirling Range), wet and windy. So it was a great surprise to see people take the drive out of town to attend.
A couple of red dots got the evening off to a nice start and everyone enjoyed the log fire, the food and the new-release wines that were on offer.
Thanks to West Cape Howe and to everyone who came along and made it a great night.
The exhibition is part of the Southern Art & Craft Trail which includes exhibitions right across the Great Southern.
In other news, I took out first prize at the 2012 Plantagenet Art Prize with my studio painting Knight's Canola.
That's me, on the right, with judge John Greeuw. And here's the painting...
Knight's Canola
37x50cm oil on board.
© Andy Dolphin
SOLD
37x50cm oil on board.
© Andy Dolphin
SOLD
I want to thank the Plantagenet Shire for their continued support of the annual event and the Plantagenet Arts Council who put in a lot effort to get the exhibition together. There's some great work on show, including a wonderful exhibit of art from students of Mount Barker Community College and an amazing display of fantasy pieces from the local pottery group.
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Art Trail Exhibition 2012
Just a quick reminder that I will have a selection of works for sale at West Cape Howe Wines in this year's Southern Art Trail.
I will be at the official opening:
7pm, Thursday, September 27
If you're in the area, I'd love to see you there.
Here's one of the paintings I'll have on show.
Evening Shadows.
40x60cm oil on board.
© Andy Dolphin
SOLD
40x60cm oil on board.
© Andy Dolphin
SOLD
West Cape Howe Wines is on the old Goundrey Wines site, down Muirs Highway about 10km from Mt Barker. The exhibition is on for two weeks and also features work by West Cape Howe's resident artist, Sue Hartley.
Labels:
about,
art trail,
available,
exhibition,
news,
oil painting
Plein air seascapes update
I've had this photo ready to post for a while but haven't had the chance until now.
This was the painting I did on site last Saturday.
My main interest here was to try and capture some of the warm light that occurs around sunset. To achieve this, I added cadmium scarlet to my palette and introduced it into the background haze and all sunlit areas. I pushed the water colour toward green in order to make the complementary warm reds appear even warmer.
In reality, the warm light was very short lived and much of what's in the painting is invented. I'd finished the sketchy background long before the light warmed up.
As a sketch, it works just fine. If I make any adjustments, or if I make a larger painting from it, I'll likely reduce the intensity of the blue-greens in the water, darken the background and push the brightest highlights even more towards orange-red.
This was the painting I did on site last Saturday.
(In the bay 3. Sketch. 35x25cm oil on board. © Andy Dolphin)
My main interest here was to try and capture some of the warm light that occurs around sunset. To achieve this, I added cadmium scarlet to my palette and introduced it into the background haze and all sunlit areas. I pushed the water colour toward green in order to make the complementary warm reds appear even warmer.
In reality, the warm light was very short lived and much of what's in the painting is invented. I'd finished the sketchy background long before the light warmed up.
Labels:
limited palette,
oil painting,
plein air,
seascape,
sketch
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Plein air seascape sketch in oils
Here's the painting I did on Friday.
(In the bay 2. Sketch. 30x25cm oil on board. © Andy Dolphin)
I arrived on site fairly early so I took a little time to map out some of the major tonal masses before painting. Actually, I sat and looked around for quite a while before I even set the easel up. The sun was so high I couldn't see much for the glare!
In this painting I used cerulean blue to make the transparent green in the wave. It's less invasive than the spectrum viridian (based on pthalo green) that I occasionally use, and will do the job well enough in most cases but it doesn't make the rich, translucent green that the viridian can.
This one is shown exactly as it was when I packed up. No touch-up back in the studio.
Labels:
limited palette,
oil painting,
plein air,
seascape,
sketch
Plein air seascape - but wait...
...there's more!
Date: Saturday, September 15, 2012
Weather Forecast: Fine, partly cloudy.
There were large cumulus clouds building at home but I wanted to return to the bay where I painted yesterday and Thursday. I made the 60km (that's one-way), 45-minute trip to the coast around 3:30pm and when I arrived, the sky was clear - not a cloud to be seen.
I started painting later than usual today because I hoped to capture some of the warm evening light I'd seen as I was packing up yesterday. This takes a bit of planning and some assumption because the really warm light only lasts for about 10-15 minutes, at best, and that's not nearly long enough time to complete a half-decent seascape painting.
I added cadmium scarlet to my palette, along with ultramarine, burnt sienna, cadmium yellow light and a touch of viridian.
The cadmium scarlet found its way into most colour mixes, especially the misty background, but its major role was in the highlights, ensuring these would take on a warm, orange-red glow. I was careful to keep the viridian out of anywhere it wasn't needed.
Here's the location shot, taken after sunset.
Green Islands, Albany. Photo by Andy Dolphin.
Date: Saturday, September 15, 2012
Weather Forecast: Fine, partly cloudy.
There were large cumulus clouds building at home but I wanted to return to the bay where I painted yesterday and Thursday. I made the 60km (that's one-way), 45-minute trip to the coast around 3:30pm and when I arrived, the sky was clear - not a cloud to be seen.
I started painting later than usual today because I hoped to capture some of the warm evening light I'd seen as I was packing up yesterday. This takes a bit of planning and some assumption because the really warm light only lasts for about 10-15 minutes, at best, and that's not nearly long enough time to complete a half-decent seascape painting.
I added cadmium scarlet to my palette, along with ultramarine, burnt sienna, cadmium yellow light and a touch of viridian.
The cadmium scarlet found its way into most colour mixes, especially the misty background, but its major role was in the highlights, ensuring these would take on a warm, orange-red glow. I was careful to keep the viridian out of anywhere it wasn't needed.
Here's the location shot, taken after sunset.
Labels:
limited palette,
oil painting,
plein air,
seascape,
sketch,
sunset
Friday, September 14, 2012
Plein air seascapes - still going!
Three updates in one!
Date: Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Weather Forecast: Fine.
More fine weather and back to the coast I go. Still getting my head around the apparent chaos of waves, breakers, foam and rocks.
Here's Wednesday's piece.
My aim with each of these paintings is to try and capture the form and energy of the waves, without referring to photos or other people's paintings - and trying to ignore "what I know a wave looks like". I want to witness it first-hand and get it down in paint. That's only going to come from staring at, and painting, a lot of waves.
Date: Thursday, September 13, 2012
Weather Forecast: Fine.
On Thursday afternoon I returned to the same place but decided to move over about 20m and face in a different direction.
The sky was mostly clear and the sun was already low. The translucent green topping each big wave that came through caught my attention.
I used ultramarine, burnt sienna and yellow as my base colours and added spectrum viridian (a pthalo green derivative) to the palette to deliver a crisp, clean transparent green. The problem with this is that spectrum viridian is a strong-tinting colour and if it's on the palette then, during the plein air rush, it's going to find its way into everything that has even a hint of green in it.
And it did.
The sun was setting fast while I painted and the scene changed dramatically as the light warmed. I finished after the sun had set. Here's how the painting looked on location.
The photo above shows how it looked in the light of day this morning. Despite the overall green tone, I'm really pleased with it. But I decided to make a few adjustments, while it was still wet.
I've gone over most of the painting with subtle colour shifts. I've added blues and siennas to counter the greens - except where a clean green was essential. The biggest change is the background hills. The old green was too "electric" (pthalo green will do that), so I made it more "earthy" (is that a word?) - now the water and shrubbery are clearly different things.
Date: Friday, September 14, 2012
Weather Forecast: Fine.
Today I was going to stay in the studio and start a bigger piece. But after making the adjustments to yesterday's painting, I looked at the weather forecast and decided to go back and have another look.
I zoomed in a bit closer than I did yesterday, focussing more attention on the rock being swamped by the breaking wave. I used a different palette for this one - no viridian - and took more time.
Here's how things looked when I packed up - just before the sun set (you can see the warm glow of the setting sun on the side of the easel and in the distant haze).
I'll tell you more and post a finished photo tomorrow.
The photo at the top of the article shows the spectacular end to another day's painting. All three days had similarly beautiful ends.
Green Islands, Albany. Photo by Andy Dolphin.
Date: Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Weather Forecast: Fine.
More fine weather and back to the coast I go. Still getting my head around the apparent chaos of waves, breakers, foam and rocks.
Here's Wednesday's piece.
(The "must-have" location shot)
(Another Breaker. Sketch. Oil on board. © Andy Dolphin)
My aim with each of these paintings is to try and capture the form and energy of the waves, without referring to photos or other people's paintings - and trying to ignore "what I know a wave looks like". I want to witness it first-hand and get it down in paint. That's only going to come from staring at, and painting, a lot of waves.
Date: Thursday, September 13, 2012
Weather Forecast: Fine.
On Thursday afternoon I returned to the same place but decided to move over about 20m and face in a different direction.
The sky was mostly clear and the sun was already low. The translucent green topping each big wave that came through caught my attention.
I used ultramarine, burnt sienna and yellow as my base colours and added spectrum viridian (a pthalo green derivative) to the palette to deliver a crisp, clean transparent green. The problem with this is that spectrum viridian is a strong-tinting colour and if it's on the palette then, during the plein air rush, it's going to find its way into everything that has even a hint of green in it.
And it did.
The sun was setting fast while I painted and the scene changed dramatically as the light warmed. I finished after the sun had set. Here's how the painting looked on location.
The photo above shows how it looked in the light of day this morning. Despite the overall green tone, I'm really pleased with it. But I decided to make a few adjustments, while it was still wet.
(In the bay. Sketch. 35x25cm oil on board. © Andy Dolphin)
I've gone over most of the painting with subtle colour shifts. I've added blues and siennas to counter the greens - except where a clean green was essential. The biggest change is the background hills. The old green was too "electric" (pthalo green will do that), so I made it more "earthy" (is that a word?) - now the water and shrubbery are clearly different things.
Date: Friday, September 14, 2012
Weather Forecast: Fine.
Today I was going to stay in the studio and start a bigger piece. But after making the adjustments to yesterday's painting, I looked at the weather forecast and decided to go back and have another look.
I zoomed in a bit closer than I did yesterday, focussing more attention on the rock being swamped by the breaking wave. I used a different palette for this one - no viridian - and took more time.
Here's how things looked when I packed up - just before the sun set (you can see the warm glow of the setting sun on the side of the easel and in the distant haze).
(And... another location shot)
I'll tell you more and post a finished photo tomorrow.
The photo at the top of the article shows the spectacular end to another day's painting. All three days had similarly beautiful ends.
Labels:
limited palette,
oil painting,
plein air,
seascape,
sketch
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