Showing posts with label oil painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil painting. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 September 2011

A Seat In The Shade

oil on canvas 120 x 80 cm or 47 x 31.5 inches
I had to post something else up on this blog as the picture that Katherine posted of me, night painting, really began to annoy me as it popped up in the side bar of my blog!  
This is a big studio piece that I did for my recent exhibition at Beside The Wave.  Obviously larger studio works are done from photographs and I know that many people see that as "cheating" somehow.  Personally I know that many many artists use photographs but very few admit to it, it seems to be a bit of a naughty secret.  I don't see anything wrong with using as much information gathering media that you can lay your hands on.  I know one artist, Paul Lewin, who makes soundscapes which enhance his work and put him into the "zone" to work on his studio based paintings.  Another, Miles Heseltine,who takes very deliberately rubbish videos of the place he wants to paint and plays them over and over while he paints. 
 I do think that if you are going to use photographs then it is vital that you also work outside, en plein air, or draw and sketch as much as you can.  This practise really helps you use the photo properly, lets you control what you put in your painting and avoids a slavish copy.  We look and see very differently to the way a camera does, we are interested and stimulated by strange things while a camera sees and records all.  You need to make yourself aware of how you "see" before working with a photograph.
Anyway the exhibition went very well, my work sold well.  I was pleased by what sold and surprised by what didn't sell, some of the strongest peices didn't sell which only goes to show that there really is no way of predicting what makes somebody buy a painting!

Wednesday, 13 July 2011

A little night painting

Now I'm back home I've started to load all my photos into a Flickr Collection - Provence 2011 - for all to see - minus a few which will only be shared with those who visited Provence!

I thought I'd post a few of these to the blog so you can see what you would have seen while we were there if we hadn't had the lightning strike.

The first is to show you that Sarah not only produces lots of paintings - but also that she does it at all times of the day and night!

Here's a photo of her night painting on the night when we had the total eclipse of the moon.  That's as in plein air oil painting at night!

Sarah Wimperis - plein air oil painting at night

Wednesday, 6 July 2011

Oil painting #4 - the view from Julian's studio window

This is the small oil painting I did of the view from Julian's studio window after I gave up wasting paint on the canvas boards and gave them three coats of gesso instead!

It was done the day after the lightning strike when the weather was a bit odd and I was waiting around to see "what needed to happen next" re the telephone and modem - so staying near to the house seemed like a sensible idea.  Ruth did a sterling job in England sorting out the telephone people while I dabbed at the board with some paint!

Oil Painting #4 - the view from Julian's studio window
5" x 7" oil on board
I feel I have to keep saying that those vineyards really are dayglo green at a certain time of day - their colour absolutely staggered me the whole time we were there.

The painting is on a small 5" x 7" board and the smoother surface of the sanded down gesso certainly helped me paint.  I also learned how to scratch out and what happens if you use a bit more paint and a bit less solvent.

I made a mistake with this painting in trying to include the roof of a small outbuilding which made absolutely no sense to the painting unless you knew what it was - which was when I learned about how you can paint things out of the picture!

The main benefits/lessons for me were
  • finding out how much I liked working at an easel in a studio!  That's not something I routinely do and I now have to think about how this might be remedied in "real life" - as opposed to "Provencal life" which is now becoming something of a dreamlike state!
  • learning just how difficult it is to find a subject which works in terms of composition, colour and brushwork when painting a small painting.  My admiration for those who can do this grew in leaps and bounds - especiallyin relation to the local landscapes produced by Julian.  
The need to simplify much more is I hope a lesson well learned.  I'm not saying this painting is in any way good - it's just the product of a learning process and hopefully that's one which I will use to re-engage with oil painting in the near future. 

Sunday, 3 July 2011

The Heat of the Day

Shadow Shed.  Oil by Sarah Wimperis

Washing Line and Pegs.  Oil by Sarah Wimperis
House in the Hot Sun.  Watercolour by Sarah Wimperis.
 Here are a few little paintings, done in the heat of the midday sun in Provence, with the sound of the cicadas making the heat even more intense.  Dry grass and dusty earth and the smell of pine resin. 


Friday, 1 July 2011

A Little More From Far Away

Rainy Day.  Oil. By Sarah Wimperis.

Midnight, Summer Solstis.  Oil.  By Sarah Wimperis


Blue Chair. Oil. By Sarah Wimperis.
Having got home and unpacked my bags, mostly painting equipment and paintings, I have done a final count up and seem to have managed to have done 59 paintings in two weeks.  I am terrible at doing things after the event, blogging stuff that has been done and when the time has past I find difficult.  Not having the Internet for a week has also made me realise what a fantastic archiving system having a blog is! 
So while it is all fresh in my mind and before I get right back into illustration work and more painting I shall be making a page at the top of this blog, and on my blog The Red Shoes which will show all 59 paintings, large and small, oil, watercolour and gouache, good, bad and indifferent.  It is an archive, you might be interested to see what one, slightly obsessional, painter can do with two weeks.  I also want to say that every one was painted "en plein air" and "alla prima"  In other words, painted on the spot and in one hit!
I will, in later posts go through the materials used and any tips that I have learned from this trip.

Monday, 20 June 2011

Two from Sarah

Blue skies and beautiful shadows in the early morning.  Little oil by Sarah Wimperis and after she had done this she toddled off to do yet another painting of the Potager.  This time with a view of the mountain in the blazing midday sun.

Potager in the Midday Sun by Sarah Wimperis.
There are many more of her Provencal paintings over on her blog The Red Shoes

Saturday, 18 June 2011

The second oil painting was another story

I enjoyed painting my first oil painting. However the second (and the third - which was a repeat of the second) were a different story.

I think they were both pretty awful - which was quite depressing

I had to give myself a pep talk of the "It takes a long time to acquire skill - you can't expect to be good straight away" variety.

I found the paint quite sticky to work with compared to the previous day and need to work out whether it's the weather or me.

Here's a shot of it in the field - literally - before I had a go at "improving it". I tried another version - equally bad.

The second oil painting - in the field and unfinished

Friday, 17 June 2011

Ruths Potager With Storm Clouds Gathering

Oil on board, by Sarah Wimperis.  More paintings of Provence are posted on her blog The Red Shoes because she cant stop painting and this blog isnt a one man show!

My very first oil painting

Well - there really isn't another title which describes its significance. I've been getting round to painting in oils for the last five years.

Yesterday morning I watched Sarah paint using the alkyds and then secreted myself away in the nearest decent shade and had a go for myself.

Got to go and start another one now. We're learning not to waste the early morning hours before it gets too hot

This morning at 6am we waved "Goodbye" to Ronelle who has returned home for a family celebration this weekend

Wednesday, 15 June 2011

A Little Night Painting

Painted by Sarah Wimperis. 10.30pm.
I am so in love with this place already.

Tuesday, 31 May 2011

The art books are going too!

I'm quite sure that Julian has an excellent library of art books - and I'm looking forward to reading some of them.  However on the journey down and while I'm there I want some of my comfort zone books with me.

Particularly since I'm Learning how to paint with oils in Provence.

I realised how long I've been planning to paint in oils when I took a look at my shelves to find the oil painting books.

Here's the books I've bought in the past - with particular reference to the ones I'm probably taking with me.  I'm including links to the websites of artists which is another way I buy books - because I ask the question "Do I like the art that the artist produces?"

General information / compendium
Single author - oil painting instruction
Squinting eliminates the unnecessary
  • Brushwork Essentials - by Mark Christopher Weber  (North Light Books 2002) This is a book which I bought on the basis of a recommendation in an earlier exercise about "best books" on this blog.  It's the only book I've ever come across which shows you which brush to use and how for which effect.   
  • Colour and Light in Oils by Nicholas Verrall (Batsford 2004)  This is a painter who is very positive about the use of colour - particularly in countries around the Mediterranean.  His book also focuses on how to bring space, depth and light into oil painting.
I've also got quite a few books (understatement!) which focus on some of the greatest painters working in oils - such as John Constable and JMW Turner.

The ones I'm inclined to take with me are the books by Curtis, MacPherson and Verrall - and quite possibly the brushwork book too.

Over on Making A Mark today I have a post which poses the question Which are the best books about oil painting?  It asks for suggestions as to what are good books.

Sunday, 29 May 2011

My Art Materials - or why it's a good idea to take a car!

This is my checklist of art materials and equipment for drawing, sketching and painting in Provence.  It contains some top tips from people more experienced than me at painting plein air in oils.

I thought I might as well put it on the blog and then I can't lose it!  I'm bound to have forgotten stuff I need to take so this will keep being updated as I remember it!  Hopefully it will be complete before I set off on 9th June.

Now I know it looks like a lot but I am going to be in Provence for three weeks and this is a painting holiday not a sightseeing one.  Plus I've got six days of travelling there and back when I'll be fitting in sketches to break up the journey.

Plus I'm driving - and that's what I buy a decent sized car for - so I can take art materials on holiday!

Sketchbooks
  • Moleskine sketchbooks (A3, A4 x 2, ordinary size)
  • Moleskine watercolour sketchbook
  • Panorama sketchbook?
Dry Media

Unison Pastel Sets at Walden Pond
  • My complete sets of Unison Pastels - seen above during a plein air outing to Walden Pond in Massachusetts
  • My Pastel Art Bin (more portable!)  So sad to see that they don't seem to be making these any more - I really like them.  However they won't take Unisons which is why I've always kept mine in their boxes.
  • Lots and lots of coloured pencils + pencil wraps + pencil cases
Links:
Paint

Water based media
  • Schminke paintbox - if I can find it
  • Gouache - but whose? / do my old tubes still work?
  • Black brush roll and Brushes for watercolour / gouache
Oil paints
  • W&N Griffin Alkyds (need to buy / including 200ml white / need to decide how these are best carried)
  • W&N Liquin
  • W&N Art Guard
  • W&N Art Gel
  • Brushes for Alkyds - to buy 
  • Palette knives for Alkyds - to buy
  • Cheap nutcrackers for if lids are hard to open (tip from Vivien Blackburn)
  • Zest It
  • Disposable Palette Pad
  • Really Useful Boxes for paint tubes and other art media
  • Baby oil to clean brushes and clothes!  (another tip from Vivien Blackburn)
I'm also looking at oil bars as maybe a half way house for me -see Winsor & Newton's page Artists' Oilbar - Oil Colour at your Fingertips

Paper and supports
  • Pack of Arches sheets cut down to usable sizes
  • Arches HP Block
  • Ampersand Colorfix (Fix colourfix to mountboard?)
  • Mountboard cut down to usable sizes (plus gesso? / plus watercolour ground?) 
  • Oil Painting Pad (A3?)
  • Baking Paper to cover wet paint (that tip was from Sarah) 
  • Cling film to cover palette (that tip was from somebody else - I forget who) 
Links:  Paper and Non-Canvas Supports - Resources for Artists
    Art Equipment
    Me on my Phillips Chair - nearly 20 years ago
    Sketching Pura Ulun Danu Bratan by Lake Bedugal in Bali
    Check this gallery for the pastel painting completed at home
    Various chairs and stools

    I'm going to take different ones have different weight for different circumstances - plus we're a party!)
    Drawing boards and clips
    • Different size sheets of 5mm foam core for drawing board 
    • LOTS OF BULLDOG CLIPS (can you tell what I often forget?)
    Easels and pochade boxes
    Vivien - who understands my problems with carrying too much weight / the need to maintain balance at all time (or else I fall over due to very dodgy feet!) - suggests I forget the pochade box and easel and use something lightweight as an alternative - she's now written up her advice in the email below as a proper post re what she takes on painting holidays
    Consider as an alternative,  a simple plastic food box - the kind with clip sides is good.  That's what I took to Cornwall.  Though I took my easel I never actually used it!   I hand hold my work - you can use the lightweight board you use and clip your sketchpad and palette to it with bulldog clips.  The liquin and palette knives fit into the box as well.   Brushes in an old padded envelope rolled up.   Then baby oil and rags and tissues plus your oil paper sketchbook and it all fits into a lightweight rucksack.
    Vivien Blackburn (Painting Prints & Stuff)
    Painting media equipment
    • baby oil and wet wipes - for cleaning up
    • Masking tape
    • roll of kitchen towel 
    Pastels and Pencils media equipment
     Links:   

    Camera etc
    • Camera + charger
    • two new SD cards
    • spare batteries + charger
    • Camcorder + charger + new SD card
    • iPad + mains lead + USB cable + up to date software
    • card reader
    Venice shopping trolley
    doubles as Artcart
    Other essential equipment

    • Sun Tan cream / sun block
    • long sleeved shirt for if I'm in full sun
    • insect repellent plus cream for if I get bitten (guaranteed!)
    • Visor to keep sun out of my eyes.  I don't wear sunglasses while using colour.
    • Hat with decent brim
    • Baby Oil and wet wipes - clean up equipment
    • Shopping trolley from Venice - this from a holiday where I gave in and realised that the shopping trolleys were an excellent way of getting stuff around really easily 
      Exhibition

      Even if it's just for ourselves!

      • BluTak for displaying work without damaging walls 
      Books about Oil Painting

      But that's another post.......

      Saturday, 28 May 2011

      Learning how to paint with oils in Provence

      My challenge for this painting holiday is to learn how to paint with oils.

      I've got enough time and hopefully enough good weather to make some progress.

      However I'm a bit wary of the drying time, (given I've got to transport paintings home plus all the rest of the paraphernalia associated with being away for four weeks).  I've been with people painting with oils in Provence before who were completely stumped as to how they were going to transport wet oil paintings back home on a plane.

      Which means I'm leaning towards using Alkyd oil paint instead as this is quick-drying and that will mean I'm hopefully transporting paintings which are dry.
      All colours in the range remain workable on the palette for 4 to 8 hours, and are touch dry on the canvas in 18 to 24 hours.
      Winsor and Newton - Griffin Alkyds
      I'd be very interested to hear from anybody who has used either or both in what will hopefully be a warm/hot summer climate.

      Colour Palette - what's available and what I will need

      Below is the colour chart for Winsor and Newton's Griffin AlkydsThis is the table of information about composition and permanence which indicates all are rated extremely permanent or permanent.  Now to work out which ones to get!

      Winsor & Newton Griffin Alkyd Colour Chart
      click to see larger version on W&N website

      My experience when going abroad is that there is usually a colour which is quite unlike anywhere else. 

      I've already asked Julian (Postcard from Provence) what his recommendations are as to colours.  I remember when I first went to Provence feeling a strong need to get some naples yellow very fast.  I also couldn't work out what colours made the sky colour or the universal blue house paint of Provence.

      Julian suggestions for blues are as follows
      • Manganese blue or ceruleum and ultramarine
      • cutting ultramarine with cad red to get that hot dusty blue/grey which is so south of france
      • the deep blue of looking up away from the sun I usually manage with ultramarine and ceruleum or manganese mixed 
      My Queries

      Since this is a virtual house party, I've listed my queries below.  Do feel free to join in! :)
      1. What colours do I need for Provence?
      2. Does anybody had any experience of using Zest It with Alkyds?  I'm very keen on using something which is non toxic.
      3. Which brushes work best when painting small paintings with alkyds?
      In my next post I'll be ruminating on easel versus pochade......