tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2999230124118604245.post6864461698288177319..comments2024-03-28T09:25:25.716-04:00Comments on Gurney Journey: Victoria's AndyJames Gurneyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01870848001990898499noreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2999230124118604245.post-1899456336590980322017-09-12T16:45:08.200-04:002017-09-12T16:45:08.200-04:00After visiting the Brandywine show over the weeken...After visiting the Brandywine show over the weekend, I can only say that I tried to examine several "drybrushes" closely and found that:<br />1) In one instance at least can clearly see use of white gouache: in the net on the left of the <a href="https://goo.gl/images/VwSrxh" rel="nofollow">bull painting</a><br />2) Some washes and dabs suggest a mix of watercolor and gouache (probably white) akin to what Nathan Fowkes uses. These have the watercolor quality but look too opaque<br />3) Others look like thick paint straight from the tube. Just "squeezing most of the moisture out between your fingers" would leave your brush either too dry to leave any mark or too wet to create the thick, opaque dabs of paint that one sees in Wyeth's drybrushes.<br />4) Wyeth also occasionally used black ink, such as in <a href="https://goo.gl/images/9i8nK2" rel="nofollow">The German</a>, where its streaks even created the tree trunks. I believe that the black in <a href="https://goo.gl/images/NX2s6R" rel="nofollow">Lovers</a> is also black ink.Peter Drubetskoyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10463750011872829081noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2999230124118604245.post-65346057284014050842017-08-26T06:00:08.614-04:002017-08-26T06:00:08.614-04:00Coming from another painter, Wyeth's theory t...Coming from another painter, Wyeth's theory that "Art has no rules" could easily sound like a self-serving cop out or an excuse for laziness. But more than any other contemporary painter I can think of, Wyeth earned the right to make that claim. He paid his dues with decades of long, careful exploration of exact appearances. Good for him for expending his capital in conclusions like this.<br /><br />As an aside, Wyeth's personal temperament probably doesn't matter much now; his personal acquaintances who had to suffer through whatever attitudes and issues accompanied his artistic genius are dwindling in number and soon will be gone. Then his art will be left to speak for itself. But while we're still living in that cusp, it's probably worth noting that Wyeth seemed to be a lot more playful with his grandchildren than his children. His children tell stories about being abandoned for hours in the woods because their father became fascinated with the shape of some leaf and forgot about them. His grandchildren, on the other hand, seem to recall a much more benign and attentive figure. David Apatoffhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11293486149879229016noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2999230124118604245.post-21330873250809978512017-08-24T22:39:25.366-04:002017-08-24T22:39:25.366-04:00Wish I could get to the show, but the book is very...Wish I could get to the show, but the book is very nice. Saw the In Retrospective show last month - spent 5 days at the Brandywine studying 104 paintings. Magnificent!<br /><br />Understanding Wyeth's drybrush technique is pretty complex, for sure. James is correct that he drybrushed over juicy passages laid down as a base. With drybrush Wyeth was basically using his tempera techniques with watercolor. Much of what he put down as drybrush watercolor is pretty opaque.<br /><br />It takes a LOT of practice to even to begin to understand this technique! Maybe someday...<br /><br />p.s. this is a wonderful site!Billhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18190713889392549046noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2999230124118604245.post-77786567734399777562017-08-24T16:58:40.153-04:002017-08-24T16:58:40.153-04:00Ted, I've never been completely satisfied with...Ted, I've never been completely satisfied with this explanation, and A.W. wasn't one to talk much about his technique. Looking at one of his originals called a "dry brush," I noticed that it had plenty of passages of juicy, wet washes. There seemed to be quite a variety of brush size, dryness, and pigment load—certainly not all dry!James Gurneyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01870848001990898499noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2999230124118604245.post-16054427627750294932017-08-24T16:45:56.372-04:002017-08-24T16:45:56.372-04:00James,Thanks for the post on Andrew Wyeth. I have...James,Thanks for the post on Andrew Wyeth. I have a question about his “dry brush” technique. I have never seen an adequate explanation of the method. All that I have read seem to come from the same source, “ take a brush loaded with watercolor and squeeze most of the moisture out between your fingers . . . “ This sounds so glib that I question whether any of these folks have ever actually tried it, because if they had they would surely know that it is obviously not that simple. Can you offer any insight into his so-called dry brush method?Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04666534965302617329noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2999230124118604245.post-69331312035445813542017-08-23T11:57:34.507-04:002017-08-23T11:57:34.507-04:00In "Between Walls" we are ushered into a...In "Between Walls" we are ushered into a world "where nothing will grow," a world full of cinders and broken glass. And yet the poet manages to find life and beauty between these walls. Likewise, Andrew Wyeth could find the shining, living spirit in a dead winter landscape.Jim Douglashttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11445910147970356728noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2999230124118604245.post-7329776504565334992017-08-23T11:54:35.915-04:002017-08-23T11:54:35.915-04:00Between Walls
By William Carlos Williams
the ...Between Walls <br />By William Carlos Williams <br /><br />the back wings <br />of the <br /><br />hospital where <br />nothing <br /><br />will grow lie <br />cinders <br /><br />in which shine <br />the broken <br /><br />pieces of a green <br />bottleJim Douglashttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11445910147970356728noreply@blogger.com