You state "Gouache is ideal for this because you can place layer over layer and fix anything." Can't the same be said for casein. I'm struggling to figure out whether I like gouache or casein better after struggling for several years with watercolor. Do you choose one over the other based on subject matter, specific objective, or just whim of the moment?
Love your work and have learned a lot from your "____ in the Wild" videos.
Douglas, I'd say that gouache and casein are comparable for the kind of additive, brush-built paintings like this one. Both are opaque and fast drying, which is what you want. You can do it in oil, too, but you need practice at laying an opaque stroke down over wet paint and not muddying it up too much. Transparent watercolor, as you know, usually takes a bit more planning in the drawing stage.
Thanks for the response. I did oils many years ago & never got the hang of "thick over thin". After being introduced to gouache & casein through your YouTube channel, I concluded that my brain (neither right- nor left-) can handle the subtractive nature of watercolors. Gouache & casein really appeal to me and I am much more comfortable with them than I have been with any other medium. To me, choosing one over the other is more a matter of deciding if a scene evokes an "opaque watercolor" (gouache) approach to me, or a "convenient but like oil paint" (casein) approach. These are the primary differentiators to me.
Thanks again for sharing your work, knowledge, and talent with us. Doug
This is amazing -- the figures are clear, strong gestures (drawn with a brush and multiple colors) all in scale with the perspective. Additionally, the resolution of detail diminishes and the color shifts as the figures recede into the distance. But I really like your approach to the background: your first strokes were soft and washy with some seemingly random directional strokes, bold in shape but close in value, then, when you lay the more descriptive strokes of the signage and building over top, they give the impression of a much more complicated structure. All within a very appealing palette. Well Done!
Brings to mind the old Roger Waters lyric: "Random precision...".
You left out those tough looking security chaps;-) Wherever there are crowds, they tend to appear nowadays.
Excellent feature once more, thanks. You must have drawn a million human figures in your lifetime by now - the accumulated memory perhaps helps "random precision";-)
Delightful sketch. Love the lady duly appreciating.
You state "Gouache is ideal for this because you can place layer over layer and fix anything." Can't the same be said for casein. I'm struggling to figure out whether I like gouache or casein better after struggling for several years with watercolor. Do you choose one over the other based on subject matter, specific objective, or just whim of the moment?
ReplyDeleteLove your work and have learned a lot from your "____ in the Wild" videos.
Thanks,
Doug
Douglas, I'd say that gouache and casein are comparable for the kind of additive, brush-built paintings like this one. Both are opaque and fast drying, which is what you want. You can do it in oil, too, but you need practice at laying an opaque stroke down over wet paint and not muddying it up too much. Transparent watercolor, as you know, usually takes a bit more planning in the drawing stage.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the response. I did oils many years ago & never got the hang of "thick over thin". After being introduced to gouache & casein through your YouTube channel, I concluded that my brain (neither right- nor left-) can handle the subtractive nature of watercolors. Gouache & casein really appeal to me and I am much more comfortable with them than I have been with any other medium. To me, choosing one over the other is more a matter of deciding if a scene evokes an "opaque watercolor" (gouache) approach to me, or a "convenient but like oil paint" (casein) approach. These are the primary differentiators to me.
ReplyDeleteThanks again for sharing your work, knowledge, and talent with us.
Doug
People in the Wild? Wonderful!
ReplyDeleteThis is amazing -- the figures are clear, strong gestures (drawn with a brush and multiple colors) all in scale with the perspective. Additionally, the resolution of detail diminishes and the color shifts as the figures recede into the distance. But I really like your approach to the background: your first strokes were soft and washy with some seemingly random directional strokes, bold in shape but close in value, then, when you lay the more descriptive strokes of the signage and building over top, they give the impression of a much more complicated structure. All within a very appealing palette. Well Done!
ReplyDeleteBrings to mind the old Roger Waters lyric: "Random precision...".
just wonderful as always ! - Thanks :)
ReplyDeleteYou left out those tough looking security chaps;-)
ReplyDeleteWherever there are crowds, they tend to appear nowadays.
Excellent feature once more, thanks. You must have drawn a million human figures in your lifetime by now - the accumulated memory perhaps helps "random precision";-)
Delightful sketch. Love the lady duly appreciating.