The idea of the epic versus the incident derives ultimately from Von Schmidt's teacher Harvey Dunn, and his 'grandteacher,' Howard Pyle.
Saturday, October 31, 2020
Von Schmidt's Ideas about Epic and Incident
The idea of the epic versus the incident derives ultimately from Von Schmidt's teacher Harvey Dunn, and his 'grandteacher,' Howard Pyle.
Friday, October 30, 2020
Brushstroke Tips
Good brush technique happens when you convey the most information with the least effort. But we don't want technique to be the subject. It's easy to make a painting look like paint; the viewer's awareness of the surface is a given. Painterly execution should invite the viewer beyond the brushstrokes.
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Previously: "Ten Tips for Better Brushstrokes"
Thursday, October 29, 2020
Hunters and Gatherers
Wednesday, October 28, 2020
Painting a Backlit Parked Car in Casein
I painted this casein study while Jeanette was in the market, so I had about 45 minutes.
I took a gamble on the car staying parked, and lost the gamble twice, but kept going anyway.
(Link to video)Tuesday, October 27, 2020
Sunny Still Life Challenge Results
You tried some bold experiments and achieved some excellent results. You've all inspired me to try some of the triadic combinations and subjects. It was hard to choose one Grand Prize and Five Finalists. Here they are:
Catherine Cervas Heaton "Bocce Set in Sun," 5" x 8." By the time I figured out what I was going to paint, after two other subjects failed, I had one sunny day--and finished today indoors because the shadows were getting long outdoors. Lemon Yellow, Hooker's Green, Permanent Rose, Titanium White."
Yoko Matsuoka
"There were so many hairy caterpillars out that day, and I'm allergic. It made it quite an adventure. Colors used are Cadmium Yellow, Ultramarine, Alizarin Crimson."
Check out some of our previous challenges:
Monday, October 26, 2020
Can Reënactors Match a Battle Painting?
Sunday, October 25, 2020
Voter Line
Still, from the point of view of people-sketching, I could only capture only an impression of each person. I used watercolor with a brush, no pen or pencil. I think I got the spacing wrong—folks were spaced apart responsibly.
Saturday, October 24, 2020
Return of Spitting Image
Political satire has a vibrant tradition in Britain, and one of the most dynamic recent programs was a puppet show in the 1990s called Spitting Image.
From the point of view of puppeteering, the characters are caricatures come to life, with a tremendous range of hand, mouth, and eye movements. The scripts and performances are crisp, over-the-top, and rude.
Spitting Image has returned with all new episodes lampooning the current crop of politicians, including Boris Johnson, Donald Trump, Mike Pence, Nancy Pelosi, Joe Biden, Prince Charles, and Meghan & Harry.
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New Season of Spitting Image, Episode 4
Friday, October 23, 2020
Thursday, October 22, 2020
Waldmuller Study
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
Rose O'Neill: Kewpies and Monsters
Rose O'Neill (1874-1944) was an illustrator, cartoonist, and writer who created hundreds of drawings of cute babies and young animals, and she invented the Kewpies.
She called them "Kewpies," a term she invented as a variation on "cupids."
They became immensely popular as illustrations, paper dolls, and then actual dolls.
Her friends urged her to publish these works, and finally she shared them with the world but didn't want to intellectualize them. According to 41 Masters of American Illustration, "these things were made for the maker's own delight, and are given to the public only under pressure of people who think it should be done, so the maker feels that she should not be put to the trouble of justifying her whimsies."
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Toy collector Mel Birnkrant's Kewpie collection and bio
Rose O'Neill on Wikipedia
The Story of Rose O'Neill: An Autobiography
Masters of American Illustration: 41 Illustrators and How They Worked
Tuesday, October 20, 2020
My Taboret Top
3. I use Liquin for a medium, which speed drying, plus mineral spirits, but I may do away with the latter for health reasons.
4. The brush wash tank is a peanut butter jar with a little plastic cup dropped in the lid, with holes drilled into the bottom of the cup.
5. The whole thing sets on a rolling cabinet. In the top drawer are pencils, lots of pencils.
6. A take-out container with a slot cut through the lid holds paint scrapings, discarded on hazardous material days.
7. Old cotton T-shirts make great paint rags. A wiggly wire holds the handles up a little.
8. Paint mixing area tips up on hinges. The polyethylene-coated mixing paper is hidden behind the left edge. I tear off old mixtures as I pull the paper through.
9. Brushes: Nylon flats, long bristle filberts, and watercolor rounds are my favorites.
Monday, October 19, 2020
Sunday, October 18, 2020
Mise-en-scène
The giant ovoid heads have toothy grins, but they have no eyes.
However, I wasn't primarily interested in the forms of the monsters when I did this little on-site painting. (Watch the YouTube video)
It's mainly a study of mise-en-scène. The term comes from the world of theater and film, and it means literally 'putting on a stage.' Informal workspaces like this one are an ideal place to find interesting examples of mise-en-scène because of the elements are placed without aesthetic intention.
Mise-en-scène is a crucial element of picture making. Traditional theory defines to include many aspects that a director, production designer, or cinematographer would deal with, such as point of view, framing, cropping, placement of props and characters, lighting, and color. In film, it also includes how elements move throughout the shot, and even frame rate and lens choices.
Such a broad definition waters down the meaning for me. When I think of the term in relation to painting, I usually think more narrowly of the original sense of how elements are arranged in relation to the viewer. Are there foreground elements? Are some things cropped off the edge? Are they neat or messy?
Here's a video that explores the topic from the point of view of film. (Link to video)
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Wikipedia on mise-en-scène
Saturday, October 17, 2020
Painting in the Wild Things Workshop
Friday, October 16, 2020
Spectrum 27 Flip-Through
This year's edition of Spectrum presents a juried selection of contemporary fantasy art, including dragons, warriors, monsters, trolls, angels, and dinosaurs.
Thursday, October 15, 2020
Atmosphere in Pencil Drawings
Wednesday, October 14, 2020
Making Brushes
(Link to video) This video shows some of the steps.
(Link to Part 2) The manual dexterity and expertise explains why brushes cost as much as they do.
Previously: How to Clean Out a Brush
Article on Brushes on The Artist's Road website
Tuesday, October 13, 2020
Skybax Rider Print
Will Denison flies on his Quetzalcoatlus high above the city of Sauropolis.
Signed copies of the art print "Skybax Rider" are now available in the Dinotopia Store
Monday, October 12, 2020
When Parents Oppose Your Choice to Be an Artist
When she kneeled before him and begged him not to go, he insisted "'Well, then, go," she said. "'Go and wallow in the filth of Paris, sully your name, and kill your father and me with sorrow and shame! I will not re-enter the house till you have left it. You are my son no longer. I curse you!"
Berlioz later reflected that he could never forget that "painful, unnatural, horrible scene," and it solidified his resolve to overcome many obstacles later.
Sunday, October 11, 2020
With Bierstadt on a Painting Expedition
In 1859, Albert Bierstadt (1830-1902) organized a painting expedition in the high country of the Rocky Mountains. He sought out the help of William Byers, editor of the Rocky Mountain News, a "mountain tramp" who knew his way around.
Byers recalled how the artist "said nothing, but his face was a picture of intense life and excitement. His enthusiasm was badly dampened, but the moment he caught the view, fatigue and hunger were forgotten. He said nothing, but his face was a picture of intense life and excitement. Taking in the view for a moment, he slid off his mule, glanced quickly to see where the jack was that carried his paint outfit, walked sideways to it and began fumbling at the lash-ropes, all the time keeping his eyes on the scene up the valley."
The artist produced one sketch after another, each time exceeding his estimate of how long it would take.
“Wait twenty minutes while I sketch this storm.” They waited, but twenty minutes flew by, and he was still at work. Thirty, forty, and fifty minutes, and then an hour was gone, and the artist, absorbed in his work, was earnestly engaged in transferring the natural sublimity before him to paper. At the end of an hour and a half the artist completed his sketch."
According to Eleanor Harvey in her book The Painted Sketch,
"'It was claimed that the artist’s recording “every detail of so wide a view in time—sketches, each limited to twenty minutes, and each noting the time of day, and consequent relative position of the sun, is one of the secrets of M. Bierstadt’s success.' He also developed a reputation early in his career as a prolific artist in the field, evidenced by the weight of his accumulated materials.”
Books:
Albert Bierstadt: Witness to a Changing West
The Painted Sketch: American Impressions From Nature, 1830-1880 by Eleanor Harvey