Pre Raphaelites in London

I have no photographs to share from today’s Pre Raphaelite adventures, because once again the paintings we saw were concealed under thick glass, preventing me from getting decent pictures and making close examination difficult.

This time we were at the Tate Britain in London on what seems to be becoming a fairly regular pilgrimage for me, visiting two of my favorite paintings: Ophelia by Millais and Waterhouse’s Lady of Shalott, both magnificent.

Presently the Waterhouse is hung very poorly for a painting that is so popular, too high on the wall to see, and because it’s been glazed it’s impossible to look at it in any detail.

I’m searching for evidence of wet-white technique, and perhaps found some here: Although the face of Ophelia appears to have been painted en grisaille, there are areas of the creek water that may have have a blue glaze over a wet white layer. I suspect that he painted the flesh using a Raw Umber blended into the white to find the shadows, then adding glazes of skin tones to bring it to life, finally adding the deeper shadows in a last layer.

Ophelia is painted on a smooth ground; a gessoed canvas that reveals no texture.

Posted in Britain, Life, Other people's work, Pre-raphaelite | Leave a comment

Rossetti’s working methods

Having the good fortune to find an unfinished Rossetti “Lady of the Window” hanging in the Birmingham City Art Museum led me to an exciting time looking closely to see what technical insights I could gain from the work.

Although the painting, like the entire collection at the gallery, is preserved under reflective glass that makes really close examination impossible, and photography pretty much impossible (the museum’s internet record of the painting includes a much better quality large image that you can click on, zoom in on, and thoroughly enjoy), I was able to see that the canvas had been gessoed quite thoroughly, so that the weave of the cloth was not visible and the surface was pretty smooth, although I could see some sliding marks in it that I suspect were made by someone wiping a layer of the gesso with a rag.

Once gessoed the painting appears to have been sealed with an Iron Oxide Red, then probably an en grisaille rendering of the face and hands. There is very little drawing to guide the painter, who was perhaps intending to work up his rendering of the fabric once he completed the work on the face and hands, freeing an instantly recognizable Jane Morris from her duty as his model.

I think this painting was done using a simplified version of the famous wet white technique, because there’s an almost violet colour appearing in the shadows on the left of the face that seems to be glazed over the top of a blended layer that includes light greys, making me think that first Rossetti worked in white, adding raw umber into it to find shadows, then working over an already dried en grisaille version of the face and hands, adding colour to the lips and shadows.

The paint is laid down quite thickly, and has a slightly scumbled surface, making me think it was done in a lead white, which has a tendency to stringiness. The hair is quite textured in a dark brown, which I hesitated to identify.

The rest of the collection was worth a visit, although its reputation might lead you to think that it’s more extensive than it really is. I thought the presentation of the works could have been better, particularly in the first hall, which is hung conservatory style without the benefit of good lighting, so the highest works are almost invisible unless you cross the room, by which time they have become tiny. However, with several major works by aesthetic Victorians, including a couple of truly spectacular Burne-Jones watercolours which are impressive not only for their scale but also for their unusual palette and the artist’s magical rendering, the entire gallery is a treat for Pre-Raphaelite fans.

Posted in Making work, Other people's work, Pre-raphaelite | Leave a comment

Studio talk

 

I had the pleasure of hosting a studio talk at my space at CLU yesterday afternoon, including a brief demonstration of glaze painting, using a Sap Green over the background of the Star to show the luminosity and  flexibility of oil painting. Between twenty and thirty people attended, and we had a very pleasant afternoon together. I spoke about the allegorical meaning of the four big paintings, alchemical symbolism, renaissance emblems, traditional painting techniques and teaching.

I was moved by an email I received this afternoon from Margaret Fieweger who told me that she was reminded of two poems as I spoke about the big paintings around the studio. First, accompanying the Magician, Fire and Ice - a piece by Robert Frost written in 1923

Some say the world will end in fire,

Some say in ice.

From what I’ve tasted of desire

I hold with those who favor fire.

But if it had to perish twice,

I think I know enough of hate

To say that for destruction ice

Is also great

And would suffice.

 

The second piece she chose to accompany the Traveler was Pied Beauty written by Gerard Manley Hopkins in 1877.

 

Glory be to God for dappled things–

For skies of couple-colour as a brinded cow;

For rose-moles all in stipple upon trout that swim;

Fresh-firecoal chestnut-falls; finches’ wings;

Landscape plotted and pieced–fold, fallow, and plough;

And all trades, their gear and tackle and trim.

All things counter, original, spare, strange;

Whatever is fickle, freckled (who knows how?)

With swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle, dim;

He fathers-forth whose beauty is past change: Praise Him.

Posted in Angel, Empress, Magician, Making work, Performance / lecture, The Star, The Traveler | Leave a comment

Star turn

After continuing the patchy Raw Umber brown a little further by using a rag to lift leaf shapes from the paint, revealing the orange glow of the Iron Oxide ground, I’ve expanded the range of the star shaped jasmine flowers to create an S shaped swoop down behind the figure. This done I spent a pleasant hour or two adding a layer of light grey leaf shapes as I did before, ready for a glaze of green that will give the background a softly focus leafy feeling.

I’ve added some sketched lavender points at the bottom, but I feel very reluctant to go into detail in this painting, preferring to allow the girl to be the centre of attention. It’s a trick used by those great Pre-Raphaelite painters Millais and Waterhouse, whose landscapes are sometimes so blurry that they resemble French Impressionist paintings, with the exception that the figures are rendered with greater care.

In the studio Joseph and Stacy prepared the space for a special event tomorrow: we’re hosting a group of friends of the CLU Art Department to spend a little time to learn about the work that I do to teach our students traditional technique in the BA program here. You can see the Traveler, the Empress, the Magician and the edge of the Angel of Death. I’m really pleased to see them all together in the space – it gives a sense of how they will work in a museum context.

Posted in Angel, Empress, Pre-raphaelite, The Star, The Traveler | Leave a comment

Legs

Two layers of paint on the legs have given them some solidity, but I’m not yet satisfied with them; once I’ve applied a glaze coat of Ceramic White the color will match the upper half of the figure. The jug has been painted with a thin coat of very light blue, cleaning up some messiness and refining the finish a little. It still needs some warmth to drop in shadows and bring some vibration to the surface.

I’m considering how to complete the foreground, thinking about grasses and dirt. I don’t want to paint too much detail in this, because I want the focus to remain on the girl, but I think some more jasmine in an “s” shaped composition around the girl will work well. There’s already a nice texture built around her feet that’s suggestive of tangled foliage, I’ll add more leafy work, perhaps including some lavender spikes there mixed in with the jasmine lower down in the painting.

Some exciting news from the university – Tony Pro and Mike Adams are joining our faculty, Tony to teach Design and Mike to teach Drawing.

Semester is drawing to a close, with final critiques and big changes to our seniors’ lives. I’ve enjoyed the company of my students this semester. It’s good to see them understanding the processes of painting. I really hope they carry with them an appreciation for painting and making art that influences them for the rest of their lives.

 

Posted in Life, Making work, The Star | Leave a comment

A Hand and a Little Green

A glaze of Sap Green over the loosely painted leaves and jasmine flowers is softening the background and helping to make the figure come forward. Now that the flowers are less bright they compete with the hair and face much less, which draws our attention to the girl. However, I’m neglecting to paint the legs, so the lower half of the painting must get taken care of now.

I’ve added more Yellow Ochre mixed with a little Cadmium Orange into the shadows of the dress, and a little Cobalt Blue to the darker areas on the right below her arm. The lower arm has been given a first layer of flesh, using the same white, orange and green mix as the rest of her skin. I like the quality of the mixture very much, so this might be a permanent change of my painting habits. Because it’s a first layer you’ll see more work correcting errors and finessing detail.

Finally, I did a little work on the jug, defining it’s shape with a little Raw Umber. Presently it’s still en grisaille, and a little colour will dramatically alter its appearance. 

Posted in Making work, The Star | Leave a comment

Background

This has been quite a week, including an unexpected visit to the hospital for a little investigation into my heart that turned out well, showing that my ticker is strong and pretty much ok for now. I’ll spare the details, but the doctor was alarmed by my extremely high cholesterol and shortness of breath, so things got a little exciting.

Regardless of the outcome of these adventures (which are still not over) I’ve been unable to spend any significant time in the studio, with the exception of finding a morning to add some background work that will become more substantial with a couple of glazes and some more detail. I’ve added more jasmine and used a Raw Umber and white to create a light grey series of leaf shapes without any detail, over the top of the previous darker layer. On the positive side, the painting’s had plenty of time to dry thoroughly, so I can work at any point on the surface without worrying about moving paint that I already laid down.

It’s good to be back in the studio. To work!

Posted in Life, Making work, The Star | Leave a comment

Yellow Dress

Two images of the work in progress today: first, a picture of it the face this afternoon with another layer of flesh adjusting the work; and then the first layer of colour going onto the dress.

I added Titanium White to the face to pick up highlights, using it instead of the Ceramic White because it’s so much more opaque and brilliant, lending itself well to producing clear lights that really pop out. It was useful in the hair too, differentiating areas of subtle shadow from the brighter areas. To enhance the shadows I carefully added a glaze of Raw Umber, and a touch or two of Burnt Sienna here and there, particularly around her eyes.

It’s really been a day of close detail work, trying to get increasing accuracy in the features and subtle shifts from colour to colour. Limiting the palette really helps, and allowing the paint to be transparent enough for the foundational grey work to control the value of the colour that’s being applied over it.

I’m satisfied with the new mixture of Cadmium Orange and Viridian for the flesh. I’ve put my hand into the picture so that we can see how well the colour matches to real skin (notice that the lower hand is still in its simplest form; I’ve yet to put any detail onto it at all). The new mix is very close to flesh when a little work on enhancing shadows adds to the dark values. I’d also like to add some discrete areas of very slightly blue colour into the shadows to make it really vibrate.

Posted in Making work, The Star | Leave a comment

Flesh

I’ve started to lay down the first layer of flesh colour to the figure’s skin, using a velatura of Viridian and Cadmium Orange with Ceramic White, then popping in and blending a touch of Iron Oxide Red in the shadows, and a little pure Ceramic White for light areas. The skin is becoming more skin-like as a result, and now her dress stands forward from the flesh, having a layer of pure Ceramic White glazing it and softening some of the dark shadows that create the folds.

I must remember to discretely use a little Viridian and Cadmium Orange somewhere in the leaves so that the foliage unifies with the figure.

For folks who are interested in the interpretation of the Star as an allegorical emblem I’d like to share this: there are three entries in the fourth century Hieroglyphics of Horapollo on the interpretation of the star symbol, including:

“What do they mean by a Star? When a star is painted by the Egyptians, they mean a god, twilight, night and time, as well as man’s soul”.

In another entry the late Egyptian priest says that the star was used to represent the goddess Isis, defender of young children and the dead. In fact this is completely inaccurate, although of course renaissance artists couldn’t possibly know what hieroglyphics really meant, having only Horapollo for their interpretation of these ancient symbols, leading to centuries of symbolic imagery based on bad information!


Posted in Making work, Sources, Tarot-related paintings, The Star | Leave a comment

Star Jasmine

I changed my mind about working on the figure today, choosing to develop the background a little more instead. I’ve painted the first of the star jasmine flowers around the figure, setting up the first layer of several more to come. There’s something very satisfying about repetitive work when it makes patterns as pretty as these flowers, but there’s a sense of endurance about it too. I find it contemplative and plaesant, in the same way that yoga asanas bring about a meditative state.

Once I’ve done a few more smaller flowers and some leaves a glaze of green will drop these ones back, then I’ll do another spread of them over it, bringing depth and variety that will feel true to reality.

The figure is still ghostly and needs solidity, so I’m looking forward to building more depth and dimension. I’m pleased to have a more substantial background so I can balance the value of the figure against it with greater confidence.

Posted in Making work, The Star | Leave a comment