Clouds and Architecture

Last night I visited Continental Art Supply over in Reseda to attend a special event there to meet representatives from major paint and art supply companies, among others Art Graham of M. Graham paint. He was, as always, charming company, filled with the self-assurance of a man who knows his work is well done, quietly and capably passing on his knowledge with a calm confidence gained from decades of working with pigments in pursuit of producing the best paint he can make. As the man who made it possible for me to continue painting in oil without using turpentine, Mr. Graham is something of a heroic figure to me, so this was the painters equivalent of meeting Elvis, or David Bowie. Thanks for making such great paint!

Two tasks occupied my attention in the studio, first, softening the clouds a little with a glaze of Ceramic White, so there is a bit less of a sense of an impending storm. I used a soft rag to even out a scumbled coat of the paint, which blurred the details of the cumuli and made the sky much gentler. I allowed the white glaze to cover the land on the horizon too, then ragged most of it off to make the land-mass blend to the sky a little.

Finally, a little time spent on fixing the architecture on the left side proved to be worthwhile, with much improved lines emerging to shape the marble balustrade. But I’m not finished with the shapes of the stone: the right side will additional reworking to make it right, particularly the back edge of the curve and I see at least one line that will require further replacement on the left.

My students are doing excellent work in the studio, which makes me particularly happy. We have only five weeks until the end of semester!

Posted in Empress, Making work, Tarot-related paintings, The Cardinal Virtues | Leave a comment

Clouds

By using dense Ceramic White to create the highest fluffy tops of the clouds I’m able to scumble paint down, then rag it to soften the body. Once the softening work is done for the first mass I’ll repeat the process to make layered cumuli all the way down to the horizon. The horizon line gets special treatment – I’ll make a brighter blended line above the landscape that merges into the sky.

Posted in Empress, Making work, Tarot-related paintings | Leave a comment

Colour!

Having finished the en grisaille work I began working on the sky and ocean with a lovely Cobalt Blue from M Graham which seemed incredibly intense until it was ragged down to make the grey base coat emerge as the first gesture toward white fluffy cumulus clouds.

Making clouds becomes fairly straightforward when approached in these steps: grey base, ragged off blue, transparent white fluffy areas with opaque tops. The photo shows the second stage. Tomorrow I hope to lay down some whites to create the upper parts of the clouds. Everything in the sky will lighten up as the layers build up.

The ocean is based in a Cobalt Blue with some Ivory Black added to darken it, emulating the seas painted by Alma-Tadema. There wasn’t enough time to work on the surface of the water today.

Posted in Empress, Making work, Tarot-related paintings | Leave a comment

Six and a half feet

This is a significant day in the growth of this painting, because with the completion of the Raw Umber work on the legs I’ve pretty much finished with the en grisaille layer, with the exception of the cherry trees that will have to wait until the sky is done.

I’d like to correct the architecture on the left side of the courtyard, because the foreground wall rises too quickly into its arc, making it appear a little distorted. Easy to correct, I can figure this out while I work on the sky without interfering with the blues and whites that I’ll introduce above the girls. I’m looking forward to getting some foliage into the piece, which feels a bit too clean at present. Once the marble veins and cracks are done I can experiment a little with some flowers and creepers.

In my mailbox this morning – The Pre-Raphaelite Papers – what looks like a good collection of documents by and about the Pre-Raphaelites, which I hope will give me some more insight into their painting techniques. I’ll report later this week.

It’s getting gloomy earlier and earlier, making the light in the studio change a lot. I’ve moved a daylight corrected light over to my easel so that I can get a better sense of the colours although I think this lamp is a little yellower than the actual Northern daylight I get from the high windows above my work area.

Posted in Empress, Making work, Tarot-related paintings | Leave a comment

Legs to stand on

Actually, if you’ve been counting, you’ll know that there are only seven legs beneath the girls. I’m not adding the eighth, which should be supporting the second attendant from the right because it would mess with the rather pleasing “M” shaped composition that’s created beneath the figures.

Most of the time I’m still working in Raw Umber over dry white – so far the wet white has mostly been confined to the flesh, where it works well to create the soft blends that make the changes in value more pleasing, although here I used blended white and brown to create the sandal straps. There’s a huge difference in colour that’s noticable when you compare the quality of the Raw Umber rubbed over a dry white background (the flesh of the feet) to the same pigment mixed with the white (the sandals), isn’t there?

I’ve not yet put the shadows of the girls onto the marble floor. I’ll have to add those in place when I work on the veining and subtle colour shifts of the stone.

Posted in Empress, Making work, Pre-raphaelite, Tarot-related paintings | Leave a comment

Legs

After a slow start I’ve finally got back into the groove and started getting the legs into shape. I’m rubbing in the shadows with Raw Umber and working on building the sandals beyond the very sketchy outlines I have previously rendered using a striping brush with some Foundation white on a small round. I’m enjoying the work, although it did take a while to get into it today.

Earlier I painted out the “Roman soldier” version of the dress on the left side because it seemed too square for these carefree teenagers to wear – I want lightness to dominate, and I’ve got about as much heavy work going on on the right hand side as I’d like to see just in those buckles. I really don’t want to overweigh the left side with too much material, because the legs come forward so much – if there’s a lot of information around them to the left I fear that they won’t feel as free of gravity. I’ll re-work the surface of the dress with this new, layered design in a Raw Umber when the Foundation White is dry so that it matches the rest of the base work. I think I’ll let colour be the factor that separates this dress from the white of the Empress’.

Posted in Empress, Making work, Tarot-related paintings | Leave a comment

Fifth Dress

I’ve begun work on the dress on the left side, having laid down plenty of Lead White over the white dress worn by the Empress herself. I’ve let some of the background behind the Empress’ dress show through here and there, with it’s warm tint glowing slightly, remaining from the Iron Oxide Red first seal, and added shadows with Raw Umber so that the surface of the fabric shifts slightly in both colour and value as your eye moves across the surface.

The new dress on the left remains incomplete, but you can see the structure of what is to come, with square patches sewn together into a pattern vaguely resembling a Roman soldier’s armour. I’ll add lead white highlights to the pattern next, glaze over the Raw Umber with a thin coat of Lead White to soften the darkness, then I must pay attention to the folds in the bottom skirt of the fabric to create some folds in it.

Posted in Empress, Making work, Tarot-related paintings | Leave a comment

Values (legs and dresses)

Now that the legs have had a layer of value added to them they’re beginning to feel more substantial, and I’ve worked on the toes of the upper foot too, making some sense of toenails and repainting one of the toes completely to make them more evenly spaced. Adding some shadows to the second dress has made the Empress’ dress more prominent, and I plan to continue to build more complex work on the fabric of all the attendants while leaving her clothes quite simple.

Soon on the agenda, to add detail into the clothing, finishing the ribbon dress, then moving over to the other side of the painting to work on the first attendant’s clothes.

Posted in Empress, Making work, Tarot-related paintings | 1 Comment

Ribbon Dress

I’ve been working at the ribbon dress to create a good first layer that will take definition nicely. In addition, I painted out the earlier version of the dress worn by the second girl from the right in favor of a much simpler folded fabric. I might change this again later, but I’m considerably happier than I was with the earlier version. I’m fighting fatigue already this evening, so I’m not getting much more done today, and I don’t ever get much out of working beyond the point of tiredness, so I’ll let this stand for now and let it dry overnight, then continue working on it tomorrow.

The reason I’m tired is that I was in Sacramento this morning leaving to get the earliest plane, having spent the weekend visiting a small town called Murphys, up in the Sierra foothills, to tell people about my University. To get there you pass through some strange landscapes – open expanses of dry hills, followed by rolling hills with thousands of evenly spaced oak trees. I wish I’d thought to shoot pictures, because those oaks were so unusual – such a dry landscape for so many trees. A magical but simultaneously bleak place.

Posted in Empress, Making work, Tarot-related paintings | Leave a comment

A Ribbon Dress Takes Shape

I’ve elongated the fingers and added some value to the elegant hand supporting the legs, then put the fingers of another hand at the top of the Empress’ calf (you can barely see the edge of it in this picture). I’ve tried to be as light-touched as possible with these hands so that the Empress feels as if she is floating out of the attendants’ grip. I’m happy with the slight elongation of the fingers and scale of hands and feet because this increases the illusion of the legs popping forward out of the frame of the canvas.

I’m unable to work comfortably around the fresh paint on those hands, so after I added the second hand (on the left side) I began working on the dress below the legs. I’m interested in making this dress appear to be made of an under-layer that is covered by a fairly dense layer of ribbons twisting and criss-crossing as they descend from the belt. Slow, detailed work.

Posted in Empress, Making work, Tarot-related paintings | Leave a comment