Showing posts with label light and color. Show all posts
Showing posts with label light and color. Show all posts

Friday, November 29, 2013

Layers of Light


It’s hot, it’s cold, it’s elusive, and it changes everything.


I was walking mid-afternoon in my neighborhood enjoying the autumn colors, the geese overhead and far off dogs barking.  The long shadows reminded me of shorter days and longer nights, the loss of light.  Humans have an instinctive love of light, and if I can’t have as much in the next few months, I’ve found ways to create it in my studio.


First Encaustic 3 3/4 x 3 3/4 wax on tile
For many years I’ve wanted to learn the ancient art of encaustic painting, the application of hot pigmented wax in layers to a surface.  I got my chance under the direction of Dianne Rodwell in her Encaustic Kitchen at her Artspace Studio in Raleigh. I learned many techniques for achieving special effects. Because beeswax is translucent, wonderful depth is achieved as light seeps through the layers diffusing the light and working its magic on the layers of color.  This ancient art is a feast for the eye as well as a temptation for the hand.  You want to sneak a guilty stroke of its surface.



 

Spring Glow #2 started with transparent oils.  oil 8 x 8

Not long after Diane’s class, I dove into a three day, fun packed (and calorie-packed-yum, thanks to Lynda Chambers) discovery of transparent colors with Dreama Tolle Perry.  The jewel like transparent colors she recommends allow light to flow through and around the painting. Opaque paints are used carefully in the final layers of the painting and in higher, lighter values to create a still heightened sense of light.  I have rearranged my painting palette to separate transparent colors from opaque colors to heighten my awareness during the painting process.Here are two interpretations of the same scene, one below painted with no mind for using transparent oil colors in the first layer, and the one to the left started with transparent oils in the first layer.
 
Spring Glow oil 10 x 8 SOLD




Mike Rooney CRAZY color-red block on yellow block
"What's in the light?  What’s in the shadow?” Mike Rooney kept asking.  In the Cape Cod Under-painting method (CCU), you use one set of colors to paint what is in light, one set to paint what is shadow, always being aware more of correct value, than of correct local “real” color (what he calls “home” color).  After a morning reminding us of how a color is one value in light becomes a different value in shadow, he introduced the application of “crazy color”.  He set up colored blocks set up on colored paper under a spotlight.  Our task was to paint a picture of the block, painting the sides hit by the spotlight using only red, yellow, orange or pink; the sides in shadow could only be painted from the colors green, blue, purple, or alizarin red.  Mind you, this might be a RED block!  So the shadow side of a red block might have to be purple or blue, not a dark red or dark orange.  Or if it were a yellow block, the shadow side might have to be green.   C- R-A-Z-Y color! 

It’s in the next layer where the artist corrects the color, without obliterating all of the under layer, bringing the color closer to “real” color. The eye grabs crazy color, mixes the layers, and you see united color full of rich light or shadow.



Light diffused through wax, transparent colors, eye-mixing crazy color defining light and shadow.  I’ll be experimenting with all these new ways of bringing light into my creative work. Goals set!


How will YOU capture the light during the winter months? I'd like to hear from YOU! Please leave comments and questions.

My paintings are available at Cary Gallery of Artists 200 S. Academy St. in downtown Cary Ashworth Village. 919-462-2035 Mon-Sat 11 am - 5:30 pm.

 . . .And by contacting me at the following links:

Monday, October 1, 2012

The Truth of Light and Color

Recently I traveled just four miles down the road to McNair Horse Farms  .  . . and back in time to Henry Hensche and the Cape Cod School of Art with the help of Lee Boynton. (thank you Waverly Artists Group for bringing him to Cary).

Most of my teachers paint and teach with the limited palette approach, mainly four tubes of colors.  This makes for very harmonious paintings and makes mixing colors, especially for beginners, a much easier learning experience.  It is amazing how many variations of color can be achieved with the limited palette.  But honestly, I’m not the most patient mixer.  And because a painter can never really duplicate the natural brilliance and intensity of natural light, I have been frustrated in finding ways to translate what I perceive onto the canvas with the limited palette.  So I have been yearning to find out more about the full spectrum palette and ideas of the Cape Code School of Art.  The full spectrum palette often has up to 20+ colors representing more of the color wheel.

Lee Boynton started us off “practicing the scales”, that is, painting colored blocks—to see how light changes color on planes facing different directions.  He reminded us this was essentially what Monet was doing with the haystacks—watching the effect of light and atmosphere.  It wasn’t about the haystack, it was about seeing and painting the light and atmosphere.  Upon returning home, I made my own colored blocks so I could continue to “practice the scales”.

What Lee said during the workshop was often in agreement with what my other Impressionism teachers have taught (especially “always paint the light, not the object”).  He persistently emphasized awareness of the warmth or coolness of the color in the light (also something emphasized by my other teachers). He mentioned that the Cape Cod school of thought has sometimes emphasized color over value, but he, himself, does not.  But he mentioned that nature is not homogenous.  By that I understood him to mean that representing the full spectrum of color found in nature was more important to him than strictly harmonizing the palette. (But here, this is my own conclusion, not his statement.)  He also does not harmonize the painting by toning the canvas, a common practice of many painters, believing this can muddy or deaden the sense of light of the colors.

"All Silence and Glimmer" 8 x 8 oil
Available
First painting completed following the workshop
With my color blocks, some tips and techniques to try, new colors on my palette, and new inspiration, Lee has given me fresh tools on the journey to become the painter I want to be.

Drop in Cary Gallery of Artists 200 S. Academy St. in downtown Cary to see my paintings and the work of other local artists. 919-462-2035

In the Wilmington area, drop in Figments Gallery, 1319 Military Cutoff, Landfall Shopping Center  Wilmington, NC 28405 910.509.4289

www.sheffieldartstudio.com