Sunday, August 21, 2011

Full weekend in plein air
 After yesterday's poor turnout I decided to go out again today and see if I could get some good paintings in before the weekend was over. For some time now I have been telling myself to document my painting process for my own learning purposes and to help others. Today I luckily remembered to document part of a painting that emphasized an important part of my process. When I plan out a painting the first thing that I do is turn everything I see into large abstract shapes. Then those shapes are combined until I gain 4 or 5 large shapes which I assign values based on creating the illusion of depth and for composition purposes. Sometimes it turns out successful.
Anyway today I got situated on a sandbar down in a creek and painted looking through a silhouette of trees onto this hillside that was lit up with sunlight. The tree that attracted my attention the most was the tree in the mid right that was standing straight up against on top of the bank. It was standing there with the hill as its backdrop just asking to be painted. As you can see in the top photo refrence I had blocked in all the main masses and was beggining to do detail work in the top shape when I decided to take a photo for analyzing the progression later on. It was taking this picture in black and white that helped me realize where I needed to go next. As you can see there is a lot of contrast between the trees and the hillside like I wanted. The problem is the contrast was so just as strong against the other trees which drew attention away from the focal tree. The best way to fix this was to darken the background trees behind the hill to lower the contrast on the trees to the left and right of the focal tree and this also helped with a few other things as well. First it helped the hill to really shine. When the background trees were the same value as the hill the entire top third of the painting was so bright that the hill didn't stand out. Adding the slightly darker value above the hill helps push the eyes back into the painting when they wander up the tree silhouettes. The other thing darkening the top did was to blend the edge of the other trees slightly so the focal tree has the hardest edges giving it the look at me treatment. I would advise anyone that has a digital camera to take it with them and record their progress as they go. Do this in color and black and white. Who knows what you might find out about your painting by just taking a picture of it.


This is another painting from today. It turned out to be more abstract than I had planned. There were tons of trees coming out of this gigantic bush(which was actually just a bunch of smaller trees). I liked the way the large trees came through the top and were all lit up from above casting down filtered light onto the smaller trees.

1 comment:

  1. I hope you try some more of this with the light filtering down through the trees. I really like this one.

    ReplyDelete