Friday, October 24, 2008

Figures: The Endless Pursuit

Here are two sketches of a figure drawing originally made from a live model. The original was a more finished sketch that I am trying here to just redraw quickly in a more gestural way. I am trying to get only what is needed. I did probably a dozen of these.



Sitting Figure Sketch I





Sitting Figure Sketch II



Then I did some paintings after finding some sketches that I liked. They all have areas of texture presented in different ways, and they have various ways of trying to maintain some line, and they also have washes. The first painting doesn't work for me. The line is from paint in a squeeze bottle, and it just is too uniform and hokey. The second painting has a nice wash and there is some definite line visible with the use of graphite pencil, but it's not exactly what I am after. The third painting I like the most because the texture is more what I like but there is no line in it of the kind that I am trying to achieve and the washes/glazes could be more drippy and 'wrought with emotion,' not to sound melodramatic or nothin'.


Sitting Figure III



Sitting Figure IV



Sitting Figure V



So what am I after exactly with showing 'line' in my work? Well this is a good question and one that the folks from Golden Paint asked me after I pleaded with them to make an acrylic drawing medium. One that was in a form (like oil sticks perhaps) that could be vigorously drawn onto an acrylic painting at any stage and that could be manipulated further with water or medium. So I searched through some work that might display what I am after.

The first image 'Blue Bow" shows line in two different ways. First with the blue paint strokes and second, and harder to see in this image, are the initial charcoal sketching lines underneath. I really like these lines and constantly try to maintain bits and pieces of them in a painting. Inevitably I end up overworking the painting and they get completely covered up, or compared to the paint they just aren't quite strong enough. I do like the separation of my elements in this piece, the line, the paint lines, the washes, and the heavy areas of paint.

Blue Bow


This second piece shows all of those elements in a little bit different way. Here I am using a pencil initially and then water soluble color pencil and then oil paint. I just really like the contrast of the thinnest of pencil lines to wash to thick heavy paint. And also the contrast of thin wispy washes to dark opaque spots of paint.

Bushman


This last piece was done with paint in a squeeze bottle. The initial fine lines of the paint have soften a bit because the paint has a tendency to spread a little. One of the frustrating things about this technique is trying to vary the tone of the line. You can't lessen the pressure like you would with a pencil to create a very soft line, with the squeeze bottle you just end up with a line with skips in it. So some of the mood that you might be trying to achieve is lost. The washes were done very quickly before the paint had a chance to set up. If I used the Golden Open Acrylics in a squeeze bottle then I would have more time to play with this.

Poppy Sketch I




My objective is not to show the details of a figure or shading etc. I am much more focused on the weight and movement or direction of 'energy' that the figure shows. Something that you would see more in a glance rather than a long look I can show weight and movement through heavy application of paint and also through washes, but line is more tricky. This line is important to me, it is a necessary element that makes the painting feel complete and allows me to simplify my application of paint. Drawing on the page is a great way to find the gesture of a figure. You can move allover the page in a light handed way that allows you to search for details and elements that are important enough to keep. It also creates an ambiquousness in detail that causes the figure to look less like they are frozen in a moment of time.

As my paintings get larger this quality of line becomes more important. If I could take a 5'x6' canvas and create the figure using a few continuous lines, one solid mass of paint, and one wash that drips and runs freely over the canvas I would have found the ultimate way to paint.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Moving Across The Page

These three paintings are very simple and yet they are what I like most about paint. The brushstrokes, the boldness, and the movement across the page are all elements that I try to integrate into my figure paintings. The last piece is done with molding paste and although you can't see the detail all that well here there is an incredible amount of texture in this piece and the glaze over top settles into the nooks and crannies in the most sensual way. I love it. I also like the color in the second piece, it's very bright and bold.


Moving Across I



Moving Across II



Moving Across III

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Movements

This is a series of paintings that I did a week or so ago. They are more gestures, concentrating on simplifying the paint and focusing on direction. Of the three, I like Movement II the most. The movement of the gesture is clear and the blocky wash over top just emphasizes the motion. I also had done a build up of colors under the molding paste with Golden Open acrylics. Which, by the way, are totally awesome paints and amazing to work with. So there just seems to be more depth in Movement II. If my figures could look like this I would be ecstatic.



Movement I




Movement II



Movement III



This last painting is very similar to the previous three, but I am always interested in squares on a page (or windows) and how they might relate to each other. There is no real progression, except for maybe the last wash of green is stronger as it moves to the right. But mostly it's more of a comparison of details - variations on a theme. The painting in the middle is particularly interesting. There is an initial wash of green gold that creates interesting negative space within the overall composition.

Three Movements

Monday, September 29, 2008

Gestures

These gestures are based on something I have done for a long time - doodles on scrap paper. They are just quick gestures on whatever notepad is within reach; scribbles, a flick of the wrist, a puddle of ink. Some of them I really like, but I've never known what to do with them. So, I am trying now to translate them into a painting that is an evolved and complete composition.

The first pieces in this line of thinking are Gestures I & II. I painted these last winter/spring. For the most part I like them.

Gesture I




Gesture II



The next three I did a few weeks ago. They are the same gestures but approached three different ways. I like Gesture III the most. The texture is the most pronounced and it plays off the washes and paint to make a real picture. Gesture IV is kind of blah, and Gesture V is just muddy and uninteresting.

Gesture III



Gesture IV



Gesture V


I did the next piece after these three, trying to simplify things and compare elements that I really like - brushed dense paint, think texture, and a wash. I love strong brush strokes of solid paint. Franz Kline and Hans Hoffman are two of my favorite painters of the Modern time period. But this is something that you don't really see in my paintings. I'm not sure why. There are plenty of washes, and lots of molding paste. But my paintings are missing that boldness and simplicity of just a big gob of dense paint brushed on.

Three Gestures Three Ways



This is a painting that I did last week that is based on the Circles painting. I'm using basically the same techniques. I really am captivated by the simplicity of the Circles piece and would like to capture that in a nude painting - but it seems like a never ending quest.

Figure I

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

A Few Images


Circle Painting

This is one of my favorite small paintings/studies. I used gloss gel and made circle imprints with various cans/lids before the gel dried. One of my main concerns in my paintings is creating fine line within the composition. It is difficult to use drawing media on top of acrylic paints because of the characteristic of the paint (having that plastic feel) most dry media will not adhere to the surface of a painting. I've tried tiny paint brushes, paint in a squeeze bottle with a fine tip, and other methods. There is another problem of trying to draw over a highly textured surface - doesn't work so well - that's where the squeeze bottle technique was concieved. However this method looks a little contrived and I am not satisfied with my technique.
The best results I've had are the accidental lines - where paint will settle into a fine incised line or where the paint is dragged and the hair of a brush will create a fine line.



Drawing of Nude
This is why I love line - so simple but somehow says what I want. And that wispy charcoal smear running around the body, it's just yummy.



Oil Sketch of Nude
This is what I love about a single brush painting using paint. All those subtle shifts in tone and the dark painterly parts. Not so well defined, makes it even better!

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Charts and More Charts

Color Chart



This is a color chart that I've been working on using Gamblin Heavy Body Acrylic colors. It is on a 40"x 40" canvas. It's tedious work and I have a ways to go to finish it. But I love what you learn as you mix two colors together, and then watch it change slightly as you mix the next variation of colors. Of course I've learned a lot about color mixing by doing this chart but I've also repeatedly seen the difference in the properties of the colors. For example, quinacridones are very glossy colors as compared to cadmiums which are more matte. And you learn a lot about tinting strengths as well, pthalos mix up beautiful colors but it's easy to overdue them in a mix. It goes on and on, and all the things I witness as I'm mixing I so easily forget, but it must be somewhere in the back of my brain.

This is not a very scientific chart. There are no exact proportions. It is more based on where I can push a color by adding a little of this, or maybe a little more if it needs it to get that second color to make a difference in the mix.

Createx Color Chart


This is a color chart that I did with Createx Pure Pigments. I was trying to find ways to get colors that were highly saturated. Createx made pigments dispersed in water (which I don't think are available anymore). It only takes a couple drops to create a richly colored paint. There are some pigment dispersion problems however, a little blotchy as it dries. Also, it is not permanent once dried so you cannot paint in layers and not have your colors bleed. If you add some acrylic mediums - this helps.
I just love the color saturation.

Medium Charts

This is the first chart that I did when I switched to acrylic paint. There are a million mediums, especially when you work with Golden brand mediums. I work almost exclusively with Golden paints. And when you consider that you can start to combine mediums to customize your working properties - it's mind boggeling.

This started to give me some idea of why I even want to work with more than one medium.



This is the first chart that I did when I switched to acrylic paint form oil paint. There are a million mediums, especially when you work with Golden brand mediums. I work almost exclusively with Golden paints. And when you consider that you can start to combine mediums to customize your working properties - it's mind boggeling.


This gave me some idea of why I would even want to use more than one medium.