
Friday, April 17, 2009
Monday, October 6, 2008
Oil Painting Demonstration - Painting Horses in Landscape with Figures

I’m heading to the canvas, now. Here you see the first drawing laid in with just gestures. No details! That’s about all I do before starting.
Placement is so important for my work, but the connection between the objects, the statement of the story in the painting, and the major shapes to be dealt with are all I’m concerned with at this point.
You can see how important the eye-level line is, as it is low in this painting. However the horses are in scale to each other because if you’ll draw a line through the hocks of these guys, you’ll see they are both in the same plane. The viewer is about at the eye level of the groom’s backside, which was very intentional.
The painting begins with the first applications of color:
Placement is so important for my work, but the connection between the objects, the statement of the story in the painting, and the major shapes to be dealt with are all I’m concerned with at this point.
You can see how important the eye-level line is, as it is low in this painting. However the horses are in scale to each other because if you’ll draw a line through the hocks of these guys, you’ll see they are both in the same plane. The viewer is about at the eye level of the groom’s backside, which was very intentional.
The painting begins with the first applications of color:
I always try to get the big shapes and the important story items laid in first. The horse and his big movement with that cooler, the groom’s head, and the horse and rider behind them.
You can also see how I sketched in the trees behind the figure and the horse, to compliment their placement and not compete with it. No trees yet, just the ouline to give me a “feel” for where they are going to be. These trees are bit players and will only provide a supporting role.
What’s important at this point is the movement of that LEANing horse grazing, that backward glance of the groom, and his mid stride position, and the horse and rider behind them.
I always start with thin darks, and linen canvas (this is primed with gesso) is just sumptuous with that thin paint! Such a feel…
The shadows under the figures are also made as a line, because this is part of the dark pattern of values that strengthens the layout.
Continuing:
You can also see how I sketched in the trees behind the figure and the horse, to compliment their placement and not compete with it. No trees yet, just the ouline to give me a “feel” for where they are going to be. These trees are bit players and will only provide a supporting role.
What’s important at this point is the movement of that LEANing horse grazing, that backward glance of the groom, and his mid stride position, and the horse and rider behind them.
I always start with thin darks, and linen canvas (this is primed with gesso) is just sumptuous with that thin paint! Such a feel…
The shadows under the figures are also made as a line, because this is part of the dark pattern of values that strengthens the layout.
Continuing:
Now it is time to start blocking in the middle values, and get this canvas covered, and start to pull some details into the central figures. I already see some need for changing some relationships of size, and this is easy to chisel out with the background paint making those changes… you’ll see in a while.
Here, you see I’ve blocked in the grass aound the horse’s front legs, and painted the blue color of the cooler as the underpainting for the highlights to come later. I mixed the color of the cooler that is in shadow, and painted it in, too. I added some sketchy details of what will be just above the eye-level line as well.
All this painting you see took about 15 mintues.
Here, you see I’ve blocked in the grass aound the horse’s front legs, and painted the blue color of the cooler as the underpainting for the highlights to come later. I mixed the color of the cooler that is in shadow, and painted it in, too. I added some sketchy details of what will be just above the eye-level line as well.
All this painting you see took about 15 mintues.
In the image above, you’ll see that I’ve moved from the grass up to the horse, spending about 20 minutes going from the large shapes I laid in first, to smaller shapes that define and show differences WITHIN those large shapes.
To explain further, the horse is made up of two major shapes–the dark reddish shape, which is a mixture of the alizerin and sap green, touched with cad red to warm it, and the blue cooler shape, made up of ultramarine blue and some of the alizerin on the lower side. Now my process is to go in and thickly lay on smaller shapes to give form to the horse and cooler. This is done with a minimum of fuss, and one brush mark to make the shapes. I put blue/white lighter shapes to define the folds of the cooler, purple/white shapes to define the top sides where the light goes through and bounces off the horse’s hide, and then took that cad red light and mixed it with some of the aliz. and blue to make the neck highlights and facial shapes of the horse.
I added purple white for the blaze, yet the canvas is still showing through on the nose, and on the back legs’ white area. On the near front leg, I used the background green to define the line of the leg and down to the hoof, which is just a grey mark with the brush and will need some further refining.
How do you keep from going to too much detail? My reply is to squint a lot, and stop looking for details. Squinting gives you a “hierarchy of edges” showing you which ones are important in your source material, and which ones you can toss out.
On the back rider, I also started to work on the shapes in the pinto, going from the darks of the brown parts, and laying in the light mid-values of the shadows on the horse.
Remember, I work generally from dark to light, laying in a dark abstract foundation to cement in the design of the piece. Everything is subordinate to that design, which is why (most) of my paintings are pleasant to look at and interesting to live with. I keep reiterating, it is all about design.
Detail of the horse’s cooler:
To explain further, the horse is made up of two major shapes–the dark reddish shape, which is a mixture of the alizerin and sap green, touched with cad red to warm it, and the blue cooler shape, made up of ultramarine blue and some of the alizerin on the lower side. Now my process is to go in and thickly lay on smaller shapes to give form to the horse and cooler. This is done with a minimum of fuss, and one brush mark to make the shapes. I put blue/white lighter shapes to define the folds of the cooler, purple/white shapes to define the top sides where the light goes through and bounces off the horse’s hide, and then took that cad red light and mixed it with some of the aliz. and blue to make the neck highlights and facial shapes of the horse.
I added purple white for the blaze, yet the canvas is still showing through on the nose, and on the back legs’ white area. On the near front leg, I used the background green to define the line of the leg and down to the hoof, which is just a grey mark with the brush and will need some further refining.
How do you keep from going to too much detail? My reply is to squint a lot, and stop looking for details. Squinting gives you a “hierarchy of edges” showing you which ones are important in your source material, and which ones you can toss out.
On the back rider, I also started to work on the shapes in the pinto, going from the darks of the brown parts, and laying in the light mid-values of the shadows on the horse.
Remember, I work generally from dark to light, laying in a dark abstract foundation to cement in the design of the piece. Everything is subordinate to that design, which is why (most) of my paintings are pleasant to look at and interesting to live with. I keep reiterating, it is all about design.
Detail of the horse’s cooler:
Here is a close up of the second layer of paint on the cooler.
If you recall that I said the horse was basically two shapes, you’ll then figure out that all that blue and blue-purple was done on top of those two shapes.
Look at the closeure of the cooler at the neck. See that one brush stroke that conveys the closing device? (Velcro) One brush mark. Decisive. I will do a little “edge losing” later on, but this is the “big picture ” of how those marks go down.
I feel strongly that my work is about more than the objects and their story (horse, groom, rider), but just as important is the amount and feel of the brushmarks. A “painterly” painting…
Covering the Canvas:
If you recall that I said the horse was basically two shapes, you’ll then figure out that all that blue and blue-purple was done on top of those two shapes.
Look at the closeure of the cooler at the neck. See that one brush stroke that conveys the closing device? (Velcro) One brush mark. Decisive. I will do a little “edge losing” later on, but this is the “big picture ” of how those marks go down.
I feel strongly that my work is about more than the objects and their story (horse, groom, rider), but just as important is the amount and feel of the brushmarks. A “painterly” painting…
Covering the Canvas:
I quickly cover the canvas from top to bottom with the background. I put in the distant trees, keeping them both warm with some of the cadmium on the left, and blue-green elsewhere, and lighter on top of course! I use my fingers in places to blend the leaf shapes into the sky, which is a greyed mix of blue and white with the rest of the palette mess mixed in to keep the harmony going. I painted the trees first, then the sky, dipping and bouncing the brush back and forth between the two areas.
Note that near the gal getting on the horse, I made a far more interesting pattern of marks. Across the back, the rest of the trees are less contrasty, and less interesting. I want you, the viewer, to look at that lady getting on the horse, framed by the foreground horse and groom. If I made all those trees interesting to that level, you’d wander around… not good.
I also did some more work on the head, shoulder and cooler, front legs and hooves.
Note that near the gal getting on the horse, I made a far more interesting pattern of marks. Across the back, the rest of the trees are less contrasty, and less interesting. I want you, the viewer, to look at that lady getting on the horse, framed by the foreground horse and groom. If I made all those trees interesting to that level, you’d wander around… not good.
I also did some more work on the head, shoulder and cooler, front legs and hooves.
This shows how I made the background more interesting and started to seriously work on the distant pinto and rider.
The groom has some serious proportion problems as I didn’t plot his shapes and size relative to the rest of the painting, so I have to take out parts and fix the problem.
He was too long in the torso, so I just took my finger and pushed and lifted the excess paint and wiped it on a paper towel. Now I protect my hands with a barrier cream (Glove Cote, Invisible Glove–like hand lotion, but impermeable to solvents and pigment contamination. At your hardware store.)
Painting the rear end in place properly also allowed me to reshape some of his arm and shirt where it hits the pants. I also worked on his feet, and cropped his skull yet again.
Then I painted in more of his shirt, and gave him a teensy beer belly, using darker tones (always darkening with the alizerin crimson and sap green and/or the ultramarine).
I do change colors of things even when I use my own source material. If it makes the design better, it gets changed…
The groom has some serious proportion problems as I didn’t plot his shapes and size relative to the rest of the painting, so I have to take out parts and fix the problem.
He was too long in the torso, so I just took my finger and pushed and lifted the excess paint and wiped it on a paper towel. Now I protect my hands with a barrier cream (Glove Cote, Invisible Glove–like hand lotion, but impermeable to solvents and pigment contamination. At your hardware store.)
Painting the rear end in place properly also allowed me to reshape some of his arm and shirt where it hits the pants. I also worked on his feet, and cropped his skull yet again.
Then I painted in more of his shirt, and gave him a teensy beer belly, using darker tones (always darkening with the alizerin crimson and sap green and/or the ultramarine).
I do change colors of things even when I use my own source material. If it makes the design better, it gets changed…
Sunday, September 14, 2008
How did you do it
"How did you do it, Dad? How have you managed to not take a drink for almost 20 years?" It took me almost 20 years to have the courage to even ask my father this very personal question. When Dad first quit drinking, the whole family was on pins and needles every time he got into a situation that, in the past, would have started him drinking again. For a few years we were afraid to bring it up for fear the drinking would begin again.
"I had this little poem that I would recite to myself at least four to five times a day," was Dad’s reply to my 18-year-old unasked question. "The words were an instant relief and constant reminder to me that things were never so tough that I could not handle them," Dad said. And then he shared the poem with me. The poem’s simple, yet profound words immediately became part of my daily routine as well.
About a month after this talk with my father, I received a gift in the mail from a friend of mine. It was a book of daily affirmations with one affirmation listed for each day of the year.
It has been my experience that when you get something with days of the year on it, you automatically turn to the page that lists your own birthday.
I hurriedly opened the book to November 10 to see what words of wisdom this book had in store for me. I did a double-take and tears of disbelief and appreciation rolled down my face. There, on my birthday, was the exact same poem that had helped my father for all these years! It is called the Serenity Prayer:
God, grant me the Serenity to accept the things I cannot change; the Courage to change the things I can; and the Wisdom to know the difference.
"I had this little poem that I would recite to myself at least four to five times a day," was Dad’s reply to my 18-year-old unasked question. "The words were an instant relief and constant reminder to me that things were never so tough that I could not handle them," Dad said. And then he shared the poem with me. The poem’s simple, yet profound words immediately became part of my daily routine as well.
About a month after this talk with my father, I received a gift in the mail from a friend of mine. It was a book of daily affirmations with one affirmation listed for each day of the year.
It has been my experience that when you get something with days of the year on it, you automatically turn to the page that lists your own birthday.
I hurriedly opened the book to November 10 to see what words of wisdom this book had in store for me. I did a double-take and tears of disbelief and appreciation rolled down my face. There, on my birthday, was the exact same poem that had helped my father for all these years! It is called the Serenity Prayer:
God, grant me the Serenity to accept the things I cannot change; the Courage to change the things I can; and the Wisdom to know the difference.
Friday, August 22, 2008
a week-long vacation
Three buddies decided to take their wives on a week-long vacation to Las Vegas. The week flew by and they all had a great time. After they returned home and the men went back to work, the men sat around at break and discussed their vacation. The first guy said, "I don't think I'll ever do that again! Ever since we got back, my wife flings her arms and hollers, '7 come 11' all night, and I haven't had a wink of sleep!" The second guy said, "I know what you mean. My wife played blackjack the whole time we were there, and she slaps the bed all night and hollers, 'Hit me light' or 'hit me hard!' and I haven't had a wink of sleep either!" The third guy said, "You guys think you have it bad! My wife played the slots the whole time we were there, and I wake up each morning with a sore dick and an ass full of quarters."
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