Fifty-three Years Ago...

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Fifty three years ago Mr. Van, my life drawing and painting teacher, told me to be very sparing with highlights when working with the human figure. That was while working with a spotlight in a classroom. In art school I made a study of light and it's effect on the human figure, driving Mr. Van nuts with my questions. I'm still studying the effects of light these days on the human figure and on everything I paint. I no longer use spotlights. I like natural lighting which I define as the light people live with, like a lamp in a living room or sunlight streaming in my studio window. Or the light that makes it through the canopy of the trees my models lay under. Seldom are highlights pure white. When the skin is wet, highlights appear white but even then they take on a bit of color. 

I tell my students and any artist that will listen to work from life whenever possible. Working doesn't always mean actual painting or drawing. When having breakfast with my friends I study them for how the light is working on their faces and their hands as well. What the light coming through the window is doing to Georges face, his hands and what type of light is it. Is it a cloudy day a bright sunny day? Is there reflected light? 

I recommend studying what the light is doing. Make notes, then take a photo and see the difference. In the studio I study Jordan's face for colors and the reason why those colors are there on that day. The colors change from day to day and it is mostly due to reflected light and what in the studio is causing those changes. 

Using a photo off the internet you are not learning much of anything. You may even be hurting yourself. Nothing wrong with using photos as long as they are your own photos. Using a photo from the internet is nothing but copying someone else's work. When I take pictures to paint from I know the light falling on my subject, I know my subjects themselves. I have reasons for wanting to do a painting which makes me look at everything that will be going into it. How important are the hands, the feet, the folds in a skirt, the shadows on the blanket, the shadows on the grass around the blanket? 

A hundred photos come into play along with years of experience working with the model I pick for a particular painting. I use the same models many times just so I know when I am looking at a photo to create a work of art, I know the circumstances effecting every thing in that photo. When sketching a stranger from a photo, there are reasons for wanting to do a sketch of that person. I make an effort to really study that stranger, to study his gestures. I never take these studies of strangers beyond studies. Sometimes I just need to sketch, I find sketching is quite relaxing. 

 

Little Things

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Colors change as the day goes on. Katie, taking my order at Jake's, raises the richness of my palette. For others, Katie lightens their step. I talk about Jake's Bagel Shop a lot when I am trying to explain my painting methods.

Most people have their "Jake's" to start the day - a place, a person, a cup of coffee in a special cup. Little things that set a persons day. Little things set the tone of the colors on my palette for the day. The ladies at Jakes help me keep the tone of my colors high and very bright. I've talked about this in several of my blogs. I wonder what affected Rembrandt's painting? Was it an inquisitive man who brought him the coal or wood he used to heat his studio? Was it the sassy girl who said he smelled of onions, making him laugh? No matter what one does in life, what they do is effected by all the little things that happen during their day. 

One of my joys is studying the art of another artist. Trying to figure out why, what, and how they created their art. I let paintings speak to me. It took me a while to learn how to listen to a painting. Sometimes there are two stories in a painting; one, the story the artist intended the viewer to hear, and then there is another that the artist can hear. A lot of times that first story is blurred by the second story. Sales down, pressure from bill collectors or not being able to spend more time with the kids can darken a painting and make the hand less confident. I call it a story when I see an artists work that is not up to par, or better than anything he's ever done.

This is all in my head you understand, it is part of how I keep my own artwork on a high level. I study my own artwork for signs of where my head was, and needed to be, when painting the one I study. Getting a painting back from the gallery with a scratch on the $1200 frame means I pull back from painting so I can get fully back in a good place. I never find art boring.