Showing posts with label snowman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label snowman. Show all posts

Sunday, February 6, 2022

"Snowman and Red Barn" (watercolor on paper; 9" x 12")

 

"Snowman and Red Barn"

 
The following is the description of what we did in the second week of the winter term, 2022 for my "Watercolor from Start to Finish" class (my online Zoom class with the Art League School in Alexandria, VA).

The main business of the day was painting "Snowman and Red Barn" from a black and white photo. We first drew the design lightly with a graphite pencil on the Arches paper. The horizon is above the half way point; the snowman is off the center; the dark anchor tree is behind the snowman (don't put it too close to the edge); the barn is in the center on the horizon. We added a few more secondary elements, then masked the snow-coated tree branches and distant trees with masking fluid.

Landscapes are generally painted from top to bottom, which means from the background (or sky) to the foreground in western art. We first wetted the sky shape above the horizon and painted a graded wash, making the right side slightly darker. The distant trees went in, slightly darker than the sky.

The barn was painted with cadmium red (the sunny side) and permanent alizarin crimson (the shadow side and the gaping interior). We had painted the shadow shapes first with black to darken it (this is something we never do, but for this particular black-and-white exercise).

Then we painted the small tree behind the snowman, slightly darker than the distant trees. The big anchor tree was painted even darker (mid-dark, don't make this tree too light). When you are painting the branches, paint the strokes below the masked lines. I added some grass-like strokes at the foot of the anchor tree; I painted diagonal strokes to suggest the tracks in the middle ground on the left (don't make them too steep, then the barn will look like it's sitting on a hill).

I also added a very pale wash around the front of the snowman so that it will pop out. Some elliptical brush strokes were done around the torso and body of the snowman. On the shadow side of the snowman, I made a bunch of mid-tone strokes to suggest trampled snow. These calligraphic marks take practice, but add so much texture and interest to a painting.

Finally, we painted the snowman itself in three layers (glazing), starting very light and getting increasingly darker, to create form (illusion of three dimension). Then we painted the hat (black) while taking care to leave the strips of white paper to suggest the snow coating. The round chips of the eyes and smiling mouth were done in two layers (light and dark) in black. The carrot nose was painted in two layers (the red-orange mixture of cadmium red and cadmium yellow pale; alizarin crimson stroke at the bottom to suggest shadow). The scarf was painted in three layers (the yellow green mixture of winsor lemon and winsor blue, then add slightly more winsor blue to make the green greener and darker). That's it!

Remember that we used the wet-on-wet technique only at the beginning with the sky. The rest of the painting was done on dry paper!


Wednesday, December 19, 2012

"Country Snowman" (oil on linen; 8" x 10") sold


sold


A jolly snowman with a green hat and red scarf greets a frosty morning by the barn.  If this painting doesn't cheer you up, I don't know what will!  Would you be surprised if I tell you that I painted the scene from an old black-and-white photo?

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

"Snowman and Barn" (oil on linen; 9" x 12") sold


sold


As I was painting "Snowman and Barn" on Monday, it started snowing!  There had been no forecast for snow, but it kept falling.  The first snow of this winter made all of us giddy with joy like the kids on the Christmas morning.  Alas, by yesterday, with the balmy spring-like temperature, there was no more white stuff to be seen. 

Another reason for my happiness was that I was painting a landscape, not a figure!  Boy, I was glad to be back to what I normally do--paint loose and suggestively.  No more uptight measuring and hours of staring a nude person to figure out the subtle color changes in the skin tone.  The moral of my experience last week is this: get out of your comfort zone once in a while; do something wild and get back to your life.  You will be wiser for the adventure.

The painting was based on a black and white photo.  The advantage of a challenge like this is that one gets to make up colors.  Ha!  it wasn't that hard to come up with lovely violets for distant woods; brownish wood colors for the barn; and the red scarf for the snowman.  I made the big tree on the right not clearly defined, although it was in the middle ground and a lot closer to the viewer than the barn, because I made the latter the secondary interest.  Of course, the snowman is the star.  I boldly put it in the middle of the picture.  Why not?  Relax and have fun.