29 July 2007
red & green
kimberly (color study)
Arches CP 300gsm 14" x 10". 3 hours.
i have played around with flesh mixtures for several years. this painting was done entirely in red or green paints: quinacridone magenta and viridian for the background; cadmium scarlet and phthalo green YS for the figure; the hair is cadmium scarlet and perylene maroon; the freehand drawing (squaring the image to copy it) is in charcoal.
the technique of glazing a carmine lake pigment over a green (terre verte) ground dates from the middle ages, and is described somewhere in james elkins' "what painting is". i only began experimenting with it a few weeks ago. i have been looking for ways to model the figure without using a blue violet shadow tint, and this does the trick.
i am contemplating doing about twenty of these small scale figures in the same color scheme. the model was a natural, a dancer and free spirit, and gave me a great series of poses.
this is what i call a problem painting, something done to tackle a specific visual problem or examine a specific painting technique. these are often gift images, for example when something grabs my interest because it would be a challenge to paint it. otherwise the problem paintings are like experiments or explorations, simply watching how things go, to learn what is possible or "what works".
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2 comments:
I'm usually not keen on "realistic" skin tones in watercolor, so I go for this slightly woozy pallor with its graphitiness...flare of color on the edges very effective. Great pose and POV. Love her left arm, this girl's in shape!
Hi Bruce!
I am loving your blog and your paintings
thanks Nick for suggesting taking a look.
Dawn
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