Friday, December 10, 2021
Sophus Jacobsen and Moody Moonlight
Thursday, December 9, 2021
Repin Exhibition in Paris
"Le Petit Palais in Paris presents the first French retrospective dedicated to Ilya Repin, one of the greatest glories of Russian art. Little known in France, his work is nevertheless considered an essential milestone in the history of Russian painting of the 19th and 20th centuries. Around a hundred paintings, on loan from the National Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow, the State Russian Museum in Saint Petersburg and the Art Museum of the Ateneum in Helsinki, some of which are very large, will allow us to retrace his journey. through his masterpieces."
Wednesday, December 8, 2021
Painting an Abandoned House -- in CGI
If you paint in traditional media you may not pay much attention to tutorials about 3D computer graphics.
Tuesday, December 7, 2021
Considering an Art Career?
My answer: If you’re meant to be an artist, nothing will stop you.* People tell you to work hard, but what does that mean? Art doesn’t even seem like work if you really love it. You’ll need to be determined, patient, resourceful, and flexible.
Keep in mind that no one is going to hand you a career. However, you might get handed an opportunity. If that happens, make the most of it. Commit totally to becoming the best artist you can be. Figure out how to do a lot of different things—framing, videography, graphic design, and photography, for example—so that you can do more than paint. If you work for a client as an illustrator, be sure to deliver on time and on budget, communicate clearly, and be pleasant to work with.
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Monday, December 6, 2021
Sunday, December 5, 2021
Annigoni on Photographic Reference
Interviewer: for example, you are one of the few painters, if not the only one, who doesn't use photography. Today everyone...
Answer: Well, this return to the so-called classicism, to reality, based on photography, in my opinion is a mistake, it's a form of impairment, in the end, because working from life, which is so transient, always changing, manifesting infinite aspects... working from life means that you accept an effort, a struggle, a labor of conquest, which is removed if you use photography. If you remove this big effort, this struggle, you are removing too much... too many important aspects of art
I: So it's easy to copy a photo..
A: Well... it definitely makes things easier. And then photography is a frozen instant of this reality, this truth I was talking about. Because truth changes together with us, while you are looking at it, it escapes, and you have to chase after it. It's a completely different view of life, I would say.
I: So, besides technique, there is also a psychological aspect.
A: Yes, of course, it's a different way of life.
I: So, the difficult part of portraiture - When you make a portrait, you require many sitting, don't you?
A: yes
I: What is the difficult part? In grasping the essence of the character?
A: To grasp something that is continuously escaping, in the end.
I: Which is the synthesis of that personality, because the instant...
A: The synthesis of...? It's the synthesis of I don't know what, it's that personality, and my personality mixed together. It's an experience of life, anyway... that's what, in my opinion, the use of photography cancels.
A: For me a portrait, or a figure, is first of all an object, like painting a still life. I have to draw this object, to put the eyes, the nose, the mouth and the ears in the right place... I mean, the construction of the figure, its shoulders and everything. Then, at a certain moment, I have to 'go inside' this human being.
I: It's...
A: A long, hard, laboring work. That's why, at a certain point, I got tired of making portraits...
I: But the most difficult thing is to let the soul come out from the eyes, isn't it?A: Well, yes, from the eyes, and from every part: from everything. Sometimes it's a matter of an instant, of a glimmer on a certain part of the face, which can change the expression. There are many aspects...
I: So during many sittings... there comes a moment... when everything gets becomes clear and illuminated...
A: Well, there is... when there is... but sometimes there isn't, and you have to adapt.
I: I've read in your diary, when you went to the US, that J.F. Kennedy let you in his office when he was meeting with his staff.
A: That was the kind of portrait I did for the Time Magazine covers. A few of these things were unfortunately disastrous for me.
I: They considered you the painter, and let you stay near him?
A: He didn't pose, I was forced to “steal”...
I: Which models were the most patient? Was it the Queen of England, or the Pope?
A: Oh, well, those... No. The Pope was like Kennedy. But the Queen at least granted me sixteen poses, Princess Margaret twenty-six. I've always tried to get as many poses as possible, because my type of art...
I: At least, on this subject, regarding you as a portrait-painter, no one has any grounds for objection, and they all agree...
A: Well, I don't know, they may take issue with that too, I don't know...
I: No, no, I say, it's unquestioned... at least on this subject, Annigoni...
A: yes, yes, they let me do portraits, because incidentally portraiture...
I: ..Is considered a genre...
A: A cheap genre, an outdated genre...
I: But on the contrary, it's the genre which requires the best technique and “eye”
I: So, you feel you really belong to our time, as a painter?
A: I feel... to our time? I don't know... to my time, that's for sure. If my time doesn't belong to our time, that's not my fault...
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Saturday, December 4, 2021
Why Bother Copying a Photo?
Answer: I'm not making something to look at, nor am I particularly interested in being a copyist of 2D images. It's not even that great a copy. Instead I enjoyed learning from the experience of using a comparator mirror. I think of it as a form of visual play. It built my confidence in capturing a slice of reality using straight-ahead paint, and who knows? That mileage may help me in my observational painting and my imaginative work.
Friday, December 3, 2021
Grisaille Portrait Video Now on YouTube
Thursday, December 2, 2021
How much data does the eye transmit?
Wednesday, December 1, 2021
Unraveling Color Pigment Terms
Organic / Inorganic
Pigments are divided into organic (containing carbon) and inorganic (without carbon).
Synthetic pigments
Both organic and inorganic pigments can be manufactured artificially in the lab, and the resulting pigments are for the most part indistinguishable from their natural counterparts.
So, for example, ultramarine is a synthetic replacement for the rare and expensive mineral lapis lazuli. The properties are identical, but the price has become so low that it's used in low cost children's paint.
Light / Deep
When a color is called "light" or "deep," it doesn't only mean light or dark in value. It also has to do with the position on the hue circle. Cadmium yellow deep is more toward red, really orange, while cadmium yellow light is not only lighter in value but also more toward the green side of yellow.
Convenience Colors / Hue
Some pigments are blended to make colors with familiar names such as “mauve” or "peacock blue." Convenience mixtures fill gaps by offering intermediate mixtures for which no pigment exists, such as phthalo yellow-green. In watercolor, Payne’s gray is a blue-black made from black and ultramarine or other blends.
When a color is called a "hue," such as "cerulean blue hue," it's a color that resembles its expensive counterpart, but it's made of a blend of inexpensive ingredients.
Designers Colors
The term "designers color" has been used for a paint color that is meant to match a particular color note. A designers color is made to match not only a hue, but a particular tint or shade and a level of chroma or saturation. Designers colors are often mixed with white to result in colors like "pale rose blush" and "cobalt turquoise light." House paints and hobby acrylics frequently are formulated in this way because people use them right out of the bottle for a given use.
Nowadays most manufacturers of artists' pigments use pure pigments and let you do the adjusting, because you may not want the white in the mixture from the beginning. So if a pigment is naturally transparent, it will still be transparent, even in gouache.
Permanent / Lightfast
The word “permanent” appears on many different art products, but it’s a confusing term. On some graphic art products, such as inks or felt-tipped markers, it really means “waterproof,” rather than “lightfast” (resistant to fading). Many calligraphy or fountain pen inks are not waterproof, but they’re reasonably lightfast, considering that most handwriting isn’t usually subjected to light for long periods.
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Learn more:
Color terms explained on the website Handprint
Color of art pigment database listed by pigment numbers on website ArtisCreation
Signed copies of my book Color and Light: A Guide for the Realist Painter
Did I get something wrong, or do you have something to add? Please let me know in the comments.