This is a painting on top of a painting, on top of a painting, on top...(http://richardspainting.blogspot.co.uk/2016/07/changes.html, July 17th post). I'll probably stop here and 'retire' this canvas.
Wednesday, 31 August 2016
Monday, 29 August 2016
A Return To Oil - A Return To Landscape.
I don't draw out my paintings first because I find it tends to be restrictive, leading to them looking wooden. Anyway, I wanted to push paint around again, which encaustic doesn't really let you do. I love encaustic, but it's more about the results than enjoying the process. By comparison, to me anyway, painting in oils feels like an indulgence - I love the physical act of moving the paint around.
Tuesday, 23 August 2016
Sunday, 14 August 2016
Allotments
This was the first time painting outside for a year. I really like the allotments and have been thinking about painting them for a while. I chose this scene because of the reflections and transparencies in the glass. I also thought it would be tricky to do. I got rained off at one stage, had to take shelter in the car, and in the end I had to pack away in a hurry before the heavens opened. All things considered I was reasonably pleased with the results.
Allotments
Oil on canvas
Thursday, 11 August 2016
Going out Sketching...
I decided that whilst the weather holds, I would take my sketchbook out into a field a few hundred metres from our house to do some drawing. I've been looking at Joan Eardley's work online, so I fancied having a go at some overgrown hedgerows and fields. My thinking was that these might lend themselves to the sort of very bold and painterly mark making, in the way that she worked. The short walk was quite productive, I completed several sketches, which has led to two paintings so far.
I left it for a day at this stage, then decided that it need more of a focal point(s)...so I added a figure in the middle ground, cow parsley in the foreground, brightened the sky a little, and added highlights to the vegetation.
Millfield
encaustic on board
Tuesday, 9 August 2016
6 Degrees Of Separation.
The images below are worked up from some of my York photographs (of people) - again in charcoal, pastel, emulsion, but this time also with encaustic wax added. The first, started well enough, but turned into a disaster, and has since been destroyed (it bubbled and peeled off it's backing, so has been painted over). As I was doing this drawing Sara came into the studio and told me that the figure looks just like a friend of hers from Millthorpe. I showed her the photograph I was working from (on my phone - we have banned the students from doing this at school!), and she laughed, saying that it is her friend. Completely unknown to me.
This is now the second time that I have photographed a stranger in the street, only to find a connection with them later. The previous one was when I photographed a woman walking towards me, oblivious, only to meet her as a colleague several years later, and recognised her from my photo.
The drawing that Sara recognised.
Charcoal
Apparently this one looks more like Jude Law.
Pastel
Emulsion.
Wax
Untitled
Wednesday, 3 August 2016
Untitled Stranger (the lady outside the bank).
This painting is a mixture of charcoal, pastel and emulsion paint. It's on a piece of lining (wall)paper glued to a board. I completed the charcoal part sat in the garden, then moved into the studio to add the pastels and paint.
I decided to extend the hair out of the picture, because I liked the design. It reminded me of some of David Bailey's sixties portrait photos. All simple black and white shapes, with interesting cropping and negative spaces. However, as the painting progressed, it looked a little too much like a 'beehive' hairdo, so after a day or too I cracked the emulsion back out and reworked the hair.
The extended hair worked well in charcoal...
...but not so well as the pastels were added.
Untitled.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)