Wednesday, August 10, 2011

More Strategy

More Strategies.
I enjoy evaluating an image or possible scene to paint, whether sitting outside with sketchbook (preferred) or in the studio with sketches and photographs (often necessary). I begin by asking myself how can i increase or create a sense of drama? I do not simply want to render or represent the image or scene for a couple of reasons: I want to engage painting a composition that has life and vitality; and, i want the viewer to experience a sense of drama and stimulation from the painting--all enhanced by the way the composition, value and color go together.

I have been told by local gallery owners that I "should" paint images that are local as they sell better to visitors. Nope. I need to be engrossed in what I am painting and select images that have a sensual orgaic nature to them: old trucks, motorcycle riders (real characters, many), decrepit buildings, etc. so the first characteristic that i look for is sensuality from my perspective. this can mean very different things to different people.

Sensuality. For me, the objects I am looking at or researching have a story to be told, whether it be a personality to be emphasized and dramatized or a mood. there is some nature of the emerging composition that wants to say something.

The next step for me is the exploration of composition in conjunction with a center of interest or focal area.

Composition and Center of Interest. These go hand in hand. A composition without a center of interest is a mono-view where everything is equal in the eyes of the viewer and can be confusing and vague. Adding a center of interest sharpens, highlights and focuses the emphasis in a composition. this establishes an "aha" emphasis supported by the rest of the composition. I do many small sketches in my sketchbook to explore composition. for me this is a process of discovery through exploration not a predetermined outcome that i then polish or finalize. Big difference. At times, I will change the composition because the center or focal area is not working or not strong enough as a strategy for painting.  and these are all critical for the value exploration that we have discussed in the past blogs. VALUE structures the composition, eliminating the mono-view and increasing drama through light to dark hierarchial shapes.

More later. ron k

I just read an article in American Artist, May 2011 by John A. Parks on "The Teachings of Charles Webster Hawthorne" (1872-1930), renowned teacher and founder of the Cape Cod School of Art. Parks quotes Charles Hawthorne, "Anything under the sun is beautiful if you have the vision--it is the seeing of the thing that makes it so."  Wow. This is more than painting the flower the way it looks, painting the barn just as it is...the task is to seek ways to bring the objects to life, to make those objects a part of their surronding, to bring out the drama in their composition.  this is why I emphasize the act of play-work in developing a strategy for your vision. this is not a formula, nor a hard-in-concrete paint by numbers exercise. the strategy for a vision provides the painter with a direction, as aspiration not a goal. Once you begin painting, the water--the medium carrying the pigment--will come into play: being pulled by gravity, soaking into the paper fiber, evaporating quickly or slowly depending upon the temperature, and moving! and as the painter engages this fascinating physics, the strategy becomes a dance with the medium, changing and challenging and the strategy assists in maintaining the overall principles of the vision. Challenging stuff!

I have watched master painters like Eric Weigardt, in an hour demonstration, get to a point where the painting changes direction from where Eric may have aspired..and he danced with that change, resulting in a dramaatic outcome that still held aspects of the original vision and now contained new and creative adjustments.

keep painting. ron k

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