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 Monday, November 17, 2008
Fall Inspirations
Posted by richard

68-fall-inspirations.jpgEvery season has its charm: winter is introspection; spring is promise of renewal; summer is energy; and fall is last hurrah. Finding inspiration in these seasons is part of what makes landscape painting so enjoyable. We know that change is inevitable. Our subject matter is never still. As the earth wobbles on its axis, the seasons come and go. We might have our favorite, even one that finds us producing the most work, but fall seems to be the one most often mentioned for its visual stimulation. The transition from greens to warm yellows, oranges, and reds never seems to disappoint. Every region has its personality on display; see what southern Oregon has to offer in the photo at left.

Areas with an abundance of hardwoods will put on the most spectacular of shows: Maple, birch, aspen, alder, elm, cottonwood, and even oak have their special palettes. Bu even the brushes of the desert add their notes of color to make fall one of the most inspiring, if fleeting, times of year.

Due to the juxtaposition of cool and warm, these autumn scenes are often difficult to portray without looking artificial. The unsuspecting landscape painter, whose paintings of winter, spring, and summer work well, often winds up struggling to make a vibrant fall scene look respectable. A suggestion that might make this stimulating time of year a little easier to handle: Choose a dominant color temperature for the painting. Imbue all the color choices with that temperature as a means of unifying what could otherwise be a painting made up of opposing color families. An example would be choosing a warm color temperature and then toning the intense blue sky and green grasses down a bit in chroma (intensity) to better unify it with the bright intense warm tones that dominate the painting. By graying the cooler tones, they will become naturally warmer and better allow the warms to dominate the painting. A cooler temperature would affect the chroma (intensity) of the fall foliage, making it slightly grayed and better unifying it with the intense cool sky and grasses. By choosing one color temperature to be of the highest chromatic intensity, a painting that represents even the most exciting of color variations (like yellow, red, and orange adjacent to blue and green) will harmonize.

Enjoy what fall has to offer; soon winter will be upon you and another inspiration will be taking your hand.





11/17/2008 2:40:03 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Dealing with Dust
Posted by richard

67-dealing-with-dust.jpgBy its very nature pastel is a dusty medium. Depending on the brand of pastel you work with and the surface you choose to apply it to, dust can be minor or heavy. Harder, less toothy surfaces tend to produce more dust, while sanded surfaces tend to hold more of the pastel particles. These minute pastel fragments are often toxic and can be hazardous to your health. Use caution to avoid inhaling the pigment particles.


  • Work with your paintings in an upright position, allowing the dust to settle gently to the bottom of the painting.
  • Work in a well-ventilated studio workspace; cross ventilation is very helpful if a mechanical means of pulling air away from the easel is not utilized.
  • Use a damp towel to clean up around the painting area. A damp towel will hold the dust instead of stirring it up. This is also useful for wiping your hands frequently while painting.
  • Avoid the bad habit of blowing on the pastel to dislodge the dust. This removes the pastel that has not been well adhered to the surface but also makes it airborne. If you must blow, take it outside and immediately stand back.
  • To better collect the dust below your painting, create a trough, something to hold the dust until it can be dealt with. Otherwise dust will fall down onto your workspace, creating a considerable mess.
  • If you plan on disposing of the dust at the end of the painting, wide strips of tape with the sticky side facing up can catch the dust, making cleanup very convenient. If you want to collect the dust, a hard trough is better suited (see the 11/26/07 blog about what to do with leftover pastel).
In my studio, I use a formed metal trough that runs across the bottom lip of the easel tray (see photo above). This collects the dust that I carefully scrap into a container. When traveling or working on location, aluminum foil is a good choice. It is easily folded and stored in a plastic zip-lock sandwich bag, taking up no room in your travel case. To attach the aluminum, or reverse tape, trough to your painting surface, adhere it to the back and fold it to the front. If tape is used for the trough make sure the sticky side faces up. Often a folded strip of mat-board is useful, making the trough more rigid. Experiment to find what works best for your needs, and then get into the habit of using good dust hygiene.




11/11/2008 9:47:56 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Monday, November 03, 2008
Edges: A Magical Tool
Posted by richard

66-edges.jpgPainting is but an illusion. How we handle the elements within the framework of the painting relate visually to the viewer and communicate our intentions. Learning the strength of these elements is our ongoing job. How edges are manipulated can be one of the strongest tools we have in conveying focus and form. The sculptor creates within the realm of mass, producing bulk and relating form. The painter, on the other hand, works on a flat surface and produces the appearance of form with the visual elements of shape, value, color, and edge. Our pastel surface is flat. We have to produce the magic of making it appear dimensional. Hard, sharper edges produce stronger focus and flatness. Soft, blurred edges produce less attention and more depth of form. Finessing hard and soft edges throughout our paintings can lead to more attention and depth.

The relativity of edges throughout a painting is determined by the artist’s choices. Something may appear very soft in one painting and yet appear hard in another, depending on how the edges are handled comparatively. If an artist chooses to work very sharp edged, then anything slightly blurred will appear very soft. If everything is blurred, anything slightly hard will appear sharp. Generally speaking, creating harder edges near the area of interest, or major focal points, leads the viewer to a specific area and holds their attention, just like focusing our vision on a given area makes it appear sharper. Conversely, softer, fuzzy edges diminish and become less important, which leads to a feeling of bulk due to the offset placement of our eyes. Softer edged objects within our paintings feel as if they could be hugged.

Orchestrating between hard and soft edges becomes a personal style choice. Understanding their visual power provides us the power of the illusion: producing both focus and bulk. Another magician’s trick exposed!


Painting detail: illustrating hard and soft edges within a pastel painting.




11/3/2008 2:26:13 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Monday, October 27, 2008
Underpainting With Oil Paints
Posted by richard

65-oil-underpainting.jpgStarting pastel paintings with a thin, wet, loose underpainting is something many artists enjoy. It sets up a foundation on which to respond with the subsequent application of pastel. Though not meant to be the finished painting, the underpainting often plays a major part in the final appearance. Depending on the medium used and the surface it applied to, it can have a variety of appearances.

Personally I have utilized some form of underpainting from the earliest years of my painting adventure. Over those years, I have experimented with a variety of surfaces and media. Thin watercolor and oil washes have becoming two of my favorites. Two things need to be analyzed when choosing your means of underpainting: how the medium will respond to the surface: and how it will interact with the pastel. Do a little research and experimentation on your own before committing major efforts to a procedure that may prove to be non-archival.

What lead me to experiment with very thin washes of oil paint was the introduction of acrylic-based sizing and binders in the manufacture of pastel surfaces. These allow for no migration of upper layers to the substrate surface below: in essence, isolating it from any harmful chemical interaction. Papers such as Wallis sanded paper even state that they accept oil paint. I don’t advocate thick applications of oil. Besides taking 
a major amount of time to dry, it would introduce a considerable amount of oil (commonly linseed oil) that could negatively interact with the pastel. My working procedure is to thin the oil colors to the consistency of weak tea using a highly refined mineral spirit like Gamsol by Gamblin, or Turpenoid by Weber. I apply these very thin washes with a brush, allowing them to run and interact to produce an interesting underpainting (see the example above). This is merely a stain and I can’t stress enough how thin it must be!

After the mineral spirits evaporate, which happens very quickly, pastel can then be applied. You may ask: why oil? Why not just use pastel spread with mineral spirits? The reason is ease of application. I can better control the placement of color and bleeding of the colors with tiny amounts of oil paint mixed and made wet on a separate palette. Pastel made wet on the painting surface is much more unruly. It's nearly 
impossible to tell the two apart, much like a watercolor underpainting compared to wet pastel. Since many pastel artists work in other wet media, they are often more comfortable getting a painterly underpainting by applying the initial color with a brush, but it really is just a matter of personal choice.

Above: A thin oil underpainting on Wallis paper.




10/27/2008 11:46:45 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2]
 Monday, October 20, 2008
On the Surface
Posted by Richard

64-uart-paper.jpgMany of us started working with pastel in the Dark Ages. There were very limited supplies available and sanded pastel surfaces were no exception. We found out we could make our own, and many of us did and still do (see my previous blog on the subject). To use a commercially available surface, we had to compromise the archival quality of the finished painting since these sanded papers were manufactured with very even surfaces of varied tooth and were nothing more than fancy sheets of hardware store sandpaper. They were never intended for fine art application. This lead to a struggle between the desire to work on a surface we enjoyed and the need to have finished paintings that would stand up to the demands of time.

One of the most commonly used sandpaper surfaces was Ersta. It accepted pastel beautifully and was a favorite among a lot of pastel artists for its consistent tooth over a range of grits. What worried us was the acidic paper. This lead to the rise of other sanded papers usually manufactured under the guidance of a professional artist. One such surface is Wallis. Recently Uneeda Enterprises, Inc. has reintroduced Ersta as PH neutral and acid-free. The paper is called Uart Premium Sanded Pastel Paper and is available in a variety of grits. Grade 400 and 500 are moderate grit, and 600 and 800 are considered fine grit. The color of the paper across the line is a manila/beige, just like its predecessor. Available now through major distributors, it will soon be offered in a dry-mounted version, a favorite for wet underpainting applications. It accepts watercolor and very thin washes of oil, as well as a host of other mediums. I'm testing the lightfastness of the paper color and will let you know the results in a couple of months (check the previous blog for information on testing lightfastness). Uart is seeking original pastel artwork done on their surface for inclusion on their website and artists are encouraged to submit works. For more information, visit their (www.uartpastelpaper.com) or email them at:uart@uneeda.com.

Apparently, sometimes something old can be new again.
 
In the photo above: A dry mounted test sample of the four grits of Uart paper with repetitive pastel marks.




10/20/2008 12:42:32 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2]
 Monday, October 13, 2008
Lightfastness—a Matter of Longevity
Posted by richard

63-lightfast-image.jpgThe lightfastness rating of art materials serves as an good indicator of how permanent our materials are. These ratings measure the general effect light has on them. The United States measures the permanence by the American Standard Test Measure (ASTM), with ratings from 1 to 5 with 1 and 2 being considered the most permanent.

Currently, pastel manufacturers are working to get their ASTM ratings. Soon the pastel public will have the same information that oil, watercolor and acrylic painters have been enjoying. Since certain pigments are less permanent than others, it will prove helpful to have this rating available when choosing individual pastels. General pigment ratings have been around for a long time; the interaction they have with certain binders and fillers, used in the manufacture of the pastel sticks, has not been tested. Some unstable pigments when mixed with other very stable pigments and fillers perform very well, while other very stable pigments will perform poorly when mixed with certain pigments and fillers. Red is one of the most vulnerable color families in pastel; the best hues are often made with heavy metal pigments. Since pastel is a dry medium, easily made airborne, heavy metal-based pigments can be dangerous. This has led some manufacturers to use more fugitive pigments that are prone to fading. Knowing the lightfast rating of these individual sticks will allow us to choose the most permanent hues possible, adding to the longevity of our finished pastel paintings, and increasing the medium’s reputation.

It is not just our pigments that are susceptible to the effects of light. Pastel surfaces can be as well. Colored papers and pre-toned surfaces need to be scrutinized for their permanence and ability to stand up to years of light exposure. Many colored surfaces are similar to colored mat board used in framing. These are colored with dyes, instead of more expensive pigment-based colors. If you work in a fashion that allows a degree of the surface to show through, it is imperative that you understand its lightfastness rating.

If the manufacture of your favorite pastel brand or surface does not provide an ASTM lightfastness rating, you can easily make tests for yourself. In fact, these are wise to do even when the ratings are available. Start by taking the surface you wish to test and place strong pastel marks from the individual sticks you want to test (making note of what they are). Place an opaque strip of cardboard across a portion of the test sheet. Place the test sheet in a sunlit window for a couple of months (see my example above). At the end of the time frame, remove the opaque strip and analyze the effect light has had on the exposed area. If there is virtually no difference, you are using the most lightfast materials. If there is considerable change, you need to rethink some of your choices. We owe it to the purchasing public and ourselves.







10/13/2008 2:23:15 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [3]
 Monday, October 06, 2008
It Is Just Black and White
Posted by richard

62-black-and-white.jpgMost of us were taught to never use pure black or white in our painting. Our first instructors made a point of explaining that neither really exists in nature. Everything we see has a color bias. What we see is a reflection; it takes the object, light source, and our eyes to become real. Since light is all color, everything has some degree of color associated to it. Even a void, non-reflective black hole has some color bias depending on its setting. It's also important to remember that the pigments we employ in attempting to create the illusion of reality are merely that—pigments. We use them to duplicate what we see; they're not the real phenomenon. Cobalt blue is no more a sky than cadmium yellow is a sunflower.

To avoid dead, unharmonious passages in our paintings, we were encouraged to avoid pure white and black as pigment choices.There are times, though, when white and black can be useful. Just as a wet-medium painter has to rely on white to lighten certain pigments to achieve a lighter value (tint) and black pigments are often employed to darken a pigment (shade) so too must the dry-medium pastelist. In fact most of our pastel sticks have some degree of these added already in order to achieve the value ranges we use. Used wisely, a pure white and black stick of pastel can produce an expanded value range within our work. Since pastel isn't as easy to mix together as wet media, we have to layer to achieve a mixed, or fused, effect. This is where softer pastels will work better. Harder pastel sticks tend to push the pastel around, even scraping the under-layer of pastel, and depositing a minimal amount of pigment. A softer pastel stick will allow for a generous amount of pigment to be deposited, fusing with the previous layer of pastel and producing a mixed appearance. For example, say the bottom of a sky area needs to be lighter, and you have used the lightest blue pastel you have. By lightly pushing a little pure white pastel into the area and not over rubbing but allowing the pigments to fuse, you'll be able to represent the value needed. Conversely, placing black pastel into a dark color until the desired value is achieved can darken an area (See my example above, in which white has been added to the blue and black has been added to violet to alter the colors' values).

So, white and black can be useful for the pastelist and should not be overlooked when setting up a working palette. It seems that sometime we can benefit from a little “black and white” ideology!




10/6/2008 11:22:17 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Monday, September 29, 2008
Photography That Works
Posted by richard


As enjoyable and addictive as working on location (en plein air) can be, there are times when we don’t have the luxury of setting up our gear and devoting the needed time to a field painting. In these instances, photography can be a useful tool, providing a reference image that sparks our memory, transporting us back to the scene and  
our initial motivation.

61-photo-tips.jpgPhotography is often given too much importance and blindly copied. We forget that it's an art form in it’s own right and easily manipulated. Lenses create distortion of depth and focus. Value ranges are condensed leading to overly dark shadows and blown out lights. Color is all over the place. With so many things against it, you might wonder why use it at all. The one thing the camera does very effectively is record detail. Focused properly, it's capable of razor-sharp definition. Since it is so capable of recording the most incidental of information within a scene, our attention should be on what it doesn’t handle well. This being: value relationships and color tendencies.

To overcome this challenge, make notes or sketches of these relationships and snap that quick photo to provide detail information that might be needed during the painting process back in the studio. I use a simple formula to photographically record the scenes I don’t have time to paint. I begin by setting the zoom lenses on the camera to as close to human depth perception as possible. For standard digital cameras, this is close to 30mm. On a 35mm film camera, it is 50mm. If your simple pocket camera doesn’t indicate these settings, just bump it up one telephoto notch when the camera is turned on. Most point-and-shoot cameras start at a mild wide-angle setting when initially powered up.  Telephoto settings might be useful for pulling things closer, making them appear bigger, but they greatly distort the depth by closing space. Wide-angle settings provide the ability to accommodate more of a scene, producing a panoramic view, creating more distance between objects, and opening up space.

As useful as these lenses settings might be, it's imperative that we remember the distorted appearance they produce. After framing the scene and taking this first photo, you can zoom to telephoto or back up to wide angle as desired, recording any pertinent information you wish. Relying on the first photo to relate the human perspective as perceived when standing there allows you to place your feet back on the ground, no matter what was done with subsequent photos. It’s the most important reference photograph—helping to transport us mentally back to the location.

The important thing with photography is to remain aware of its limitations. We need to become sensitive to human perception by spending time observing nature. Not a quick glance, but studied quiet time just observing. Through this study, a better relationship can be formed with the photograph as reference material and not the all-powerful god it can become. It's our job to use it, instead of being used by it.




 




9/29/2008 11:48:44 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Monday, September 22, 2008
Open a New Door
Posted by richard

60-creek-side-interplay.jpgEven with the best-laid plans, a painting can sometimes just not work. No matter how hard we try, nothing seems to help. This happens to the best of us and I would like to share some advice that might prove helpful when you confront your own painting stalemate. First, don’t force it. Give yourself time to just observe the painting. Set it aside and periodically glance its way. You'll be amazed how all of the sudden you just “know” what it needs. Breaking away from the intensity of the process often leads to a clearer perspective and an easier resolve. Remind yourself of why you were doing the painting in the first place. It's easy to get distracted from our initial objective and aimlessly throw “things” at the painting in hope of resolve.

Look at work by artists you admire. By finding a similar situation in someone else’s 
painting, you'll often find a solution for your own. When all else fails, go a new direction: open a new door. If the old path wasn’t getting you to your desired destination, allow for flexibility by closing that door and opening another. One of the ways in which I do this is to wash a section of the pastel painting off (typically, the one in conflict) and open myself up to the possibilities as the pastel runs and blends together. Repeatedly brushing solvent (usually mineral spirits), allows for those “happy accidents” which can spark a creative response. All of a sudden a heavy rock and brush filled foreground becomes a distant field, or a rushing waterway filled with large boulders becomes a quiet still pool of reflective water.

This is what lead to the resolve of my painting Creek-side Interplay (above). Started on location in a heavily wooded creek-side interior, the lower right side was dominated by a large rock and turbulent cascading water. Nothing I tried seemed to resolve the painting. I darkened areas, lightened areas, altered color relationships, adjusted edges—you get the idea; and nothing was making it work. After considerable time and patient study, I closed that door and decided to open another. Out came the brush and mineral spirits. After repeatedly brushing the foreground, the pastel began to run down the front of the painting and the appearance of a reflective pool emerged. With this new-found enthusiasm, I quickly let the painting lead me and added a few fallen logs and water surface indications.

Once the imagination explores the possibilities by opening a new door, excitement and enthusiasm is sparked, and a painting often seems to paint itself. If a painting isn’t working to begin with, you have nothing to lose and everything to gain by taking a chance. Pastel is a forgiving medium. Worse case scenario: you have an exciting underpainting for your next masterpiece.





9/22/2008 4:47:59 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Fix It or Forget It?
Posted by richard

59-to-fix-or-not.jpgQ: I've studied with a couple of different pastel artists and one of them sprays throughout the building up of the painting, and blends until no dust comes loose, then ends with a final spray. The other one blends with the pastel stick and never sprays the painting.  What is the most common and preferred method? 
 
A: To fix or not is one of those ongoing pastel dilemmas: color shift, a slight darkening and dulling, will occur to some degree when fixative is applied to a pastel painting; however, a thin layer of fixative makes for a more stable pastel surface. Weighing the pros and cons becomes, int he end, a personal choice.

Fixatives have come a long way from the early heavy resin varieties that created considerable color shift. Many modern brands like Lascaux, Sennelier Latour and Daler-Rowney Prefix (see photo) create a minimum of color shift and are favored by many professional artists. These fixatives are of the highest quality, utilizing acrylic resins and are non-yellowing. This makes them very suitable as a final protective application. Brands like Blair No-odor and Krylon Workable Fixatif produce more noticeable color shifting and are better suited for isolating layers of pastel. This replicates the technique of an oil painter that allows individual layers of paint to dry before adding another. Fixative can also be used to settle a heavy pastel buildup.  This provides additional tooth, allowing more pastel to be easily applied.

Historically, fixatives were supplied in a liquid form and applied with a breath-propelled atomizer. With the advent of the aerosol canister, application become more convenient. Some artists may still prefer to apply fixative in the old-fashioned manner for technique or for environmental reasons. Practice and good lung power will be needed to effectively work in this manner. Hair spray is often mentioned as an inexpensive alternative to artist grade fixative, but most hairsprays contain oils, perfumes and other conditioners that make them better suited for your head than your artwork.

When applying fixative, multiple light applications are highly recommended. Heavy over-saturated applications often lead to increased color shifting, shiny areas, and the tooth of the surface becoming filled.
 
Every artist becomes comfortable with his or her individual technique. While many artists that work in multiple layers utilize fixative, the majority shun it because of its ability to alter the appearance. Personally, I use very little fixative in my work. Sometimes, however, I might use a light spray to stabilize a drawing before applying an underpainting, or I might use an isolated spray to settle a heavy pastel passage for additional work. Recently however, I have begun applying a thin final fix, using one of the above mentioned quality fixatives, to add more stability to the finished painting.  By practicing proper application and utilizing the availability of high quality fixatives, the benefits of a more stable final surface might be worth the “fix.”




9/16/2008 10:53:57 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [3]
 Monday, September 08, 2008
Do You Work With Hard Pastels First?
Posted by richard

58-hard-to-soft.jpg
Since artists first applied sticks of pigment to surface, they've experimented with a variety of techniques. Many of these adventurous artists were first trained in what was considered a more traditional medium—oil. With alla prima oil painting, meaning "all at once," it's imperative to work thinly in the initial application, working up to heavier layers as the painting progresses. Otherwise everything becomes mud. With each layer of application, the volume of paint becomes heavier and thicker, gently interacting with the one below. 

This process can easily be mimicked in pastel—which shares so many similarities with oil—by beginning with harder pastel sticks in the initial block-in stage and progressively working towards the softer brands for the final layers. The other means of retaining control in oil paint is to allow each layer to dry before applying additional layers. Pastel 
artists may employ a similar method by applying layers of fixative to settle and solidify the pastel before applying additional pigment. If you prefer softer pastels and wish to work in layers, the initial pastel application can be rubbed or scraped down—another technique employed by our oil painter friends—to allow for subsequent layering. Depending on the support, this can be an effective means of producing bold painterly pastel paintings that have as much substance and visual weight as an oil painting.

To make things easier when selecting pastel sticks for those beginning strokes, many artists segregate their harder pastel brands from the softer pastel brands. This works well in the studio where multiple palettes of pastels can be arranged, but when working en plein air, it can become cumbersome to carry two palettes. If you wish to work hard-to-soft with your travel palette, I have two tips that might prove helpful. First, select harder sticks for the darker regions of the palette, as discussed in an earlier August blog post called “Downsizing a Palette for Travel." Typically our first strokes are in the darker, dull shadow areas of the painting. Having more of these darker, harder sticks in our palette makes it easier to utilize the softer, brighter, lighter sticks as the painting progresses. The second tip is to take one section of your palette box and segregate a selection of harder pastels, in a variety of hues, values, and intensities.

If you have a heavy hand when applying pastel, working hard to soft might be the solution for you. It has definitely been part of my painting arsenal, helping me navigate through many a painting battlefield.

The photo above shows a variety of harder pastels on the left, including Girault, Nupastel and Rembrandt, and softer pastels—Schmincke and Great American—on the right.




9/8/2008 1:37:54 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2]
 Tuesday, September 02, 2008
Quotes That Guide and Inspire
Posted by richard

“You have but one master and that is nature.”

Quotes from admired artists are a great way to remind ourselves of important but often overlooked artistic perspectives. We often become so involved in intense technical study that we lose sight of the big painting journey. Having a collection of these gems, often humorous—sometimes deep—but always insightful, are a wonderful way of having quick reality checks that can get us out of a slump, or propel us farther down the road to our goals.

These quotes are culled from the writings of, or about, the artists. Historically we had to research these obscure books, many long out of print, or rely on a published collective. In this modern technological age we have access to a labyrinth of famous quotes online. Sites like BrainyQuote.com and ArtQuotes.net and ThinkExist.com allow easy access to short quotes that are free. It's wise to check the resource of these quotes before relying on them. History has a way of propelling mistakes, as I recently learned. One of my favorite quotes is: “You have but one master and that is nature.” I had run across this in a book from the 1980s about Leonardo da Vinci and used it for years, always attributing it to Leonardo. I was stunned one day when Anne Hevener, the editor of The Pastel Journal, pointed out that it really belonged to Rembrandt (thanks Anne). Fortunately, I admire Rembrandt as much as Leonardo so it wasn’t an issue to continue throwing the quote around!

Over the years I've collected many inspiring and insightful quotes. One artist I especially enjoy is Sir Alfred East, 1849-1913. This popular British artist penned a book on landscape painting that has influenced generations of representational painters: The Art of Landscape Painting in Oil Colour by Sir Alfred East (U.S. publication 1907 by J. B. Lippincott Company, Philadelphia). In fact, the first copy of this book I ever saw had the bookplate for the library of John Gamble, the famous California impressionist. Here are a few of his words that I return to often:
  • There's no royal road in art. In this department of life, as in every other, the students must serve before he can govern. He must learn to construct, to draw, to paint, to observe, and select.
  • Build up your picture from the broad masses; don't finish your trees, or your sky, or your distance first. Work on them all at the same time, keeping them in tone like an orchestra. Keep them all in hand like a musical conductor. Have no false notes, no discordant line or colour.
  • A boy learns at school the conventional rules of arithmetic, and in after life he probably discovers for himself a system of reckoning which is better suited to his purpose; but had he not first learned the fundamental rules, his own system could not have been so easily evolved. So it is with painting. Technique is of the highest importance. The artist should be able to draw with his brush as easily as a writer uses his pen.
  • Go forward in the world with a purpose, a great purpose. You are responsible for the work you do, and you only. The material is right; Nature is as kind to you as she was to Shakespeare. If there is a fault or failure, do not be so mean as to suggest that it was due to Nature. Shakespeare does not tell you what buttons were on the coat of Hamlet, but he does reveal to you the secret of his character.
  • Nature has so much to offer that her very generosity may prove a snare, since there is a danger of wasting time and labour in the selection of non-essentials; for that which does not help is a positive hindrance. But of this I am certain, that to those who with patience, with minds free from bias and prejudice, determine to become masters, to them will come the pleasure and the ability of expressing their love of Nature in a language that is perhaps the most beautiful mode of human expression-that of landscape painting.
These are but a few of Sir East’s gems. If you have a favorite artist quote that you would like to share, please post it to the comments section of the blog.







9/2/2008 4:00:06 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [3]
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