Friday, October 31, 2008
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Why Oil Paint?
Once a canvas is stretched, many coats of gesso are applied to shrink the canvas. The canvas is then sanded with sandpaper to make it smoother and easier to paint on. Once that is done, creativity begins.
The artist or painter applies turpentine all over the canvas, so it will be easier to erase or fix mistakes. This is true because oil paint dries slower than most paints.Then the artist sketches the forms and step by step builds the up the painting with color. The oil paint and linseed oil used serve as varnishes to produce bright vivid colors. These oils give the painting a glossy finish. Regular paint hardens and you can not go back to fix a mistake; therefore, it shows up in the end result. Oil paint lets one blend colors and show the highlights, mid tones, and shadows of an object, setting, or person more effectively. No brushstrokes are shown; with regular paint the strokes are more visible.
Plus, the artist's style shows through the painting. Glazing is a technique Leonardo Da Vinci used in the painting The Mona Lisa. He kept building up a thin layer of paint upon another thin layer of paint to give the painting depth and texture.
Overall, oil paint has more benefits and advantages than normal paint.
Saturday, October 25, 2008
What is a Portrait?
Saturday, October 18, 2008
Reflection on White Objects Painting
I spent too long outlining the objects and fixing one part at a time. I finished the painting yet I do not feel as though i really completely finished it. I would have worked more on adding details to the fabric and the cups.
For the next painting, I plan to pace myself and not take so long on one part of the painting.
A Sense of Place
The second painting by Edward Hopper depicts the lady on the right hand side of the theater as being troubled or dismayed. Maybe she was waiting for someone and that person did not show up. She also seems to be in deep thought because of the gesture she makes with her hands; one holding the side of her face, the other hand propping up the first one. The warm bright colors of the red curtain, and the contrasting colors depict the essence of loneliness. The lamp sheds light on the woman's face highlighting her features and captures the emotion in her face. There is a sense of longing also. Plus, the place where she is standing is more illuminated than the rest of the theater. The rows of seats are dim. This creates contrast and puts more emphasis on the woman.
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Where Are You At?
I am still working on the White Objects painting and I find it difficult to get the right color or shade of white that matches the actual object's color. It is a little hard to make the fabric look like it has texture and folds on it. I also have trouble making the shadows and highlights really stand out. However, I am learning day by day and I am getting a little better. I am making my way.
I have improved on color mixing and showing different textures of the cloth in the White Objects Painting through varying the brushstrokes. I have also used wet brush to effectively mix colors and dry brush to blend colors together.
Looking at paintings made throughout history have a huge impact on us as painters today. Seeing others paintings gives us painters inspiration to make great paintings. We receive an insight to the artist's mind, emotions, and views through the abstract and surrealistic paintings. Seeing many painting like Starry Night and Sunflower by Van Gogh and many others helps bring out our creativity.
Saturday, October 4, 2008
Some Famous Paintings
Salvador Dali was Born on May 11, 1904 in Figueres, Spain. In 1929, he joined the Surrealists. Dali became widely known and got his fame through self publicity. He took over surrealistic theory automatism and turned it into what he called "Critical Paranoia". This is the reason why most of his paintings deal with delusions and hallucinations.
Salvador Dali concocts paintings by combining weird cartoon like objects with realistic objects. His paintings always involve surrealism and things he experienced in his childhood. His paintings are meant to intrigue or confuse the onlooker and make the person think.
I found this painting very interesting and its images of frail bendable clocks and a creature in the foreground and cliffs in the back caught my attention. I like the way he uses repetition with the clocks, continuation, and contrast. He varies the textures of each object to create a sense of the clocks looking floppy. It looks as if you could easily touch them and it would feel rubbery and be lightweight. He emphasizes the cliffs very well by using a lot of detail to accentuate the jagged rough curves of the cliffs and making them a vibrant warm yellow so it is striking to my eye.
I think this painting is important today because it has many meanings and themes. It represents how reality and the imaginary world sometimes get mixed up or become inseparable. It represents dreams people have wishing for something extraordinary to happen. When people watch a fictional movie, the movie has some unreal aspects that capture your attention and could become real through constant thought and manipulation. Some people take the dreams they have and turn it into reality by making a cartoon or writing a story. Persistence of Memory causes viewers to think creatively and beyond and above, and influences them to make other works like it and take action.