Oil
Painting - the Process
I generally work from a photograph or two. A striking color, or
dramatic lighting will catch my eye. I’ll snap a few photos
to catch the moment. Sometime I need a set of photographs to capture
the details of the shadows and the highlights which one photo cannot
capture both well. I choose my composition with a balance of shadow
and light. I like to paint big so the 4x6 inch photo I paint from
becomes a 2x3 foot or larger. I determine my final size, cut the
primed canvas, and hand stretch all my own canvases. This gives
me the freedom to fit my canvas to my composition rather than the
reverse.
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Layer
1 - washes of color |
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Layer
2 - thin paint with more depth |
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Layer
3 - thicker buttery paint and deails |
I draw the basic
lines of the objects, shadows and lights with pencil. Correcting
errors in drawing like proportions before any paint is applied.
I follow a traditional oil painting technique building layers of
oil painting fat on thin. Thinned (faster drying) oil paint is applied
in almost a watercolour wash covering the canvas. Again the drawing
is checked for mistakes and the layer is allowed to dry. A second
oil paint layer (slightly fatter in oil) is added, dramatically
deeper of hue, slightly thicker but without apparent brush strokes.
Pencil marks may still show through the more transparent colors
like the yellows. Yet the painting at his stage has taken on some
of the depth the final painting will have. The darks have not attained
their full richness but their colored bases are evident. I never
paint with black or greys out of the tube. My darks are always deep
rich hues like Alizaron crimson, Ultramarine Blue, or Viridian reflecting
the colors of the lighter areas while giving volume to the depths.
I tend to paint
with restricted palette based on my subject. I use the pure hues
in the sunny areas and blends of the same hues to create the greys,
browns, and faded tones of distance. Colors of Conch had a light
palette with about 8 hues making up the full range of colors and
tones. By mixing my own greys, I was able to shift them from warm
to cool simply by varying the proportions of the same two hues.
The greys harmonize - one is sun, one is shadow.
The third layer
of paint has no thinner. It is thicker like butter. It coats the
depths with pools of smooth color. It brings solid structure to
the objects and builds the middle tones. Details are added in this
layer. Brush strokes may be left in or skimmed away to the best
effect. I push the limit from light to dark building depth and volume.
Sometimes this is the last layer, sometimes there are more. The
paint, the subject, all rolled in one dictates the final moment.

Is it done?
Now I spend minutes staring at the painting, stepping back a few
feet, a few feet more. I squint. I meditate. I feel the painting
as a whole. I dab a little in the darkness or whisk in some detail
in the objects surface. Sometimes not touching it for a half hour
or more. Finally, it is really ALMOST done. I hang it on the wall
and live with it. It greets me anew every time I enter my studio.
I see it in sunshine, shadow or artificial lighting. I might dab
at it or not. I sign it days or weeks later when it really is done.
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