Martin put up the photograph below as a prompt (scare tactic!) and asked how sense could be made of it in translating it into something simplified that could be built upon.
The following three pictures are how he then stripped this down to its essence in terms of a composition that had a focal point, colour notes and tonal relationships.
M. Kinnear
M. Kinnear
1) On a daily basis, take a difficult photograph or go outside. Decide on a focal point and from that decide on a compositional plan;
2) Decide between a tonal or colour approach as the dominant feature for your composition;
3) Unify the elements, creating as few blocks of colour or tone as possible;
4) Block in the shapes then develop them with tones or hues keeping lit areas opaque and shadow areas translucent;
5) Try to minimise the detail to a few important and suggestive - rather than illustrative - marks.
Martin has published the routine on his blog, 'The Studio' at http://oilstudio.blogspot.com/
The next three panels are a selection of the ones that I produced in the ensuing feverish activity.
Light in the forest - 11" x 9" MDF panel
Sea Cave - 11" x 9" MDF panel
Light in the forest - 11" x 9" MDF panel
Sea Cave - 11" x 9" MDF panel
This procedure along with Notan sketches provide significant source material for paintings and most of all underline, what for many of us, is the most difficult hurdle in developing our painting that being forgetting the ingrained search for photographic type imagery in our work. The essence of good painting being the way we draw the viewer into an interactive approach with the work prompted by the suggestive marks we have created on the canvas.
3 comments:
Thanks Mick.....I might grab that one too!
Looks like a solid approach. I must take a look.
Michelle - it would be good if you could let me know how your students respond.
Mary - give it a go, it certainly makes you think.
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