Watercolor Painting Step-By-Step PDF
Watercolor Painting Step-By-Step PDF
Watercolor Painting Step-By-Step PDF
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f
i
V
l>
in
1891-1956)
Pencil (1922)
in
Sketching as a
Hobby (1936)
Norman
Pencil
WATERCOLOR
PAINTING
STEP-BY-STEP
by
ARTHUR
L.
GUPTILL
Wi
WATSON-GUPTILL PUBLICATIONS
To my grandson
WILLIAM LEIGHTON GUPTILL
Copyright
Publishers Note
THIS PRESENT
VOLUME by Arthur
L.
shortly
before his death, February 29, 1956. He intended it as the companion to Oil Painting Step-by-Step, published in 1953 and in
continuing demand. As with the previous book, the basic content
Contents
Part
Page
Care
1.
Equipment:
2.
How
3.
Getting Under
4.
45
5.
50
6.
58
7.
68
8.
Color Schemes
9.
Still Life:
80
10.
Still Life:
88
11.
Now
Part II
Selection, Preparation,
Watercolor Paper
to Stretch
by
John Rogers
Way
33
39
Let's Paint
15
Outdoors
73
99
1.
Norman Kent
2.
How Ted
3.
Herb Olsen
4.
5.
Paints a Landscape
Vll
Still-Life Painting
108
112
117
121
126
Authors Note
my
favorite
at least so far as
my own
WATERCOLOR HAS
resentation
whenever
loiig becii
medium
of pictorial rep-
painting
is
concerned
write about
it, I
attractive result
mood
all
to see
of nature, a record
of a mental conception.
This mere exhibition of the watercolorist's virtuosit)^ is sometimes enough to take one's breath away. Facility, spontaneity,
crispness, directness, color opulence
come
to
at
work
or
\'iev\'
his results.
But there
is
I like
watercolor. It
is
ix
And
transport
all
of this
and easy
equipment
to store.
And
Even the
it
is
is
light
in weight,
easy to
everywhere available at
no problem.
producer can be stored,
AUTHOR S NOTE
and disappointments. Many things, though, will be simply
With a few hues \'ou will create others. W' ith a dozen
brush you will successfully catch the
strokes of a "split-hair
repetitixe undulations of a plowed field. You will touch a Hat
brush into two or more colors on \our palette and, in a single
stroke on your paper, effectixeh' render a tree trunk. You will
swish a brush up and down and cause a mass of tangled grass or
shrubber)' to appear. You will drag a somewhat dr\' Inrush ov^er
your paper and instanth' create the roughness, the weight, the
trials
fascinating.
You
will stick
semblance of water
will catch a
mood
which
prescribe.
However
laurels. You
Arthur L. Guptill
Stamford, Connecticut
February 1, 1956.
xu
Parti
FUNDAMENTALS OF
WATERCOLOR PAINTING
14
Circular
5"A3r'
Muffin Tin
useful for
t/ie
Adjustable, to
Will tilt to
\vaherco\orislr
anu anal^
any angle
Tabled
Adjustable,
toariij
jf
''
Table easel
Folding
field
easel
mixing
cups
FIG. 1
Equipment:
AS
Selection, Preparation,
Care
of pictorial expression,
it is
obvious
that one entering the field of watercolor painting for the first
time should get to know, before rushing into premature attempts
at picture making, something of the customary materials the
new
has to
offer,
thing of
We
come
15
16
and pans
tube clean and fresh. Tube colors
also permit the quick preparation of amounts of color sufficient
to coat large paper areas. (It is discouragingly slow, by way of
contrast, to have to soften enough color from pans or buttons to
cover any but the smaller areas of one's work.) Whatever one's
decision as to kind of paint, almost invariably considerable water
must be added, the quantity depending on the depth of tone
required. For dark or brilliant hues, relatively little water is
needed. For most light tints, the color is greatly diluted.
Make of Colors As to make, practically every painter ultimately develops a personal preference. In today's stiff competition it seems safe to assume that any of the well-known brands
will give satisfaction. Your choice may depend on what your
dealer has to offer, though most dealers carry several lines. Or
perhaps some teacher or artist friend will be the one to determine
your choice. The main thing is to realize that, whatever the
make, you get just about what you pay for, so the cheaper
colors sometimes known as "students' colors" cannot be expected to be as satisfactory in the long run as those made for
is
from
its
some
Professionals
extent,
better grades.
Eventually you
different
THE EQUIPMENT
17
may do
is
for
work
The more
of a temporary nature,
though
knows how
color note.
18
are not garish; therefore, they can best be interpreted with paints
to an extent already neutralized by the manufacturer.
which are
Recommended
"palette"
who
Lists
which one
They
not only
are
Cadmium
Cadmium
Indian red
red, light
Yellow ochre
Viridian (green)
Burnt sienna
Payne's gray
Alizarin crimson
Ivory black
wet
surface."
Cadmium
Cadmium
Cadmium
yellow, light
Prussian blue
yellow, deep
red, light
Alizarin crimson
Hooker's green #2
Burnt sienna
Lamp
black
THE EQUIPMENT
19
any desired
for
command
result. Asterisks
enough
'Cadmium
'Cadmium
**
yellow, deep
**
Cadmium
Cadmium
deep
Cadmium orange
Scarlet vermilion
Aureolin
Vermilion
when
colors)
*Raw umber
Yellow ochre
'Raw sienna
Mars \ellow
**
X'^enetian red
*Viridian
Oxide of chromium
Indian red
Light red
Lamp
* Cerulean
**
Burnt umber
Burnt sienna
blue
Cobalt blue
French ultramarine
Prussian blue
black
Ivory black
Mars black
Below we describe
we
all
REDS
fa\'orite in
painting flowers.
20
YELLOWS
Aureolin A veiy bright, transparent color. A common choice
as a primary in color mixing.
Cadmium yellow Another bright yellow, slightly opaque.
Also used as a primary. Does not mix well with all colors, however.
Yellow ochre
great favorite.
Not
two.
GREENS: BROWNS
reasonably adequate range of greens can easily be mixed
from blues and yellows. But among the well-liked ready-mixed
greens, phthalocyanine green has become a popular choice. Viridian is also a favorite. Among the browns, common choices are
burnt sienna (listed above), sepia, raw umber, and burnt umber.
WHITES: BLACKS
Chinese white has occasional uses, and one needs a good black
or two, such as ivory black or
lamp
black.
THE EQUIPMENT
Color Box
21
Though
absolute essential,
it is
certainly a convenience.
many
small "stalls"
(one for each color) into which fresh paint may be squeezed as
needed. The tubes remain in the box and so do not weigh down
the palette. Both the tubes and the colors in the stalls are usually
arranged by the artist in some logical way, perhaps in a "rainbow" or color wheel sequence such as we shall describe in a
moment.
Color Cups
Professional
watercolorists
use
paint
in
such
see Fig.
1.
Some hke
a thermos bottle
both painting and drinking.
as this
00
One
He
is
timidity.
FIG.
(^JUA^^
^hidUvtcdh-Pyi^
A^
-ftyy
fOMj^^
WATLR.COLOR. PALETTE,
E> ^
Such a palette or
circular utensil
best.
THE EQUIPMENT
23
Of the
his stock.
as to preference.
method
several types
As we
commonly
with
of working.
^:Z3y
i/J
Sakoj^?''
fYneil{u/i^^
muecyju^
24
Red Sable Brushes Brushes of red sable are popular for many
kinds of work. Of these, the round, sharply pointed ones (such
we
picture at actual size in Fig. 3) are perhaps the most usesome painters employ nothing else. A good sable brush of
the round type should, by the way, be uniformly round, and
as
ful;
which
is
all
times.
flabby and
fails to
give
many
wash them thoroughly with mild soap and warm water when
you put them away. Shake each one out don't squeeze it so
that
it
let
THE EQUIPMENT
25
cramped
positions.
hardened watercolor paint on your palette or color box by scrubbing it vigorously with your best brush. And moths, by the way,
are all too fond of expensive sable brushes!
For Field Trips For outdoor work generally, where one
wishes compact yet adequate equipment, a metal box of the
type made to accommodate fishing tackle or household carpenter's tools can also prove of great convenience, especially if large
enough to hold practically all of one's paraphernalia excepting,
of course, paper.
Paper
Unlike
oil
paintings,
This
is
manufactured especially
it
must be
of exceptional quality.
26
Is
paper) reading in the natural way that is, from left to right
the top (working surface) of the paper is facing you. So far as
general use is concerned, it apparently makes little difference
which side of a handmade sheet you paint on, but some machinemade papers reveal a noticeable difference between front and
back, the former being far superior to the latter.
Mounting and Stretching The heaviest, and consequently
most expensive, of the watercolor papers do not buckle badly
when wet; they are often used "as is." The lighter ones, as mentioned above, must preferably be ( 1 ) mounted on heavy board,
(2) "stretched" by any of several methods, or (3) made up by
the manufactmer into solid blocks (pads), each containing a
number of sheets.
Some papers can be purchased already mounted; once you
have decided on a brand you merely ask for it in mounted form.
Such mounted paper has two great advantages: it remains flat
throughout the entire painting process, and is relatively easy to
mat or frame. It is quite expensive, however, and, unless you
place a high value on your time, it is cheaper to mount your own.
Here is a typical method of mounting: the selected paper is
moistened until limp, with a sponge (or by soaking in water),
when it is pasted evenly all over the back with some watersoluble adhesive such as drawing board paste, bookbinders'
paste or diluted glue. It is then laid paste-side-down on heavy
mounting board, previously dampened. Next, with a protective
sheet of paper over it, it is rolled, scraped or brushed vigorously
enough to force all air from between paper and mount, and
promote uniform adhesion. It is then weighted down ( as between
two drawing boards loaded with books) where it can dry flat.
27
THE EQUIPMENT
This often takes se\ eral hours. The mount w ill buckle if removed
before thoroughh' dr\-.
This takes so long and results in so un\ ielding a surface that
man\' watercolorists prefer to "stretch" their paper, as the following process is called. In stretching, only the edges of the paper
are fastened down. There are sexeral methods of going about
ever\' painter should master at least one.
In what is perhaps the simplest of these, the initial mo\ e is
to assemble a wooden frame of the desired size, using for the
purpose four of the stretcher strips sold for stretching canvas.
This frame should be at least two inches smaller than the paper
in both length and width. The next mo\e is to saturate the paper
until it has absorbed all the water it can hold. It is then laid
flat on some clean, le\el surface and the frame placed upon it,
centered to lea\e a unifomi margin of paper all around. \\'orking
one edge at a time, this paper margin can now be turned up at
this;
main surface
of the
Any
perative
tension
exert
or
such a
work
loose,
or pull the stretcher frame out of shape, thus slacking the paper.
As the paper dries, it gradually shrinks to drumhead smoothness.
It is then ready for the artist. It wdll buckle to some extent each
time he wets it (depending on its thickness), but will go flat
again when dr\-. The finished painting should not be cut from
the frame until it has dried for se\eral hours, or it ma\' wrinkle
badh-.
In another stretching method, faxored by many, the thoroughh" wet paper is first laid face up on a drawing board or sheet
of hea\ > pl\ wood. Heavy gummed tape is then used to fasten the
paper to the board. The tape must run around the entire perimeter of the paper, equally o\erlapping both paper and board.
The tape ma>- be doubled or tripled for greater strength, especially if the paper is of sufficient size to indicate the possibility'
of developing excessi\e pull. As the sheet shrinks, watch the
28
tape to make sure that
repeatedly and reinforce
work
it
doesn't
it
with thumbtacks
loose.
if
Rub
it
down
you think
this
advisable.
Sometimes
ing
method
especially
is
for large paper still another stretchfollowed: the paper (in its original dry state) is
later
29
THE EQUIPMENT
they will dry there and, in the finished work,
may
reveal a
don't
mount
or stretch
come
in
many
sizes
and several
surfaces.
Easel:
indoors
uses a suitable easel or table to support
Drawing Table
when working
''dry'' (drawing
rather
painting
it),
*"^*^a
An
Gnild
'"K
30
When
THE EQUIPMENT
31
high
lights.
Two
good
substitute.
32
FIG.
FIG.
We
how
Many
artists
know
is
and students
though well aware of the difficulties invoKed in painting watercolors don't seem to realize how often these difficulties are
multiplied because the painting is done on unstretched paper. It
is true that some artists do well without stretching their paper
by using a \ ery dry technique or b\' working on heavy paper; but
for those who work on lightweight paper using average methods,
turns out a
properly handled, will
adhere all around and remain absolutely flat, and it will work
with the pleasant tightness of a well-stretched canvas. This
method of shrinking (for that's what it really is) will give less
trouble and produce more successfully stretched paper than the
paste paper method or any other.
Our first picture (Fig. 6) shows the materials needed: a sheet
of clean wrapping paper about the size of the board being used;
a pack of white blotters; a jar of drawing board paste and a few
paste brushes; a sheet of any good handmade watercolor paper,
72 lb. rough; a five-ply plywood board about 26" x 34" for a full
sheet or 17" x 26" for a half. It is a good idea to have at least two
of each size. The plywood board is placed on the drawing table
with the wrapping paper on top of it the blotters, paste and
brushes are placed convenienth'.
Wet the watercolor paper (Fig. 7) by slipping it loosely half
folded under cold water which you have run in the bathtub. It
is important that it be completely submerged and remain submerged during the few^ minutes required to become thoroughly
wet.
stretching
is
imperative.
Any
sheet,
33
if
34
Fl(..
Grasp the wet paper by the corners and Hft it carefully out of
the water. Flop it onto the wrapping paper (Fig. 8), quickly
taking a blotter to soak up any large amount of water that might
run
off.
FIG. 9
35
FIG. 10
Fig. 10 ) to a
Appl\- paste around the edge of the paper
width of about one-half inch. Use a spare piece of mat board as
an aid in keeping neatl\- within the one-half inch width. The
drawing ])oard paste is put on just as it comes from the jar. It
must be ])rushed on smoothly and thoroughh'. Here again speed
is most important.
The wrapping paper is lifted and placed on some other table
so that the watercolor paper ma\- be lifted o\er and lowered onto
(
FIG. 11
36
FIG.
12
The
unevenness that
care, since
may
exist.
FIG.
13
to dry
com-
When
the watercolor
finished
is
Fig. 13
37
it
can be cut
off
the board
left on,
be attached. Assuming
that the first sheet is ]:)onded to the l:)()ard finnh', one can stretch
quite a few papers, each adhering to the previous border. When
the border builds up too high, the whole thing can then he pried
off. Portions that can't be pried oft must be soaked with lukewarm
water and scraped until the board is clean.
The ease with which work can be done on this taut surface is
ample payment for the trouble invoKed in stretching. At least
the basic element in a watercolor the paper will not stand in
the way of a successful painting if \ou follow this procedure.
for
it
is
38
H^
FIG. 14
3
Getting Under Way
ONCE YOU HAVE ASSEMBLED yoiir equipment, you will be wise to
spend some time becoming acquainted with it before undertaking
your first picture. While there is no one best way of doing this,
the following exercises, long tested through classroom use, afford
a sound guide.
''Transparent" Painting
First,
it
of watercolor painting
throughout
this
other types
to the use of
commonly
is
self-evident,
transparent. If that
is
truly
were the
case,
Methods
let's
plies his
which should be
39
40
EXERCISE
on
Line
Work
First,
what might be
strokes
may
A, Fig. 14 ) to an inch
many such
lines,
working
for
variety.
entireh^ in dry-brush,
many
use
it
oc-
dry-brush technique.
EXERCISE 3: Dabs; Stipple As a variation of the linear approach, the artist may "dab" his color in place, merely touching
his paint-laden brush to the paper again and again (H). By
\'arying his kind and size of brush, and his brush position or
pressure, he can produce an amazing variety of brush marks.
Occasionally artists paint some passages through the use of
hundreds of tiny brush marks placed side b\^ side in close proximity. This type of work (L) is called "stipple" or "stippling." By
contrasting these juxtaposed colors, following much the s\'stem
used by the French Impressionists, and known as pointillism,"
painters are able to set up a sort of vibration or scintillation
sometimes useful in obtaining atmospheric effects, appearances
of distance, or suggestions of movement as in foliage. Try these
this
'
GETTING UNDER
WAY
41
Spatter and Spray Now and then the artist may spray color
onto either the whole of a painting or a part of it. He nia\' use
for this a mouth or hull) atomizer, or the mechanical device
known as the aiibrush. Or he may spatter paint onto certain
areas. These are but occasional expedients, however, so we shall
pass them by. For a full explanation of such methods see the
author's book. Drawing with Pen and Ink (Reinhold).
EXERCISE 4: Wash Work Aside from these various kinds of
lines, dabs or dots, which together make possible one basic t\ pe
of watercolor painting a ''drawn" or linear t\pe we have
another wholh' different yet equalh' basic "painted" or "wash"
type. In this, the brush usualh^ of considerable size is employed to con\ey quite a puddle of liquid paint to the paper, this
"wash' then being brushed (or allowed to flow under control
of the brush) over quite a large area of the paper, paint being
added a brushful at a time as needed, or reduced (picked up by
a partly dr\' brush and wiped off on a rag or l:)lotter ) as the limits
of the area are reached. Such washes, when applied and dried,
may be either "flat" that is, uniform throughout (A, Fig. 15)
or "graded" ( Fig. B ) If the latter, the gradation ma> be from
,
o^i??
FIG.
15
42
Some
handle
paints,
in the
GETTING UNDER
WAY
43
down
often
FIG.
16
part but only the lower part of the area first painted, using,
perhaps, a round-and-round stirring movement of the brush just
as though he were painting small circles. (An up-and-down
motion is sometimes substituted. ) As he gradually proceeds from
left to right in this way, the puddle should flow down uniformly
to re-form at the bottom. He should never forget that in order
to maintain an adequate puddle, he may need to dip his brush
again and again; he must keep the puddle wet. The main thing
to avoid is the drying out of part of the area too soon.
He should now return once more to the left and proceed as
before, gradually supplying just enough paint to keep the puddle
wet as he paints this third band across. (The upper areas which
were first painted will soon begin to dry. One shouldn't go back
into them once they start to set and lose their shine or he
will be in trouble.) This entire procedure should be repeated
as necessary until the designated area has been nearly filled.
As one approaches the lower boundary line, his job (aside
from painting exactly to the pencil boundary a thing which
it is good practice to try to do at all times) is to take up any
surplus paint which may flow down to make the puddle too wet
along the lower edge. As has already been hinted, he does this
by drying his brush slightly touching it to blotting paper or a
rag after which it will absorb the surplus paint. In this, one
44
too
size of
particles
much
satisfactory
Graded washes
general procedure
an
are even
is
It is
in size
to cover
more
difficult,
the
wash
a sky,
sometimes mixes
a number of color cups of wash, each a little darker than the
previous one. He builds his puddle with the lightest wash,
then shifts to the next and so on. With practice, he can learn
to create in this way a gradual transition from light to dark (or
from one color to another).
Some prefer to work from dark to light. If so, they should of
course reverse the order of using this premixed color. Not infrequently, they grade dark to light and back again, or the reverse.
In the case of color, they similarly grade from one hue to another,
then to a third, and so on.
If an area is comparatively small, it is seldom necessary to
prepare the cups of color in advance. If one has learned always
to keep his wash wet, he can probably master in a few attempts
the trick of increasing or decreasing any given color in order to
secure uniform gradation. Often he adds paint or water from
time to time to his pool or puddle on his palette, thus reloading
his brush with paint of the right hue and value.
Let me stress once more that this matter of wash laying is very
important. Stick to it (even if it takes a week) until you can lay
a wash of any size and kind. Many painters are needlessly handicapped for half a lifetime because of failure to acquire this knack
of laying flat and graded washes.
again, or a large area of lake or sea
artist
hue
5:
of watercolor
45
46
EXERCISE
paintings,
6:
it
often
so
ALlIXRtMCRlMSOM
Ckmim
AUllEOUMYELlOW
CADMIUM
WIMSOR BLUE
RED DE F P
YE
UOW
FREMCH UITRAMARIWE
YELLOW OCHRE
COB>ALT
B^aiE.
I^AWSIENJUA
CERULEAM
B-LUE
W>iii$m90^9^^
EMERALDGI^IEM
FIG. 17.
WiKiSORGREEM
Make
V^SM?^
k-E
[^^QWK
LAMrp~.\.,r
we
suggest that
by applying it
every other color.
palette
witli
47
in Fig. bS.
example,
it
a test, a
will
Artists troubled
in
"mud"
freshly
and
direct!)' as possible,
layer of paint.
Or we
we
FIG.
kno\\' to
19.
Order
be resistant to
of superimposifion
later overpainting.
48
EXERCISE
still
7:
further. Parallel
bands of
all
this
thought
them with a
EXERCISE 8: Opacity of Color In Fig. 21 a line of black waterproof ink was painted across the paper. This was then superimposed with various colors. Some of these cadmium red, cadmium yellow and emerald green, for instance nearly hid the
line. Such opaque colors can be very valuable when one wishes to
hide or disguise unpleasant passages but should not be used in
full strength when it is desirable to have underlying color or
detail show through. Test your colors in some such manner.
EXERCISE 9: Test for Fading Many a good watercolor painting has been injured some of them ruined through long
exposure to strong light. Certain colors resist light well; others
fade badly. Here is an easy test of your own colors; make it now
FIG. 21.
Opacity
test
GAINING ACQUAINTANCE
\\'ITH
YOUR PAINTS
49
and by the time you are reach" to start \ our "masterpieces" you
should know a lot about e\ er\ color's permanence.
Paint a vertical band (a half-inch or so wide) of each of your
colors in full intensit\ all the way down a sheet of paper, so that
\ou finalh" have a dozen or more parallel bands. Then cut this
paper horizontally in several strips; each strip will thus contain
a sample of each color. Write the names of the colors on at least
one of the strips preferably all and add the date.
Place one strip permanenth* in bright sunlight, as at a window;
another in bright light but awa\' from the sun; a third in a darker
part of the room; and a fourth in a drawer or elsewhere, where
no light can penetrate. E\ery few weeks, la\' these strips side
by side for comparison. If an\' colors are proved by this test to
be too fugiti\ e they can be rejected from your palette at least
for any serious work. For all-around practice, however, you will
probably find that each of >'Our colors is sufRcienth" light-proof.
upon
thousands of hues, some bright, some dull, some light, some dark.
How, with your few paints, can you represent them all?
Frankly, you can't hope to match each one perfectly, especially
for
or
characteristics
of
your different
50
colors,
51
Some
Definitions
green,
and
blue.
which you
are
We
is
a change in hue.
52
Brilliance;
Value
Webster
which
it
may
by brilliance or value that we are able to discriminate between light red and dark red. By mixing a color with
something lighter or darker than itself we change its value.
"value." It
is
Saturation;
quality,
in
is,
as differing in
degree from gray." As "saturation" refers to vividness or distinctness of hue, the more gray we mix in a color the less saturated
it becomes.
Some artists substitute the word "chroma" for "saturation."
(Webster tells us that "chroma" characterizes a color qualitatively without reference to its brilliance [value], thus embracing
both hue and saturation.
Still more in use by the artist in this connection is the word
"intensity." Therefore, that is the term we shall employ in the
fact that
many
authorities don't
We
We
Normal
strength
Colors;
may be
value." If lighter
sense,
it is
a color.
wrong
Tints;
Shades
color in
its
full,
natural
we
call
it
a "tint";
if
Remember
53
a bright dark or light tone of bhie; the gray walls took on a greenish
tone; the soft tones of the old marble." As to painting, Webster
adds this thought on the word "tone": "The general effect due
to the combination of light and shade, together with color;
excellent
let
colorists
it
as, this
know
nitions.
each of your water might be considered as a "normal" color, that term sometimes being loosely
applied to one's more intense colors just as they come from the
tube. Some painting will be done with your colors in this natural
form. Often, however, it will be necessary to lighten, darken,
intermix or otherwise so modify them as to create a greater
variety of hues to approximate the myriad colors of nature.
color paints
at
least the
more
tests,
brilliant
ones
There are several ways in which you can obtain, on your white
paper, tints of each of your colors ( 1 ) You can dilute the paint
:
with water; obviously, the more water you add, the lighter the
This
is
the best
can brush the paint on so very dry that it "breaks" to let the
white paper show through in places. (The rougher the paper,
the more easily this method can be used. ) ( 4 ) You can cover an
area of your paper with small separated dots of color. The eye
will blend these dots with the surrounding white, through this
optical admixture, gaining the effect of a tint. (5) You can also
lighten a color by mixing it with some other color of lighter
value, though this will, of course, change the hue as well as the
value.
is to darken
with gray or black. It can also be mixed with some other color
(or colors) darker than itself, though this again changes both
it
54
sheet of paper, one for each of your colors just as it comes from
the tube. Group your reds; also, the yellows, blues, greens, and
browns. Above this row of squares, paint a second row in which
every color
is
giving you a
which the colors
are
still
further
diluted
Still
(as
above
uniformly as
this add, if
you wish, another row or two, with your paints so greatly diluted
as to result in very pale tints of all of
your
colors.
to
yourself to
later
55
wish
56
AG RAPED"
A'iTEPPEP'
SCALE
SCALE
^^AjJbi
more
accurate,
though
mere addition
iii
^IMi
wmvr^'^^m
all
to the white.
Try
you wish;
it's
if
excellent practice.)
te!;.ri:f..-r4-;.yi
Wi?\*S
we draw
stepped
that
at
painted
or paint, instead of a
scale, a
"B."
In
interpretation
of
this,
22
VALUE SCALES
57
or parts of
it
more
than
When
6
Color Mixing and Matching: Color Charts
YOU HAVE NOW MIXED cach of your watercolor paints with water
and with black to obtain a full gamut of values. You have also
made value scales in black and white, as well as in color, and
have practiced "measuring" nature's tones by comparing them
with these scales. All of this exercise, even if it served no other
purpose, could (1) strengthen your realization that areas of
color as seen in nature vary not merely in hue but in degree of
light and dark, and (2) sharpen your faculties of observation
and discrimination between one hue or value and another.
Now the Real Fun At last comes the excitement of turning
magician, for your next move is to create an endless variety of
colors of your
own by mixing
58
59
A/a/ng e.veTcwe
FIG. 23.
Repeat
gamut
of \-alues ranging
this exercise
You should
how
appear
dark shades.
from
light tints to
nature,
color,
60
much from
made up
Secondary Colors If you mix together primary red and primary yellow they will give you orange; primary yellow and primary
blue will give green, and primary blue and primary red will give
violet.
colors.
colors
are
often
called
"secondary"
positions indicated.
you needn't be unduly concerned with these names; in themselves they mean very little. The thing which counts is that
when the colors are arranged around an arbitrary circle such
as we have in our diagram, they give us to repeat a very
useful instrument.
61
>^
FIG. 24.
VIOILT
Color wJ]cel
to
contain red. So are blue, bluegreen, and blue-\iolet; the\' all contain blue. Because of their
common factor, analogous colors of an\- one famih* usualh'
haniionize estheticalh* among themsehes and so can be em\-iolet
plo>ed together
all
safely.
62
such as blue-violet and yellow-orange, red-orange and bluegreen, red-\'iolet and \ello\v-green.
Colors
which are
on our chart as to
our three primaries, (2)
our three secondaries, (3) our two trios of intermediates are
Triads
so positioned
i.e.,
(1)
seem brighter.
A Practical Application If you are picturing a building
bathed in the yellows and oranges of sunlight, and you wish to
make it look still more sunny, you can use, adjacent to these
warm colors, cooler colors such as blue, blue-violet, and bluegreen, thus creating (through what is known as "simultaneous
contrast") an illusion of brighter light. One reason why artists
employ so man>- blue and purple shadows is because they know
of the orange. Also the blue will
make
their
63
'
three or
more
we
ha\-e stressed. If
you ha\e
to
do
mix
so.
an\-
'
64
A Successful Scheme Study many paintings and you will discover that in such analogous schemes with complementary accents the artist often selects, for the larger areas of any given
painting, the analogous colors which would be found in approximately one-third or one-quarter of the circumference of our color
wheel. He then goes to the opposite side of the wheel for
complementary colors to be used in relatively small areas only.
But Be Careful! Although comparatively small complementary areas can thus be effective, the employment of anything like
equal areas of two full-strength complementary colors can be
highly dangerous; it often creates a chromatic clash. In other
words, it is generally best not to cover large adjoining or adjacent
areas with opposite or competing colors of any great degree of
brilhancy unless you are intentionally working for a dazzling,
unrestful effect. Usually, when opposites are conspicuously employed, one or the other should dominate either in area or in
hue. To give an illustration, if a painting were to be made with
roughly one-half of its area bright red ( a red barn, perhaps ) and
one-half of its area bright green (the foliage around the bam)
would have, instead, an
there would be no dominant hue.
unpleasant clash of opposites, a fighting for supremacy. To prevent such a chromatic battle, the green could be dulled down,
leaving the red to dominate, or vice versa. Or the areas might be
adjusted in size so that one of the two colors would dominate
We
would be too
garish.
65
And
In order to create harmony, artists frequently use complementary colors to neutralize the shade or shadow side of an
object. If one is painting a blue bowl, a certain amount of complementary orange can often be used to advantage in the shade
side. A yellow bowl might have some violet added in the shade
areas, and so on.
Timidity Whatever you do, however, don't neutralize everything. It is far better at first to risk garishness or stridency through
the use of overbright colors than to risk monotony or worse
through an attempt to "harmonize" everything.
EXERCISE 16: Try for Yourself Why not make some little
sketches (or paint experimental areas) to illustrate these points.
Or you might
like to
either
actual paintings
or reproductions in color.
we
shall
offer
little later
66
point
some colored
paper clippings
From
combination
harmonious relationship by the mere
expedient of changing the areas in size. Designers of such things
as millinery, dresses, rugs, etc., have also long since learned the
importance of thus restraining certain colors as to area, while
expanding others. Rules can be of little help here; the trained eye
ping of the other
of
is
two or more
colors into
Phenomenon
In
order to test
by
side,
still
fur-
each three
and a like
area of bright green. Here you have the typical and very lively
complementary color combination repeatedly mentioned, each
or four square inches in extent, an area of bright red
the
stripes,
67
Incidentall), a
prmt
it
is
large
enough
next to impossible to
some paintings
in the original to
is
that
be effective are
so greatly reduced in reproduction that, like the stripes of Ex18, they lose their chromatic power. Illustrators have
learned that, when painting for reduction, it is necessary to keep
color areas large and simple somewhat posterlike.
Where Does This Leave Us? By way of summary, three
facts which stand out from all of this recent discussion are that
(1) large areas of opposite colors, juxtaposed, tend to intensify
each other; (2) myriad small areas of opposite colors, similarly
juxtaposed, are blended by the eye into neutral tone, each color
tending to annihilate its opposite; and (3) opposite colors when
mixed together also tend to neutralize or annihilate each other.
ercise
another?
at
to
h\\-
all
optical illusions.
test the
As in Fig. 25, place side b}' side two fairly large sheets of
paper ( at least five or six inches square ) one of them light yellow
and the other of dark but intense blue. On these, lay two small
inch ) squares or other con\-enient shapes of bright
( one
self.
green paper. So arranged, the green against the dark blue will
seem lighter than before and slight!}- yellowish, while the green
against the light }-ellow will appear darker and slight!}- bluegreen. (Lay transparent tissue paper o\-er the wliole and tlie
contrast will be even more pronounced; it is sometimes liard to
beheve that the two green squares are actual!}- of identical liue.
FIG.
2o
68
69
Not only will the two small green areas differ in apparent value
and hue, but the yellow, eontrasted with the green and blue, may
appear slightly toward orange and blue, eontrasted with the yellow and green, a bit purple. In short, a few sueh experiments
will demonstrate elearly that colors are infiuencccl in hue by adjacent colors, each tinting its neighbor with its own complement.
of other eolors
(or areas of
hues on a dark
ground which is not complementary will appear weaker than on
one which is complementary; light colors on a light ground which
is not complementary will seem weaker than on a complementary
ground; a bright color against a dull color of the same hue will
further deaden the dull color; when a bright color is used against
a dull color the contrast will be strongest when the latter is complementary; light colors on light grounds (not complementary)
can be greatly strengthened if bounded by narrow bands of black
or complementary colors; and dark colors on dark grounds (not
complementary) can be strengthened if similarly bounded by
white or light colors.
Just how does all of this affect the painter when he goes forth
to interpret nature's hues? Not much, actually. But because he
has learned how tricky nature can be, he realizes the truth of our
claim, on an earlier page, that any rules of color harmony any
paint,
if
Color Activity
be described
and attentive
value.
Some
and others
as light
70
Hues which
when
bright, stimulating
while
we wish
warm
to paint distance or
The
artist
71
their abilities to
power
72
to
discuss them,
tor
altliough
tlie\
these l)ooks
are
apparently at
most
art hinaries.
The Luckiesh
])ook
would be an
it
and the theater. There are illuminating chapters on symbolism, explaining the significance of
individual hues. There are also chapters on nomenclature, psychoph>'siology of color, color preference, the affective and attentive \alue of colors, etc. Finally come helpful statements on
esthetics, harmony, and the like. Sargent's and Weinberg's books,
for that matter, go into many of these same things.
EXERCISE 20: Further Color Experiments What we have
literature, painting, religion,
time!
8
Color Schemes Which You
Can Use
PERHAPS
73
74
learn to go after
])ig itiipiessions
matching
of each hue.
If
by the novice
paintings
fail in
it is
Yet color
But,
if
is
there are no
man-made
rules,
and
if
nature
is
not an
satisfactory
error.
One way
others; there
to
is
COLOR SCHEMES
\\
75
colorings
it
it
purpose or fancy.
Most color schemes tall \\ ithin one or another of the following
categories. UnfortunateK, ho\\e\er, it is not eas\' with words
alone to describe these different schemes. In the author's book.
Color in Sketching and Rendering [Reinhold], such descriptions
are not onh" more complete, but color reproductions of selected
paintings exemplify them all a big help.
suits his
One Color
makes use
The
simplest
hkeh' to emplo\' is an extension of the abo\e: it consists of any desired values and intensities of a single hue. used
with or without white, gra\' or black. A good illustration would
be a painting done on white paper or canxas with but one color
sepia, for example the \alues perhaps ranging from light
tints to dark shades, v Such \ ariations are sometimes referred to
as "self-tones.
As onl\- one color is used hence the temi "monochromatic '\ there is no chance for an inharmonious color result.
That monoclii"omatic schemes can be effecti\e is proxed by the
fact that all but colored photographs are in monochrome usualh'
black or brown.
painter
is
'
which
othersvise
is
mono-
of
analogous
hues, the whole then being intensified through the use of small
(possibly bright) complementary accents.
Auak)<i,()us Schemes Inasmuch as strictly monochromatic
schemes are rare in the work of the painter, his main interest will
be in various types of more colorful schemes. The simplest of
these is the analogous or related scheme already discussed (on
page 61 ) in connection with our color wheel. It will be recalled
that this scheme is made up of colors which are adjoining or
adjacent in the spectrum, and hence on the color wheel. Orange,
yellow, and yellow-green, for example, form an analogous scheme,
common
factor, yellow.
me
Let
We
safest
and
surest at the
artist's
command.
if you want to obtain haniionious color, limit
few hues showing a clear indication of mutual relashould perhaps warn you, however, that even this
In other words,
yourself to a
tionship.
is
We
no absolute guarantee of
success.
recently noticed a
florist's
enough
to relate the
two hues
was
But
this
exceptional.
in
member
other words, to
that a
make
77
this
to
its
its
in Chapter 6,
most successful analogous schemes are enlixened by
the introduction of rather small but sometimes intense complementary accents. Such accents, particularly if brilliant, often have
a power out of all proportion to their size. A single touch of color
complementar)' to the dominant hue of an analogous scheme can
many
of the
give surprising
life
to the whole.
We
colors
in
full strength.
78
violet.
79
complements, which are closely related to the complement ituse other split complements, each a step further removed.
In the twehe-color wheel on page 61, if yellow should he taken
as a hue to dominate a color scheme, and the split complements
red-violet and blue-violet (alone or in mixture) should prove too
inadequate to hold their own, red and blue might be substituted,
giving us a "triad" harmony. Yet there we are, of course, in a
danger zone for, although some mixtures obtained from triads
can be very rich and beautiful ( we have seen again and again that
practically all colors can be mixed from the triad composed of
red, yellow, and blue), other mixtures can be far from harmonious as each primary strives to dominate the other two. To get
effective results, therefore, one hue of the triad is usually selected
to dominate the scheme, and the other two are mixed together,
or with the first, or with white or black, or some other color so as
to render them less potent.
One of the most certain ways of preventing rivalry among the
basic colors of a triad is to select one of the three to dominate,
and then to "veil" (by means of a thin wash) or neutralize the
other two with it.
A Play-Safe Method For the beginner, incidentally, there is
Split
self,
we
a "play-safe" type of
harmony which
gives
him reasonably
satis-
other.
Very Complicated Don't expect to grasp from this all( and undoubtedly confusing ) printed word more than a
vague notion of the intricacies of color harmony. Some painters
have concentrated on color harmony for a lifetime and entire
books have been devoted to it. May I stress again that my main
purpose is merely to get you thinking about color, so that you
will develop as you go along a more critical color sense, plus
an ever-increasing facility in harmonizing the various hues at
It's
too-brief
your command?
EXERCISE 22: Color Schemes Make some small color sketches
to illustrate the types of schemes discussed above, or hunt up
pictorial illustrations of each in books or magazines.
9
Still
many
things
we
down
Choice of Subject
80
81
is
multitude of different
alues, colors,
and
textures.
may be
profitable to
tr}'
to paint a
out
82
Now
object,
first excMcises; and, to make the lesson as simple as possible, suppose we work in monotone instead of color, using either ivory
black or lamp black or, if )'ou prefer, Vandyke brow^n. The black
is really simplest and serves the purpose of our exercise perfectly.
By working
in
We
by
a dilution of the
high light will not be pure white in the finished state (Fig. 30),
it is well to leave it w^hite at the beginning. We treat the pear in
a similar manner.
In Fig. 27, w^e begin to model the form. This looks very harsh
and impromising. As a matter of fact, our painting was arrested
at this point to emphasize the fundamental conditions of light,
shadow, and reflected light upon a rounded object. The darkest
shadowy as is demonstrated in Fig. 33, page 91, does not extend
to the contour of the shaded side; light reflected from adjacent
objects illuminate the shaded side more or less, depending upon
the strength of such reflections. When the light comes from some
very light object the reflection is most pronounced. However,
there is always some reflection to lighten the shaded side near
the object's contour. This may not be obvious, but if the artist
neglects to recognize this essential condition the object will lack
the appearance of roundness.
In Fig. 28, as intermediate gray washes are applied on either
side of that dark shadow band, the modeling of the jar begins to
develop. Don't be disturbed w^hen edges of the washes show
abruptly as they do in these early stages; as successive washes
are overlaid, the edges wall disappear to a considerable extent.
However, it is not our aim to "polish" the watercolor painting,
obliterate all edges, and give the rendering a photographic effect.
Note that in our final stage ( Fig. 30 ) some of the edges of washes
remain as a desirable aspect of the painting.
FIG.
83
26
FIG.
FIG.
28
27
84
FIG.
29
In Fig. 29
we have developed
the
modehng
FIG.
30
85
the ground and finishing the rendering of the nioutli of the jar.
covered the high hght with a hght gray tone to bring it in
proper vahie it is ob\ious (in Fig. 29) that it should not ])e
We
how
interesting
shadow. Note how the edges of the shadow of the jar on the
ground have been softened except close to the jar where we want
a shai-ply accented shadow edge.
We have not talked about the pear but the development stages
show^ how light and reflected light apply just as in the jar.
EXERCISE 21 Still Life in Wash Tr)- this sort of thing for
yourself. Don't be satisfied with but one or two such studies;
make many. To gain the greatest advantage from this work \ou
will want to vary your objects as earlier directed, choosing some
hght and some dark, some flat and some round, some rough and
some smooth. Do a shiny glass object, and next a battered felt
hat. We can't emphasize too often that this sort of \ ariet\' can
prepare you, better than you may realize at the time, for your
larger and more colorful subjects to follow still-life groups,
landscapes or figures, for example.
As you paint continue to ask yourself, "In m\ painting, am I
getting this feeling of roundness that the objects reveal this
three-dimensional quality? In short, do my objects seem to come
forward in space as they should, or do they look flat? Have I
caught their sense of weight and solidity? Am I indicating their
texture convincingly?"
You can best judge these things by placing your painting back
beside the objects frequently for direct comparison. Then stand
away and examine the whole thing critically and without bias.
:
Work
work
as rapidly as
86
of the
CM)
lahoriousK".
)()ii
mean
all ot this
don't
But
if
There
is
will train
who
making
The
of their
minds
so far as
barrow looks
draw
87
at least a
10
Still
Life:
ill
is
common
the
place.
working indoors, especially if his subject matter is small, sometimes prefers to sit. Not infrequently he
leans one edge of his drawing board ( or watercolor block ) against
the near edge of the table supporting his subject matter, with the
other edge in his lap. This gives his paper about the right pitch
so that he can view it easily (otherwise his drawing might de\elop distortion) and apply his paint without danger of its
running off.
an
better, perhaps,
is
be successful you can advantageously experifew minutes with the arrangements of the component
objects which comprise your subject. Just as you pose your figures
ment
this picture to
for a
88
AND COLOR
89
FIG. 31.
FIG. 32.
90
his objects
or
his
paper
in
direct
confusing.
(whether windows, doors, or lamps), as this will produce a comshadows falling in different directions, one series overlapping another. Even a single window may
produce more light or light of more varied direction than is
desirable, so frequently the artist covers part of such a window
perhaps the lower sash with a curtain or cardboard shield.
Daylight indoors is, of course, quite different from artificial
light or from direct sunlight outdoors, being as a rule far more
soft and diffused, often causing extremelv pleasing, harmonious
effects. The resultant shadows are generally soft-edged whereas,
when the lisjht is direct, shadows are sharp and clean-cut. When
you paint, therefore, you should give considerable thought to the
existing kind of illumination, the tones it reveals, and particularly
the
Reflectors
He
artist
and shadows
AND COLOR
91
Colored
reflections,
harmony of a composition.
This is enough to demonstrate that, while you surely can't be
expected to become expert in still-life composition at your very
color
first
life
attempt, you can at least be made to realize that good stillpaintings don't just happen they are skillfully planned.
Light areas are carefully contrasted with dark areas; one color
is set off by another. Controlled shade and shadow
tend to integrate the whole, weaving it into a pleasing pattern.
or one texture
If
is
selected to
complement
f^ntKttil^^^^
V
FIG.
33
92
O
Horizontal objects suggest a horizontal picture
Vertical
objects
often
suggest
an
It
upright picture
Fig. 34.
There
picture.
Paper Not until your set-up suits you reasonably well should
you select an appropriate sheet of watercolor paper. For best
results you will stretch or mount this as earlier directed. The
choice of paper will depend in part on the textures of the objects
to be pictured, rough paper often being more appropriate than
smooth for rough- textured objects. There is, however, no set rule
and some watercolorists do all their work on one kind and surface
of paper.
Drawing
color paper
Now comes the construction drawing on the water the delineation of the objects in correct proportion.
all pictorial
is
already
it,
for
it is
AND COLOR
93
Analysis of Subject With the subject matter selected, arranged with reasonable satisfaction, and blocked out lightly on
the paper, \'ou should next ask \-ourself such questions as: what
is the lightest area? The darkest? Where are the strongest contrasts of light
What
and dark?
Do
color?
94
all-aroiiiul
to
When
ject matter.
95
advantage by a
strokes
AND COLOR
final application of a
of a slightly
yellow. This,
them
less so.
Scrub Method
Though
a pleasing character.
Certain colors will so dye the paper that a sponge or soft brush
them sufficiently. In such a case, a bristle brush
Caution
must be exercised in all this scrub work
may be used.
not to soften and injure the surface of the paper.
will not lighten
96
moment.
EXERCISE 24: Still Li/^ Carry out for yourself such exercises
as this chapter suggests, and as are further discussed and demonstrated in the following chapter. Don't be impatient! Work out
every step thoroughly.
Still Life in Color Probably very few of the objects which
you will choose, even for the wash studies of the previous discussion, will be pure white or black. Some will show at least
subtle indications of color. Soon you may decide to represent
these colors, using paints of similar hue. In this way you can
sneak up on color by degrees, learning that value and hue are so
interrelated that they must be treated as one.
EXERCISE 25: Full CoZor Eventually you will accept nature's
challenge to turn to full color, working first from still-life objects
of various hues.
or subdued.
AND COLOR
97
While
it
simplifies
We
The
discerning artist constantly takes advantage of this factor by distributing his hues throughout his composition according to
nature's plan. At times he may even somewhat exaggerate these
reflected tones which nature tosses about so freely.
The
best
vation. So
personal obserin
both normal
fall.
You
throwing their
Note
to
98
my
not
reflectors
Some surfaces
Wood, stone, tree
some smooth,
to varying degree.
everything
which we see
many
is
it
fully as
is
to picture successfully
11
cHiect froiii
Still life,
flowers or
what
some
wholh'
new
set of
Equipment
mon
problems.
When
much
paraphernalia!
mood
or aspect of
it.
some
of
the greatest masterpieces e\er painted picture the simple e\er}"da\' tilings
known
to
all.
But \ou are not entireh' limited b\- \our subject. We ha\e
repeatedl}- emphasized that it is \our prerogati\e as a painter to
take as many liberties with subject matter as \ou wish, and in
this wa\' translate the mere hint of a picture into something of
worth. If your subject is too complex, \ ou can simplify it: if too
large, you can shrink it or omit part of it. You wiU be wise,
99
100
FIG.
35
view
it
to advantage.
101
when
expect your light and shadow masses to remain static; they won't.
Analysis Once you have settled yourself before a promising
subject ( with your equipment within reach ) study it analytically
just as you did your still-life objects. Ask yourself questions as to
its size, shape, color, textures, etc. You must determine upon its
,
r.4-
FIG.
36a
make
it
intriguing
to you.
Preliminary Sketches
color paper,
it
will
Before
pay you
to
starting to
making one
will
be your
logical
medium.
Figs.
typical
02
To
illustrate,
at exact
esting.
FIG.
36b
xow
let's paint
103
outdoors
White Paper
Alwa\
keep
in
mind
little
added
(Indoors, a fan or
It
humid
may
fonii so
many
ridges
and
alle\s
especially on
that
da\-
104
other
is
same
subject,
though often
Or he may,
for the
There
is
an extra advantage
in this:
when he
is
its
determine what to do next. The change of subject mathas given his eyes new critical powers.
faults or
ter
in a
'
somewhat
linear
manner. Try
this:
with a
flat
brush of red
when doing
flat
brushes are
may
Colors
or side of a
is
if it
or
otherwise brought
stage, there
sometimes
successfully
isn't
too
much
105
is
otherwise
displeasing in effect.
It's
ing
always worth a
improvement
try,
may
paints
gouache or tempera
is
used in
oil
up
106
the
chill
c)l
clciiicntar)
face-to-face with
work
exercises,
now
Part II
DEMONSTRATIONS BY
PROFESSIONAL WATERCOLORISTS
Norman Kent
Ted Kautzky
Herb Olsen
Ralph Avery
Samuel Kamen
all
all
The
been
conditions of lighting.
is
a delight to
attractive in
The
lost-and-
After several days of sketching and painting in the neighborhood of Seeley Creek, Pennsylvania, I came to the subject of
Willow Bank. It was a late afternoon at the end of August. I had
formed a strong attachment for the willow trees I had drawn
during the morning. First I made a quick pencil drawing similar
to the one reproduced. Next I set up my easel and painted a
15 X 20-inch watercolor in about an hour. But even before taking
it
home
my
first
it
My
my
108
onh' to find when he was read}' to paint that the Hght effects
which had attracted him to the subject in the first place had
vanished.
It's
much
better to set
down
'
111
In
all
became
little
\Miile
I
find that I
in
my
am
able to do an equal
sketches with marked contrasts of light and shade, a\oiding closevalued subjects like Willow Bank which require intimate association to
do
well.
one of
my favorite trees. And the most intimately familiar because of
the old willow road that winds its way to my summer studio on
the rocky ledges of Land's End, Cape Ann, on the Massachusetts
here,
is
coast.
willows
many
112
most casual of
know
'roughs'
that
but
lightest values.
sienna, burnt umber, raw sienna, raw umber, Hooker's green #2,
Davy's gray and Payne's gray.
foreground
trees;
2.
116
and
a half-inch
it is
the
means
ducing broad smooth strokes. After the wood has been whittled
away to expose about a quarter of an inch of the lead, the lead
is rubbed at an angle on the sandpaper block to produce a flat
wedge point. Broad strokes are made with the flat side of this
wedge held evenly against the paper. The width of strokes will
depend upon the angle at which the point is sharpened. Note that
the surface of the lead held against the paper will be oval-shaped
since it is a section cut by a plane intersecting a cyKnder. This oval
shape allows great flexibility in producing a greater variety of
strokes than could be had with a square lead."
Kautzky, however, frequently used square leads for bold broad
areas graphite sticks about one-quarter-inch square which come
in various degrees of hardness. These were employed freely on
the sketch here reproduced, on the foreground tree trunk. The
middle distance and the distance were done with the 2B and 3B
leads.
and
it
home
Step
3.
The darker
effects in the
117
CO
a.
CJD
Co
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120
subject
we may
as well select a
tiny petals
One
The
Looking
at the Subject
gins as soon as
we
start to
121
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124
the light; high eye level or low eye level; the over-all shape
horizontal or vertical. These are all points to be considered early
in our plans before selecting the best viewpoint with the aid of
prcHniiiuu) rough sketches. Selecting the best one of the roughs
is often the deciding factor in the final success or failure of the
painting. This being done, the procedure
large the selected
to use
is
it
as a starting point in
Edges
Painting Step-by-Step
Starting on a piece of
Whatman illusmedium
as
white paper,
painting. If this
125
warm
performance.
LIKE
Some
to
my
then use
on a
still
process
Almost
way
become
increasingly
call "design."
all
What an
embodied
in
artist selects
is
in this direction, as
might
I at
a later stage in
my development.
This painting, as usual, was done entirely from
126
memory
in
my
128
Thus far 1 ha\e rarely made a watereolor from life although I have painted a great deal in oil from both indoor and
outdoor subjects. This watereolor required about three hours for
completion. But, as often happens, I felt dissatisfied with the
result w ithout knowing just what the trouble was. So I put it aside
and brought it out months later for the fresh look which revealed
the faults. I am a believer in drawing and painting from memory.
Tliis way of working reveals the areas of my ignorance. Then I go
back to nature, observe more closely and fill in the gaps.
studio.
work on a
makes it
that
tilting
tilting easel
My usual practice
in "designed representation"
is
as follows
element.
As one's experience and mastery increase, it is possible to compose from the very beginning in line, pattern, value and color,
integrating all simultaneously rather than by separate stages. I
learn from the small to the large; I create from the large to the
small.
It has been my practice to compose from imagination many
hundreds of black-and-white compositions in wash landscape,
still life, figure and pure design themes. I usually do these in small
size. Working small in the initial stages seems to eliminate barriers
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