Basics
for Painting
Michael Bull – June 2010 - shared June 2013, 2015
If you think you might like to try
painting, this blog may save you several years of finding out what you
need to know. I wish someone had given me this before I started. It may
have saved dozens of failures, although failures are the way to learn.
The four factors which most affect the end quality of a
painting are:
1. Colour
– colours in a work can be complimentary to each other or not.
Where possible use complimentary colours. Examples are blue/orange,
violet/yellow, green/red. White is the brightest colour in a painting
and is often used as highlight on other colours. A 'colour-wheel' is most helpful.
2.
Contrast
– contrast is the combination of dark and light in a picture. There
can be no light in a painting without the contrasting dark area.
Always plan for a dark area to bring up light in another area.
Contrast is the most important of these four factors.
3.
Texture
– texture is the combination of rough and smooth, shiny and dull
etc. These are a different form of contrast and can often be used to
enhance.
4. Drama
– drama is a concept which is also related to contrast, and in a
landscape might be considered the 'wow' factor, or it may relate to
the subject in a painting containing animals or people. It enhances
the focus of the painting and is the emotional part of a work. Art, like music, bypasses the reason process and appeals directly to emotions.
The
Canvas
– divide the canvas into thirds horizontally and thirds vertically.
The top horizontal area would normally be background (or sky), the
centre the mid-ground, and the lower the foreground. The vertical
divisions are a guide to maintaining a balance of the subject matter
and avoid crowding one side or the other. The focus of the picture is
normally within the centre square, but avoid putting the focus
exactly in the centre of the centre square.
Colour
Mixing
– If you add white to a colour it becomes a tint
of that colour. If you add black it becomes a shade
of that colour. The primary colours from which all others can be
mixed are white, black, red, yellow and blue. For example, red+blue =
purple, blue+yellow = green, red+yellow = orange, red+green = brown,
white+black = grey. All of these can then have many different tints
or shades.
Where to
Start
– You need to paint a picture in your mind before you brush a
stroke. This may take days, while the painting itself may only take
hours. Be aware that the painting rarely turns out exactly as you had
in your mind. Photographs are useful to refer to for detail which you
may forget, such as the colour and shape of hills or vegetation or
people or animals. Photos normally do not have that 'wow' factor you
need in a painting and once you have used the photo for details, put
it aside and concentrate on what is right for the painting.
Simplicity in a painting is often very effective in enhancing the end
result if the four factors are present.
After you have
planned your painting often it is appropriate to put in a basic
colour backwash to which you later add more layers or details. For
example, a blue where the sky is to be to which you may later add
cloud, red/ brown/orange/yellow for earth, green for grass or forest
areas etc. When the backwash has dried then start on your detail.
Some people find it helpful to add the dark areas first and work
through to the detail and main subject. Painting from the distant to
the close saves having to repaint areas or getting overlaps wrong.
When detail has been added, use an appropriate colour for shadow
(often a shade of the colour where the shadow falls) then finally add
the highlights to the subject ( it may be a dab of white on the top
of the hair or clothes for example) to bring up the light in the
picture.
Expect a lot of
failures when you start painting, you need them to learn as you go.
Look to see if all the above four factors are present. Chances are
that they are not all there in a failure. Every painting you do,
success or failure, will teach you something. If you are lucky enough
to find a constructive critic it will help accelerate your learning
process. If you never start you'll never know.
Which
Paint Type?
– Oils, acrylics and water colour all require different approaches.
Oils take a long time to dry and need a turps solvent. Messy.
Acrylics look like oils when dry, dry quickly, have water as solvent,
and are relatively inexpensive. They are probably the best for
beginners. Water colours are normally used with paper rather than
canvas, and therefore require framing. You choose. There is no right or wrong here.
Jabiru in a Boab Tree - MJ Bull 2010
What about Results?
- This picture of a morning scene in the Australian north-west, the
Kimberly region, displays the complimentary colours, (blue and
yellow/orange), the contrast , (sunlight and shadow), the texture,
smooth grey sky and rough foreground swamp, and the drama of the unusual
boab trees against a spectacular sedimentary rock mountain range with
the added interest of the Jabiru bird with its nest perched in the top
of a boab somewhat like an eagle. Although this painting is not the most
brilliant I have ever done, it does contain all of the four elements
aforementioned and sold very quickly. It has been my experience that if
you get all four elements, then the picture is saleable to the right
person, usually one who identifies with the the subject. If you sell on
the coast, paint coastal scenes. If you live inland, paint the things
these people identify with. One subject area (which is somewhat overdone
in Australia) is subjects relating to the past, which often strike a
chord with older people, such as old buildings, farms, machinery etc.
Look at your local demographics for a clue as to what might sell.
Lake Argyle Sunset - MJ Bull 2010
Here
is a very simple painting using colour, contrast, texture and drama.
Drama and Contrast are very closely related. In this case the Pelican
provides both. The Texture contrast is between the sky and the shiny
water.
Hope
this is of interest and is helpful to those starting out in art.
Another mistake I have sometimes observed is a foray into 'abstract art'
before learning the basic skills of more conventional art. There is no
way to succeed in abstract art without some basics, it is not a shortcut
to developing the necessary skills.
Good Luck !
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