Archive for the 'Art Insights' Category
From Behind the Camera: Art From the Outside In
When I was an Art History major, I liked to imagine that when looking at paintings it was as if I was looking through someone else’s eyes. Paintings were my own time machine into the past. Painters could not help but create a reflection or reaction to the styles and mores of their day. Even [...]
[ Back to top ]
From Behind the Camera - Workshop Expectations
e-Newsletter: 060308
The expectations students bring to a workshop greatly influence the benefits they gain from an instructor. Students may overlook details of the process if they are intent on copying a teacher’s painting. A useful goal for a student is to try on a teacher’s technique and thought process, then permit the things that don’t [...]
[ Back to top ]
CAROLINE JASPER’S COLOR TIP: Value is worth a lot!
e060308
-by Caroline Jasper Value is a significant color characteristic. Contrasts between darks and lights are key to visual impact. Through comparison of such differences our brains perceive objects and determine depth. Lighter things stand out against dark backgrounds. Dark ones show up better against light. Strong darks and lights together read as close; lack of [...]
[ Back to top ]
Projecting vs. Drawing
To draw or project ones subject on paper…ah, that is the question? I see nothing WRONG with projecting a photograph taken by the artist. Sometimes a very complex subject, that requires accuracy, requires one to project the image. Restless subjects, such as children, also require the use of photography. However, projection has major creative limitations [...]
[ Back to top ]
PONDERINGS
This weekend Ted Nuttall, a wonderful portrait artist, was here for a visit. He’s toying with the idea of doing a workshop with CCP. He does not want to film a workshop that is only about technique, but rather something that gets to the HEART of portrait painting. I’ve spent the last few days trying [...]
[ Back to top ]