Work In Progress:
Glade Creek Grist Mill, Update 10
Using the full scale drawing as
a guide I first drew in the large shrub in front of the Mill. Then, I masked
out some irregular splotches to indicate snow. When the masking fluid was dry I
painted in the foliage of the evergreen shrub using a small round brush and a
mix of hookers green, yellow ochre and winsor blue. I varied the mix to keep
the mass from having a uniform color. After the shrub was painted in I removed
the masking fluid.
Because the
foreground hemlock blocks out part of the shrub mass, I painted in some rough
shapes to indicate the fine needle foliage of the branches and painted in a few
branches as well. The branches were painted in with burnt sienna, raw sienna
and winsor blue, the hemlock foliage with hookers green, lemon yellow and a bit
of winsor blue. I want to keep the foliage on the lighter side so that I don’t
overwhelm the Mill with a huge dark mass. I’m depending on the dark tree trunk
and branches to stop the viewer from running off the right side. However, I’m
not 100% sure at this point about how dark to go on the foliage. I’ll have to
wait and see when I get to that part.
Next, I
started painting in some of the snow down below the Mill. There, I first washed
in some very light tints of permanent rose and new gamboge in the sunlit spots.
When dry, I started in with the shaded areas using winsor blue and, in the
darkest areas, paynes gray. The tones were built up slowly by adding more and
more layers of blue until I felt they were dark enough. I was careful to avoid
getting any color on the tops of the masses where the sun was hitting them
directly.
Moving
toward the left I penciled in the distant shrubs just below the bridge and then
painted them in with the green- blue mix mentioned before.
The big
mass of shrubs below the bridge came next. The shrubs were first penciled in to
get the general shape and contour. Then I used masking fluid to block out areas
of snow. Using the green mix, I painted in the shrub mass. Once again, I varied
the tone of the green by varying the colors, to give some form to the shrubs,
indicating the dark shadows here and lighter leaves there. After the shrubs
were painted in I removed the masking fluid and finished up edges here and
there. Winsor blue and a bit of paynes gray were added to the snow to give them
some three dimensional form.
At first I
made the more forward part of the shrub mass a bit lighter than the mass
further back – and wasn’t happy with it. I felt the whole mass needed the same
tone, so I darkened the forward part more. That seemed to help. I also didn’t
want too much green to show. Darkening the mass helped that, too. By adding
more winsor blue and burnt sienna I was able to darken the mass sufficiently.
The
deciduous, bare tree in front of the bridge was painted in with a combination
of winsor blue, burnt sienna and raw umber, and using both a pointed round and
a script brush to get the thin branches near the top.
Once finished, I felt the tree
lacked real character but also had to tell myself that the tree was not the
center of interest. One problem I have is treating each item that I paint as a
special subject, needing special treatment. If I were to make the tree very
interesting it would draw attention away from the Mill, which is, after all,
the center of attention.
As I look
at the painting at this point I have mixed feelings about how it is presented.
Although the shrub mass and snow look realistic, I wonder if there should be less
detail. Less detail in everything except the Mill. I had this same problem when
working on the bare tree. I felt the tree needed to be more interesting. I
think that was wrong. When involved in painting an object, I forget about
everything else around it, and focus on making that object look real and detailed.
I think it’s necessary, when developing the composition, to determine also what
level of detail each area of the painting should get, and keep that in mind
when progressing through it. If I put detail into everything, then everything
becomes more important. Even though I’ve composed the painting to focus on the
subject, I don’t want to draw attention away from that subject by having highly
detailed objects all around it. So, I think, as you move away from the center
of interest, I think the detail should also decrease. Otherwise, the painting
gets way too busy. Everything should look realistic, but the detail should
decrease. There needs to be a balance, however. I don’t want everything too out
of focus compared to the subject. As I continue with this painting I’ll have to
evaluate each element and decide whether to increase or decrease the detail. Everything
relates to everything around it.
So much to think about.
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