These are some Ads I designed for climbing equipment companies.
Friday, June 29, 2012
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
Painting For My Daughter.

I painted this red onion for my daughter. It was for her wedding shower, and has a sweet story, between mom
and daughter. You can learn much from painting subjects seeming to be monochromatic. What seems to be
such a dominant local (single) color, will give an opportunity to explore what yo need to add, to make the
composition richer in color. Red onions are both red and violet, and purple and more. In a small study, you can
make wonderful discoveries.
The contrast between deep purply reds and the illuminated area, gave the opportunity to learn that cadmium red
light, is about as light as it gets. What looks like highlight, is a bit of yellow ochre mixed with the c-red light.
You may see in the foreground, and not so much on the onion, there was a great opportunity to play with the green
and yellow, the complements for both red and violet in the onion. Pay careful attention to neutralize with the
complement, and it will belong where you place it in the rest of the composition. The background isn't black. It's
a careful effort to use all the players in deep values. This is the difference you see in master paintings. That rich,
colorful work in the background. Without it, you will have a flat, artificial space.
I had it near finished. I must confess, I did most of it watching t.v. in bad light. It was more like a knitting project
that night. I refuse to apologize for bad painting manners, it was so enjoyable. In the morning, the onion looked fine. but the yellow in the focal point, between the cast shadow and ground plane, was chartreuse. It looked amazing, but in the bad light, it looked more like yellow ochre. I wouldn't have pushed that color so hard, but for the bad lighting. I would have left it that way, but it was a gift - didn't know if she would 'get' it. You can see the yellow/green/orange play in the foreground (my phone camera mangled the brushwork).
As any artist finds, doing small studies (this is 8" x 10"), will accelerate skill. Small studies allow you to quickly cover a broad variety of subjects, learn the color and techniques, then take the information to larger works. That is, if you can get past how fun small studies can be.
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