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Showing posts with label watercolor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label watercolor. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Less Expensive than Dinner for Two

Butte Shadows #989 - 5x7 oil

Looking for that perfect gift for yourself or a friend? Look no further! You can purchase an original work of art for less than dinner for two at a fine restaurant. I'm pricing each item for only $50, no matter what the size.  Visit http://www.michaelchesleyjohnson.com/holiday/holiday_sale.html

This time, I'm also including a few watercolor sketches.  When I'm not painting oil or pastel, I enjoy pulling out the watercolor block.  Painting watercolor is a different process for me, so it exercises some mental muscles that tend to not get used.

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Avoiding Chalky Color - and About Xiao Song Jiang


Sugarloaf Rock Sketch, 8x10, watercolor

My oil painting students sometimes ask:  How can you lighten color without adding so much white that the color turns chalky?

The first obvious answer is, simply, to use less white.  I always first try to lighten my mixture by adding a light, tubed color.  For example, I will add cadmium yellow to lighten a dark green.  But sometimes this approach will change the hue more than I want.  In this case, I'll use white cautiously.  If the mixture loses saturation or warmth (both of which happen when you add white), I'll add a touch of some light, warm, analogous color.

Instead of white, some painters use a tint of Naples yellow.  The problem with using Naples  yellow rather than white is that your painting may feel a little too warm overall.

Another approach is to paint transparently on a white ground.  If you use transparent colors, they will work like watercolors and give you rich color.   I bet you've never seen a "chalky" watercolor painting!  (I've included a couple of plein air watercolors from this week for your enjoyment.)  Save your opaque paint for final touches and highlights.

Low Tide at the Duck Pond, 4x10, watercolor

Finally, you might try using zinc white rather than titanium white.  Zinc is more transparent and will let some of the color's richness show through.

On another note, I want to mention the painter Xiao Song Jiang.  His painting, "Tide," just won the Oil Painters of America's Gold Medal in the 2012 national exhibition.  I was honored to have critiqued this painting for Song Jiang through Artists Network University.  It is a pleasure to see such fine craftsmanship.  You can see the painting here.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Working in Watercolor - and the Re-Opened Studio Store!

Oak Creek Sketch, 8x10, watercolor

I don't work in watercolor very much.  Why?  Because I spend nearly 100% of my painting time honing my skills in oil and pastel.  As I've described in these pages before, oil and pastel fill my needs as a landscape painter.  Yet I do enjoy working in watercolor when the opportunity arises, as it did this week.

As luck would have it, I had not one, not two, but three students working in watercolor.  (The others worked in pastel.)  So, to be fair to the watercolorists, I decided to work in watercolor, too.  I modified the 9x12 Guerrilla Painter box that I use for oil to accommodate my watercolor setup.  I prefer to work with my paper nearly vertical, unlike most watercolorists who work flat; the Guerrilla box served me well with the paper taped to a panel in the lid.   I hung my little water bag from a pair of clips off to the right, and put my hand-held palette on top of the Guerrilla box's palette.

Watercolor in the arid Southwest can be difficult because of the rapid drying time.   I recommend working small (8x10 is what I use) and, if you're using washes, applying washes in small patches.  The drying time can be a plus, though, since you don't have to wait long before you can apply delicate glazes over previously painted areas.  Accompanying this post are some of my watercolors from this week.

By the way, it soon will be time to close down the Arizona studio to head east again.  Before I go, I always like to clean out my studio to see if I have any smaller pieces, demos and sketches that I might offer through my studio store.  To see this season's offerings at the Michael Chesley Johnson Studio Store, please click here.

Arizona Sycamore Sketch, 10x8, watercolor

Canyon Hill Sketch, 8x10, watercolor

Sailrock Sketch, 8x10, watercolor