If you've read my previous two posts then you'll know that almost a fortnight ago I finished my
last sketch to complete the one sketch a day challenge. One effect of this was
that it has freed up my Wednesday evenings at art group. For the last few months
I've been concentrating on making either plain ink or ink and watercolour
sketches which I could complete in an evening to take care of that day's
sketch. Now that I've done it, I decided that it was high time to start another
acrylic painting.
What to paint, though? Well, thinking
back over the last couple of years, when it comes to large acrylic paintings,
my favourite subjects have been trams, trolleys and streetcars; steam
locomotives and racehorses and working horses. Well, my last painting was a
tram, and the one before that a steam engine. So it looked like another horse
racing painting would fit the bill. This time, though, I decided to do
something slightly different, by panting a harness racing subject.
Starting this one I promised myself
that I was going to work patiently, by which I meant that I was going to sketch
the design first onto the canvas, and not put one speck of paint down before
this was finished. Then I was going to paint in the backgrounds, and then and
only then was I going to allow myself to paint the bits I actually really enjoy
- the horses and the jockeys.
So I spent all of Wednesday 27th's
Artist's Group session in just sketching the design, and even then worked on it
for another half hour last Saturday.
Taking so
much time, the ironic thing is that if this was just a pencil sketch or an ink
sketch of the same size I would have put a lot more detail and shading into it.
The canvas is too big to be scanned, ad pencil on my canvases just doesn't
photograph all that clearly, still hopefully it should give you the gist of
what I've been doing.
Last Saturday, then, having
completed the sketch I put down a layer of fairly strong yellow for the turf.
This was always going to be painted over, but I was hoping that glimpses of the
underlying yellow would come through in some areas. Then with the trees in the
background I began applying dabs of light green , some of a slightly more
watery consistency than the others. The idea was to paint in shadows and other
colours of the leaves on top of this for the trees.
In this photo you can see the basic
mottled effect in the top middle, while I've begun to paint in shadows and more
variegation on the left hand side. I'd also begun to apply a mixture of olive
green and titanium white on top of the yellow on the turf.
The above photo represents between
5 and 6 hours of work. I put in another hour's work before Wednesday completing
the green layer on the turf. On the Wednesday I finished the trees in the
background, and I wasn't at all unhappy with the effect. A judicious
application of pthalo blue in some of the shadows and a watery application of
burnt sienna in one area created the look I wanted, and drew some appreciative
comments from other artists there. However, the other side of the coin was that
my attempt to rectify the turf by adding a thin layer of creamy yellow to the
top just made it far, far worse.
So on Thursday evening, I put in
another hour and a half's work, applying layers of two slightly different
lighter greens, one of which has a very appealing emerald tint. After about
half an hour I started to think that this might actually work, and after another
hour this morning I was a lot happier.
This one
shows you the trees in the background now, and gives you a good idea about the
different shades of green in the turf. I put in a bit more work on the turf,
applying some subtle shadows and some scuff marks, and then, wonder of wonders,
at least 10 hours after I began working on it, I finally started to paint a
horse.
This is where I am currently. The neck and head of the
horse in the foreground, which are mostly combined different shades of burnt
umber and yellow ochre, which I've started painting still need some work, but
it's a joy to do. I don't know if I'll get time to do anything more before
Wednesday, but I'll post an update when I can.
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