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Fifty shades of Grey

As the story goes when John Singer Sargeant was painting outdoors in Paris with Manet he asked his friend for black to which Manet replied, “I have none, I never paint with black”.  Singer then replied, “ah well, then I cannot paint.”  True or not, it speaks to how we perceive shadow and shaded items.  There probably are fifty shades of grey and not attained just by gradations of white and black but infinite variations that may include, for example French Ultramarine, Hookers Green Deep and Cadmium red mixed of course with Raw Umber.  It is my guess that Sargeant could have done well enough with Raw umber.DSC03317

When one studies Rembrandt’s portraits we rarely see true black in the dark shadows of the face (the side opposite the source of light) but very deep shades of violet.  He seemed to retain black itself for the rich, velvet black sateen that men often wore in those days as capes and such.  Indeed, by using French Ultramarine which inherently has a violet cast, Raw Umber and Cadmium red deep, one can mix tones deep enough to emulate black.  These three pigments in fact lend a certain luminosity to shadows that black cannot match.

In landscapes where foliage in shadows becomes very deep and dark, adding in Hooker’s Green deep to the Raw Umber and to the Ultramarine Blue/Cadmium mix seems to bend the shadows tone nicely towards the other, lighter greens in the landscape.  Veridian I find is just too brilliant to use in shadow.  There is a new tube grey out now called Torrit Grey which I bought as a whim and I like how they have bent it towards a dark, green grey.  Adding white gives it a pleasant transition hue – a quicker way to achieve a grey/green tone.  This is by the way distinctly different than Payne’s grey which leans markedly towards dark blue.  When we think of Van Gogh’s work we think of very bright, rich pigments but his famous painting the Potato Eaters was somber in tone, extensively using deep shadows for effect and of a predominate green cast with gradations towards blue greys.  His winter landscapes I think are his best work where he carefully picked his way through subtle shades of greys within the snowy fields and shadows of trees, walls and figures along the road.

Of course every painter will eventually discover that various shades of grey carefully mixed and rendered adds an important ‘base’ to a painting – even one titled White Line by Kandinsky.  The stark bent, white line gains importance vibrating in front of the beautiful green, umber and blue greys that border the painting.  Some painters even prefer to paint the entire canvas grey before beginning.  This deep tone provides an entirely new reference than stark white when first starting a new painting.

michael wilson

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Fear of Abstraction

Fear of abstraction stops a lot of good artists in their tracks.  Certainly understandable.  We were taught to view our art through the eyes of realism.  Imagine a famous pop artist  who gets on stage and begins to play a piece he has never played before.  His band is expected to follow along.  This kind of thing doesn’t happen does it?  Jazz however, is an exception and jazz can be brilliant. It takes a brave soul to play real jazz. This brief article will explore how to overcome this fear of painting abstracts in oil.

Where does the fear come from – this great hesitation to paint in abstraction?   Children have no problem with this, do they?  We admire their lovely free-form shapes, wild swirls, beautiful colors merging with each other.  Then something switches in our brains about the age of twelve or so.  Maybe it comes from our education system or maybe it is just a natural progression.  We start happily with finger paints and then, in adolescence  if we can’t paint a decent human figure or a discernable tree we are considered un-artistic.  Usually we give it up.

After that it is a difficult climb.   It is a slow process of undoing our brain synapses so we can envision an abstract piece.    How do we paint something we can’t see?  How do we paint un-reality?   For me I just kept painting and experimenting and I found over the years there was this need to exxagerate a color or shape.  It felt better and even more natural.  I began to read  the psychologist Jung and then Tolle.  I read a book by Gerhardt Richter.  In general I began to read more.  I was discovering the inner world that they spoke of.  It was for me like pulling away a long drapery of gauze and I saw behind it.  I began to experience Jung’s sub-conscious and what Tolle called the awareness of Presence.  I actually found myself becoming more aware – not only of the shapes and forms in my natural surroundings but also more aware of my own, unique inner experience.

I bought myself new canvas and more paint and in 2009 began to paint abstracts.  I was no longer painting what I could see externally.  I was now painting what I was experiencing internally.  I was painting a feeling, an emotion.  Sometimes I felt I was painting in response to something I had dreamed.   Remarkably I discovered that a painting could in fact develop on its own – it could itself dictate the next shape, the next color.  After that discovery whatever residual fear I had seemed to vanish.  It seemed I was more a facilitator than the creator.  I felt very connected to (I guess I should say), the greater Universe.  It felt like I was working out some solution when I painted abstracts.  I felt like I was a vehicle to manifest something that was very deep within my psyche.  This became enormously invigorating for me.

I must confess this was not an easy process and it took awhile.  I was sixty-one.  All my life I had essentially painted realistic forms.  There were small ventures here and there, experiments that hinted towards abstraction but the breakthrough for me was dramatic.  I am a believer in painting abstractions.  I think it should be taught in art schools right next to life drawing.   Any semblance of fear or trepidation could progressively  be canceled.  The world of music, of dance, of sound, of prose could be greatly expanded.  This type of art can be transformative.   It can help us better understand our own consciousness.  If we can understand our own inner presence, our real nature than we become more alive.   Abstract art can definitely foster this kind of discovery and bring forth a very personal and transformative creative experience.DSC02543.JPG

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Concept Sketch for your next Abstract Painting

Use a concept sketch for your next abstract painting.06.jpg
I personally do believe that a painting can and will evolve by its own volition. An artist through practice, will develop a sensitivity to the development of the painting. Through this sensitivity various forms, impressions and color combinations will become apparent. Responding to these and allowing them to manifest is a very big part of the magic of abstract painting.
You will find it is sometimes necessary to develop a concept sketch for a painting. An idea might come to you at a time when you are away from the studio. Write down something briefly so it is not lost. It can be frustrating to experience an image or feeling come – something that seems important – and then it vanishes. This initial quick sketch can be enhanced later on paper and then when you have time, this sketch can be transferred to the canvas with pencil. I use colored pencil for this. A conte crayon also works well.
If the abstract piece is geometric in nature your sketch will be more considered and more thoughtfully rendered. If the abstract in mind is more freeform, then your sketch on the canvas will of course be very brief.
Take some time to now study the drawing on the canvas. Ask yourself what it is your are trying to say or express. Is there a feeling you are after? What colors will work best? Are the edges going to be soft and blended or hard-edged? Try to develop the painting in your mind, at least initially.
Now begin…perhaps you will want to paint the most dominant form first. Perhaps you are attracted to a certain color. Keep in mind the colors that will be placed next to each other and how they will be blended to each other. The important thing is that you have begun. You are painting because after all, if we are artists we must paint. Even when we are not sure of what we are after, we must begin to paint. The concept sketch has helped me numerous times to overcome inertia and to get started. Often the sketch is so simple but the painting will often miraculously take on a life of its own…it begins to express itself. One form seems to lead to another form and one placed color then opens up an opportunity for the next. Balance can be achieved through color and through form and these two elements you will find, also become manifest.