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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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BEGINNING ABSTRACT OIL PAINTINGS

For over four centuries all of art representation was figurative and scenic.  It was highly formulaic and it was not considered ‘good’ art if brush strokes were detected.  All of this thankfully changed during the French Impressionist period.  The range of subject matter increased dramatically and now brush strokes became not only visible but seemed to show the vigor and intensity of the painting.  Of course the public was slow to appreciate this dramatic departure from the careful studio paintings of the past.DSC02551

The impressionists paved the way for Miro, Matisse, Braque and of course Picasso.  Then Kandinsky came on the scene, which brings me to my subject of Beginning abstract oil paintings.  He was not originally a painter but once he began to paint the process consumed him.  At his height of production he was producing over two hundred paintings a year.  Because of the war years he was compelled to always be moving his studio locations and yet he continued to explore and discover breakthrough methods of painting.  His work should be studied by anyone interested in seriously painting abstracts.

When you do study his work it will by degrees come over you just how technically perfect are his paintings.  The patterns, the balance, the colors are all very carefully thought out.  If one can successfully compose a painting will not succeed as a whole unless it is painted with technical skill and Kandinsky’s skill was unmatched.  His use of the brush and his great skill with the brush is clearly demonstrated in every painting.  This virtuosity came as a result of painting often and much.   The beginner painter and even more advanced students must realize and face the harsh truth that only with copious practice can these kinds of results be achieved.  In my view he was more skilled than, say Picasso in terms of sheer ability with the brush.

It is not unlike the young violinist who must practice a piece over and over until the music is mastered.  There is however great joy in the mastering.  It is the same with painting.  As one develops the technical skills, a steady hand and mastery of the brush – a distinct pleasure will arise at being able to execute what the heart and mind envision.

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Contemporary Art

 

Contemporary art as a style goes back as far as Picasso and Kandinsky from the 1050’s.  Contemporary art typically refers to art that no longer relies on realistic images for subject matter.   I recently visited the showing of abstract art here in San Diego which featured works from Gauguin to works as recent as 1960.  These represented a wide range of artists with very different styles.   Apparently the show started progressively with Gauguin because he was one of the first to abstract and flatten planes into modular colors.  Depth and perspective became less important.

Fortunately artists today can choose from a wide range of styles that can be classified as contemporary art or ‘modern art’.   Broadly speaking, any work of art that varies from natural forms and realistic perceptions can be considered contemporary.  Technically when  an artist purposely abstracts realistic images it would be more accurate to say that they are an abstract painter.  This is more narrow, precise way of describing this type of art under the umbrella of Contemporary Art.

It is interesting that work from the 1950’s and even earlier can be classified as contemporary art, along with work produced now in 2014.   This broad umbrella of style allows for multiple genres.   As an artist who prefers to leave naturalistic images and to explore abstraction there are many varied styles to choose from.  With experimentation it is possible to find the style and manner to express your own feelings on canvas.  For example we know how different Jackson Pollack is from Rothko or from Kandinsky.  There are artists today who have studied these past masters and have developed their own unique expressions.

Contemporary or abstract art is not for everyone.  The majority will prefer to view something that is recognizable,  something pleasant and bucolic such as the paintings of the commercial artist Kinkaid – the so called ‘painter of light’.  Abstract art pursues those realms that are not so easy to identify.  They stir up feelings which may run deep but we are not sure why.  We have to appreciate those artists who are willing to explore these other dimensions.  There is a certain adventure and energy in this type of exploration perhaps because it invokes not only the natural responses but also sub-conscious responses.   Translating these sub-conscious responses requires greater sensitivity to our inner feelings.   We can sense this thread of exploration even back from the early contemporary, abstract art of the 1950’s.  It will be exciting to see what turn the abstract artists of our era produce.

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Abstract Art Definition (2)

 

Studying art literature and what artists have to say about their work will not yield masses of material.  Artists historically have not written much about their process.  Kandinsky is a notable exception though his small book, Concerning the Spiritual in Art is not an easy read.  This may be due to the translation from German to English.  He does talk about an artist’s need to express the ‘inner feeling.’  He attempts to discuss how color and compositional design can effect those inner feelings.  It becomes apparent just how careful he was with color, even in apparently random paintings.  His paintings could not be classified as random and he makes efforts to place art in a position where art is meant to lift us spiritually.  He feels art should raise the consciousness of a civilization and in fact the ‘Arts’ in general are uniquely capable of this task.  He calls it a noble task, a noble responsibility.

The departure from naturalistic forms into the abstract is considered a more direct line towards this responsibility.  The constraint of fusing natural settings with inner feelings hampers this direct relationship.  Abstract art is considered more responsive to an artists’ inner feelings.  As I mentioned before in previous articles, Ekhart Tolle explains this expansion of consciousness more completely and more thoroughly.  He explains how we can more fully appreciate our own inner consciousness.  As an artist I have found this to be helpful.

Abstract art can be defined then as primarily a response to an inner feeling rather than to natural forms.  Attenuation of forms can get in the way of a more spontaneous response to an interior drama.  We immediately think of a Jackson Pollack whose work is completely free of any reference to natural forms.  Gerhardt Richter uses the process of dragging paint and relies upon this as an accidental effort to create spontaneously.  We might call it ‘controlled accidents’ because he is obviously carefully choosing where to place the colors to be dragged and which hues to implement.  In any case Abstract art, by definition divorces itself from copying natural forms .  This effort brings to bear new disciples such as a refined approach to color sympathies.  Paradoxically rythmn and composition becomes even more valuable and more important to the concept of the painting.  Kandinsky speaks of the harmony that needs to take place in an abstract painting and this must come from the jumble of inner feelings – that is, a certain order from the drama of our inner feelings.10

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Abstract Oil Paintings for Beginners

Are you new to oil painting in general or just to oil painting of abstracts?  In either case you will want to have an understanding of what defines the Abstract genre.  What defines Abstract and Non-Objective painting?  If you can have a clear aim in sight, this will help you develop your work, right?

Kandinsky attempted to define what he was doing when he worked as a teacher at the Bauhaus.  He wrote the small book titled, Concerning the Spiritual in Art.  Considered the ‘Father’ of Abstract art it was apparently necessary for him to define his new directions.  We read for example of his painting from an inner need and from an inner compulsion.  This required a break from conventional known or recognizable forms.  I think the book explains his position fairly well and his departure from object forms.

It is an interesting comparison in reading Ekhart Tolle’s book, The Power of Now.  This book talks about the relative illusion of form.  He describes a process of seeking a higher consciousness by recognizing form as being an illusion.  He points out that true reality lies within and is quite separate from what we perceive as form.  This seems to resonate with what Kandinsky wrote fifty years ago when he states the need to paint from an inner resource and to give that inner feeling expression.  Tolle however is able to give us a more clear understanding of that inner dimension.  His book is a valuable resource for an artist.

I was watching a Facebook video clip of a niece, just three at work on a painting.  The painting was nearing completion and she was standing before it brush in hand.  There were all kinds of swishes and circles and dashes of varying colors – a very exciting painting.  She began to mix on her brush some reddish tones and then carefully reached up and put two deliberate swatches of red near the top but separate from each other.  Why did she choose to do that?  Why were they the final strokes to the painting?  This process should be similar to our own means to create Abstract art.  We should be studying the canvas and placing shapes and colors in response to an inner feeling.  We should also be sensitive to the other colors and shapes on the canvas so that we create a symphony.  As in a symphony all the various components work together to create an effect.  08

Ultimately painting an abstract oil should be a joyful expression.  We should not worry about ‘wasting’ paint.  This should be our time to draw out our inner feelings and to express them with relative freedom unrestrained by the forms we see around us.  This is what makes Abstract art, for me so special and so intriguing.  The other advantage is that we have a more broad free range of colors to implement.  As a painting develops we can creatively use colors that best suit the needs of the painting – we need not be bound by ‘what is before us’.

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What is Abstract Art

For those who know their history Picasso, Braque and Gris led the way with cubism. Cubism
was considered one of the true breakthroughs in art. Those three artists however never really
pursued abstract art – that is, 15 they always identified something tangible in the picture frame.
There was always some visual source, some connection to the physical world.

Kandinsky however made a very distinct departure from known, recognizable reality sources.
In the height of his career his paintings are highly dramatic with intense feeling but these
come from forms, patterns and colors never experienced before. Surprisingly the art world
at that time eventually embraced his new abstract work. Some critics go to great lengths
trying to explain and ‘read into’ his non-objective forms. Paintings such as his however
lie beyond any superficial explanation or ties to reality.

There is now a new genre in music, especially piano where the music is continuous and
experimental and spontaneous. It builds on its own notes and the musician say that these
notes and passages come from an inner feeling. Good abstract art is constructed in a similar
fashion. It begins often with a faint concept and then develops through sensitive, inner
responses. Abstract art comes from an inner consciousness and then is manifested through
paint, line and form. Remarkably we can respond to these kinds of paintings almost more
than we can to bucolic scenes of nature or Cityscapes. When abstract art is done well by
a seasoned artist we can very definitely understand the mood and force of the painting.