Now, we go back and strengthen any darks we may have
lost during the color block-in and begin keying up those lights. We
should use thicker paint for the lighter tones and refine things a
bit more include a small amount of detail.
Here is the finished painting with all the colours
established, keyed up. Notice how you can still see some burnt
sienna showing through! I then sign and varnish the
painting.
For a more indepth look at this painting process, with
much for information, pictures, tips and instruction, consider
purchasing
"7-STEPS TO A SUCCESSFUL PAINTING",a complete course
in acrylic painting. The book is available in three different
formats on this site! You might also consider a
workshop!
www.briansimons.com
Copyright © 2000-2010 by Brian Simons
All rights reserved
Here the "block in" is nearing completion. We cannot
assess any colours until we get them all "roughed in" and see them
in relation to all the other colours.
Once the "value study" is complete, we then start
blocking in the colors starting with the darks and working towards
the lights. Keep the paint thin, this is only an estimate.
Let lots of the burnt sienna show through.
Once were happy with the "big shapes" and have pulled
paint away from the lightest areas, we then start our "value
study", a study in lights and darks only. We do this by starting
with the darks and use a bit of dark purple to darken the burnt
sienna for the darkest darks.
Then with we establish the other values , paying special attention
to the value differences. We are looking for 4 or 5 different
values.
Then, before everything dries, we pull paint away from
the lightest areas only. If the underpainting has started to dry,
we wet the rag. Interesting how the painting is already coming to
life!
At this point, using burnt sienna and a large artist
brush we simply "map out" and identify the big shapes we see in the
image. Squinting is required to see the big shapes. No real
drawing, just mapping in a few shapes and breaking up the format of
the canvas into pieces of a big puzzle.
The second step is to underpaint the canvas. Here I used
"burnt sienna and a large house brush. The idea is to simply cover
the canvas in a "painterly" manner without any regard for the
subject!
This is the original photograph I used from
www.morguefile.com. Thankyou to the contributor! At this step
it is very important to study the image and identify shapes, colour
etc.
THE PROGRESS OF AN ACRYLIC
PAINTING
ACRYLIC PAINTING WITH BRIAN
SIMONS