4 Crucial Figure Painting Tips - Artist Daily - Artist Daily
On Hamilton's Prairie by Rose Frantzen, 32 x 40, oil painting. Rose Frantzen's work has been on my radar for a while and even more so after I saw her oil painting portrait show at the Smithsonian Portrait ############## in Washington, DC, which featured 180 paintings of the residents and neighbors from the artist's hometown of Maquoketa, Iowa. As a figure painter, Frantzen is second to none and she's developed a few really successful strategies for moving a painting forward and making crucial corrections when that is called for. I wanted to share a few of her <a href="http://www.louisvuittononline-discount.com/gucci-gucci-messenger-c-65_71.html"><strong>authentic designer handbags</strong></a> oil painting techniques and tips with you. 40 times is the charm. Believe it or not, Frantzen draws the model for any one of her figure oil paintings about 40 times--not total, but per session. She does it directly on the canvas in a thin wash, in the air above her canvas, or as she is painting. Go with what appeals to you. Frantzen is a strong and ardent proponent of starting with areas that appear easiest to see or make sense of. "If you can see and respond to a shape immediately, put it down," she says. "Anchor yourself with the areas you feel strongest about." So it isn't necessarily about a right or wrong way of doing things, but finding your way! Looking Back by Rose Frantzen, 40 x 52, oil painting. Judging your progress. Stopping to assess and reassess while in the throes of painting is invaluable. Frantzen will often setup a mirror behind her and view her painting through it several times during the painting process to see the work from a different perspective. <a href="http://www.louisvuittononline-discount.com/chanel-2010-chanel-handbags-c-53_54.html"><strong>wholesale tote bags</strong></a> She'll also pull books and photographs of Old Masters' works off the shelves and compare them side by side to her own work, asking herself if she's achieving the effects she wants. Clean up on aisle four. During a figure painting session, Frantzen will clean her palette every time her model takes a break, wiping down the center of the palette and the outer areas where her paint piles lay. She does this so that she can start fresh and isn't confined <a href="http://www.christianlouboutin-temperament.com/"><strong>cheap christian louboutins</strong></a> by her previous mixtures. But she doesn't waste that "old" paint. Instead, she separates it into red, blue, and yellow piles to make gray mixes at a later time. There is so much for a novice like me to learn from practicing artists like Frantzen, and others. One of our newest resources in the Artist Daily store is practicing artist and author Sam Adoquei's book, How Successful Artists Study. As I read through it, I found a handbook for artists looking to pursue a serious course or career in the fine arts, as well as the technical and practical guidance I want for making art. I hope it is the same for you!
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