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Breaking Through: Step 5

I used a grid to transfer the final to-scale sketch onto the canvas.  The grid should be pretty hard to spot in these images, thanks to a handy little trick I picked up in the Artist’s Handbook (by Ralph Mayer).  Incidentally, if you are an Artist yourself, or an aspiring Artist, or a really serious, geek-level art enthusiast and you don’t already have a copy of this hefty tome of art-related information, you should really consider picking one up.  Anyway, the trick is to draw the grid with water-based color pencil, and then sketch the cartoon on to the canvas with oil-based pencil or charcoal.  Once the drawing is complete, the grid can be carefully removed with a warm washcloth.  This may sound ridiculously anal, but oil colors have a tendency to become increasingly transparent over time, and the last thing an artist wants for a carefully planned and painstakingly executed painting is for a nice set of grid lines to mysteriously appear in it after several years.  For this same reason, I sketched the composition onto the canvas with white colored pencil, which seemed the least likely to ever make an unexpected appearance down the road.  I have seen original paintings by Bouguereau, one of my personal favorite figure painters, in which the sketch for the composition has become easily visible over the lifetime of the piece, sometimes even revealing alternate positions for arms, drapery, etc.  This makes for really interesting viewing for anyone curious about the methods of as competent a craftsman as Bouguereau, but I guarantee he (Bouguereau) never intended for it to happen.

Once I had the canvas sketched, I began working on the sky.  The idea was to set the scene at sunrise, symbolizing a beginning.  I spent a fairly long day blocking in the sky in the image below.  I was referring to a set of photos I took in St. George, UT a few years earlier, and thought the colors and angles would create a real dramatic backdrop for the painting.

Breaking Through

The next morning, I walked into my studio and realized the sky was far too busy.  There would be so much going on with the cliffs, water, and house, that it would be overkill.  Besides, who needs all the negative press associated with one of their paintings causing a series of seizures in unsuspecting viewers?  Not me.  I spent the next two days re-painting the sky.  This is how it finally turned out.  Did I mention these images were dark and grainy?  When you see the photos of the finished painting, you will see what I mean.  Oh, yeah…did I also mention that I had a sizable number of images vanish into the ether of a computer meltdown?  Consequently, the water is also finished in this second image.

Breaking Through

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About Bryan Larsen ~

Bryan Larsen

"I was born on February 12, 1975, and have been drawing as long as I can remember. By the time I was in high school, I knew I wanted to be an artist, although at the time I didn't have a clear idea of how exactly I would use my talents to make a living.

"As I continued studying art, I began to suspect that fine visual art was dead. No one seemed interested in teaching students how to draw well, or paint well. More often than not, my own skills exceeded those of my instructors.

"The only field left that seemed to require good drawing, painting, and compositional skills was illustration, and therefore I began studying illustration at Utah State University in Logan, Utah. I became even more convinced that I had made the right decision in staying away from fine art as I endured course after course of required "drawing" and "painting" classes in which instructors required me to draw with "less focus", or use ridiculous materials such as shellac, glue, sand, salt, etc.

"My second year at Utah State, I met Damon Denys. In discussing Art with him I realized that there were other people who believed that technique and subject matter were indispensable components of any work of art. I then decided that I would work to develop my own painting skills with the purpose of creating artwork that I considered worthy of being called Fine Art.

"Since that time, I have studied on my own: Drawing from live models to learn the human form, studying proper painting techniques from any source I could find ample reason to trust, and developing a philosophy of Art based on reason, and life on earth.

"My goal is to portray the heroic and romantic in human nature and human achievement in a realistic style and a modern setting. I place particular emphasis on composition, technique, realistic detail, proper craftsmanship and consistency of style."