Icarus: Step 20

Time for the snap. WHAM! Were you ready for that?
Ah yes, nothing like an intense, bright color to round out a chilly blue composition. Put some fire in its belly; you know what I mean? Well, excellent. This is my favorite part of working on the painting–anticipating the effect that swath of brilliant yellow will have on the composition, and then seeing it materialize exactly how I planned. So I now have a solid bass drum to put the thump under the high hat of my jazzy blues. Let’s talk about yellow, shall we?
The actual fabric I used to model the yellow sash was more of an orangey yellow. Now cadmium yellow is an orangey yellow, but the original fabric was a bit too orangey and didn’t have quite enough zim in its zam for the effect I wanted. The yellow area is small compared with the amount of blue space in the painting, so I knew I was looking for a real firecracker–the Mighty Mouse of yellows. Now my advice to you in this situation is to go back to the fabric store and find exactly the color of yellow sash you need. That’s what a responsible person would do. On the other hand, if you find yourself working on a painting step by step in front of a large audience, feel free to take the riskier route of higher potential humiliation, forget about the fabric store, and dive right in with wild abandon.
Opting for the latter route, I have to mix alternate colors and use my modeling fabric only as a suggestion of shape and form (which translates to: “additional work, more chance of messing up”). To get a real brilliant yellow, I use pure cadmium yellow right out of the tube for my mid-tones, and make the shadows fairly orange in color to create a nice simmering foundation for those highlights. Cold shadows would dampen the effect, and with warm orange shadows we’re guaranteed that the blue toga will have its complimentary color living right next door, reaching over the fence and picking from its prize cherry tree, stirring up their old rivalry. Exactly what we want. Friendly neighbors make for boring paintings (although they’re often good for barbeques).

