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Two Shores: Step 9

Two Shores

Now things start to get fun. I love painting lights. The day I get to add lights to my buildings and bridges is like the day your secret decoder ring finally comes in the mail. With the burnt umber base completely dry at this point, I can apply the colors for the lights without worrying about the dark base color dirtying them. I use titanium, cadmium red, cad yellow, and a combination of cerulean and ultramarine blue to create a variety of lights.

To create a nice, soft “melting” effect for my lights, I first mix a very thin (lots of linseed oil), inky mixture of each color, which is very transparent. I use this to create a hazy areola beneath some of the lights, and then go back with the thicker paint and add a fleck of opaque light color to the center. I then very carefully blend this slightly into the hazy area to make the lights bleed nicely. I also add some direct flecks of light without the hazy under-paint, just for variety and to accentuate the sense of distant atmosphere.

I should mention here that I’m thinning the colors of my lights with linseed oil instead of turpentine at this stage. You might remember that earlier, when I was sketching the painting design onto the canvas, I added turpentine to my umber instead of linseed oil to achieve the same inky effect. The reason I’m switching to oil is to obey the rich-on-lean rule. Oil dries more slowly than turpentine, so by using oil at this stage to thin my paint, I’m painting a slower-drying layer on top of a faster-drying layer and ensuring that the future owner of this painting doesn’t curse my name as he writes ghastly checks to conservation laboratories.

So why am I essentially icing the cake while leaving the interior of the bridge bare? Don’t the lights seem like something that should be done last?

Well, sometimes, yes. But I need to be able to see how much contrast is going to exist between the lights and their environment before I can go ahead and paint the foreground elements. At the moment, the foreground is as dark as can be. I’ll be painting over it to give it more detail, but before I do that I want to know how light or dark to make those accents so I don’t drown out my lovely little lights with a crop of over-bright grass in the foreground. And I know the side of the bridge is going to need some highlights on its curve, catching the light of the sky at an angle, so that region is also staying unpainted until I know how light or dark I need to make it. I can tell the sky itself (remember I decided to paint it brighter than it would actually appear at this time of day to give a more cheerful impression) is going to give the lights plenty of competition already, so it’s obvious that I’m going to need to keep the foreground quite dark in the final painting if I don’t want to lose them entirely into the mix of the composition.

2 Responses to “Two Shores: Step 9”

  1. Aparna Padmanabhan Says:

    Damon,

    No, I did not think that you were snowboarding all day. I spotted the difference between steps 7 & 8 right away. My mom is an artist and I have seen her paint the same stroke for several days… Great job so far and thank you so much for your work and commentary.

  2. Damon Denys Says:

    Thanks Aparna, it sounds like your mother is a very focused and patient painter. You’re obviously familiar with what goes into producing carefully painted works, which I like. It’s amazing how many people seem to be under the impression that accurate, detailed paintings just fall out of the sky, or are the natural byproduct of a “talented and inspired” individual. As you probably know, high realism demands a huge amount of practice and dedication, just as any refined skill or science. It doesn’t just happen, and no one is “just born with it”. It’s very refreshing to meet people who know and appreciate that fact. I’m glad you’ve enjoyed the artist’s studio so far. Thanks for your comment.

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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."