Just finished this woodland path in oils. It'll be up for sale once dried.
Monday, March 2, 2015
Monday, February 16, 2015
Thursday, February 5, 2015
The story of a painting.
About 20 years ago, whilst at the Artist and Illustrator Show at the Business Design Centre in Islington I made a rash decision to buy a large stretched canvas (70cm x 50cm) Don't ask me why. I didn't even paint in those days, I did small (15cm squared) highly detailed pen drawings on watercolour paper. But something happened that day to prompt me to buy a canvas.
When I got home (it isn't easy to carry a large canvas on a busy tube is it) I had a think about what I wanted to use this canvas for - something abstract maybe. But I never got round to actually starting anything and the canvas (still wrapped) was put in my parents loft until I needed it.
19 years later I remembered this canvas and, seeing as by that time I had done some small acrylic landscapes, decided to make the plunge and start a large Lakeland landscape in oils (never used them at that time - I'm always making rash decisions).
I did the underpainting in acrylic then oils on top. Looked great... for a while. Then I realised I wasn't happy with it - maybe it was the oils. Eventually I decided to get a tub of gesso and paint over it (there you go, another rash decision) and re-use the canvas for acrylics, a medium with which I've had some previous success.
Covering with gesso |
Now, all you artists out there will be tutting and saying 'You can't gesso over oil paints. The oils will seep through giving a ghosted image of the painting underneath'. I soon discovered this myself. So, rather than wasting this canvas, I decided to give oils another chance and start a woodland scene in darker colours in case the old painting still came through.
I started with a blue acrylic underpainting then oil pastels to sketch out my landscape.
Blue acrylic underpainting |
Sketching out in with oil pastels |
Within a couple of sessions I was getting really excited about the results I was now achieving.
At the time of writing, it's not quite finished, but I'm really pleased with it and have now developed a love for oil paints.
The (almost) finished painting |
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