Thursday, March 27, 2014

Optical mixing in Pastel

A3, pastel on paper. I love this way of obtaining in-between shades by optically mixing two or more colors - the retina tends to interpret a mix of the different-colored strokes (which are laid cross-wise or in parallel) as a tertiary color.



In case you're interested - posted below are a couple of old (2011) w.i.p sequences, showing the same technique in some detail. These I had posted elsewhere, although I'm not sure if I had posted the last sequence in this blog as well. Being more than 2 years old, the technical quality of the drawings, and my understanding of form is obviously inferior - but then, that itself is something to learn from :)

Sequence 1

15" x 11", pastels on cartridge paper.

1. The initial sketch in Conte sanguine pencil. Will fix drawing issues later as the painting progresses.


2. Having painted the background and hair, I started laying down the under-layer for the face. The face had a light, blue-violet(ish) cast in the reference, so this underlayer will 'peep' through the hatch marks on the over-layers - thus achieving an overall optically mixed tone.


3. I darkened the eyes and started mixing a crimson-pink tone with the blues, but in strategic areas to reflect the colors variations on the face. Where I wanted the mix to be more subtle and the tone lighter (as in the neck area) I used wider spacing between the hatch marks, which were also placed parallel to each other. Whereas on the cheek and other areas, the marks were crossed and denser.


4. Have started to add the over-layers - the scarlets and the pale creams. Have also worked further on the lips. The whites of the eyes still have a light greenish underlayer. I'm gradually encroaching upon the highlit areas now


5. Finished version. I have used light finger blending to harmonized certain areas, but the strokes mostly retain individual definition. Could have worked more on a few small areas, but I thought I'd call it a day and decided to put it away.



Sequence 2

15" x 11" on white cartridge paper using assorted brands.

1. The initial sketch in black conte. Looks a bit too finished, and that's because at first I didn't intend to bring out my pastels for this. I've already started to work on the background...


2. Background :- applied white on the undermix of cerulean blue and light orange, and lightly blended it all (with the thumb). Figure :- beginning to apply the under-layer... I intend to optically mix this with subsequent layers.


3. Have started to integrate the different layers. Very light blending here and there, mostly cross-hatching strokes.


 4. The finished painting. Approx 2.30-45 hours, done at one sitting.




Figure and portrait references by kind courtesy of (in order of top to bottom):
1. Cable9tuba in DeviantArt.
2. Tassjafocused in DeviantArt.
3. Daniel Burns (Tanis Macphail is model for the last two).

Thank You!

Saturday, March 22, 2014

Neither hair, nor there

Just some hair study... 14" x 22", acrylic on gessoed paper. The figure is imaginary, used image ref for the hair. Please click to view in actual size (1600 px).



Hair reference by courtesy of Chamarjin at Deviantart.

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Studying the beautiful Arabian...

So here I'll be following my figure-drawing principle, that horses are human too :) ... a few studies of the Arabian horse (except last one, I think) on A3 size pages, using pastel, conte and pastel + water color.

Before this, I had no idea Arabian horses have such a distinctive head shape - almost conical, with large eyes and nostrils, and a concave-ish 'forehead/bridge of nose' area. Their neck has a pronounced arch, and the lower back (croup) is flat with a high-pointing tail. Beautiful animals indeed!

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A slightly closer view...


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Ref images by kind courtesy of Jello88 in deviantart.com