So, after reading that Peter Cronin book. I was keen to put his ideas into practice. Ā I picked this view from Christ’s College, Cambridge because of the interesting shapes and the chance to paint some interesting light on the path. Ā The main colours today were French ultramarine, rose dore, transparent yellow and raw sienna. Ā Both yellows are cool, so this is in the key of triadic right. Ā Why this key? Ā Well I wanted transparent yellow for the grass and raw sienna for the Fellows’ Building at the back. Ā I didnāt want the green to be overpowering, so picked French ultramarine, a warm blue. Ā And I didnāt want the top floor of the Fellows’ Building to be too purple, so picked rose dore, a warm red. Ā Cadmium red, cambium yellow and, in particular, titanium white also made cameo appearances.
The first stage of the painting was to draw a pencil outline, reserve some white highlights and put down a watery underpainting. Ā Here’s what I ended up with:
I guess this looks quite like some of the stuff I’ve seen Peter start with in his first stage paintings but it’s far from perfect:
– the little bit of sky showing between the Fellows” Building and the arch is too dirty: not blue enough
– the Fellows’ Building has been coloured too literally, with mainly raw sienna: some blue and red in there would have made for a far more interesting painting
– to be honest, using raw sienna as well as transparent yellow wasnāt really necessary: the transparent yellow could have replaced the raw sienna everywhere
– the shadow on the right of the lawn was added too late and it’s cauliflowered
– some reds on the path haven’t diffused into the yellow as much as I’d have liked
But let’s see how we go.
Stage two is where I needed to start adding some hard edged shapes. Ā Ideally just for the bigger shapes and not for little bits of detail. Ā Here’s how things looked after I thought I’d finished stage two.
Things were starting to come together but stage two isn’t finished:
– the tree shadow isn’t there yet
– more glazes are needed on the archway to darken it
There’s also a minor problem in that the stones in concrete between the path and the lawn are a bit too dark for my liking.
The last photo I took is the final one, after completion of stages two and three. Ā For stage two, I just added the shadows and glazed over the whole archway twice with the blue and the the darker bits in the archway with the red. Ā I also added the blue shadow, which I tried unsuccessfully to combine with the shadowy colours in the archway.
Stage three was about adding detail. Ā Here I added
– window details
– white highlights (the reserved whites didn’t really work)
– opaque reds, yellows and blues in the flower bed (dabbed in rather than spattered)
– some dry blue brushstrokes in the lawn, which I wet and spread out a little bit in places
– some white spattering in the archway to add some magic – a spattering of masking fluid would have been better
I also added a little bit of the red to the Fellows’ Building. Ā This was more of a stage one correction than Ā part of stage two or three.
So let’s talk about the final painting. Ā The three things that bug me most about this one are:
– how the shadow on the lawn hasn’t merged properly with the dark archway shape
– the bit to the right of the path being too dark
– the windows in the Fellows’ Building looking too loose and shaky
What I do like, though, is:
– the composition, looking through the archway
– the contrast between dark and light values
– the variety of shapes
– the colours in the archway, including the spattering
– the light that I’ve caught on the path
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