NATONAL ART LEAGUE DEMO NIGHT
OIL PAINTING DEMO
Friday, October 2
The evening is FREE, and ALL are invited.
*I will be offering a painting to be RAFFLED OFF to some lucky member of the audience.
I am invited to do an oil painting demo at the NAL from a flower set-up. I will be the FIRST Friday demo artist for October. I am looking forward to this evening and invite my students to attend what will be an informative and entertaining evening. I usually Demo in Pastel, however, as I also paint in Oils, I would like to offer this view of my Oil painting approach and direct painting techniques.
NATIONAL ART LEAGUE
OIL AND PASTEL WORKSHOP
Saturday, October 3rd
1-4 pm
ALL LEVELS WELCOME
I am excited to offer a Saturday class for those who are not available during the week. I am looking for new students NEW to me and NEW to NAL. If you have friends who are thinking of beginning to honor their inner artist, I will be happy to help introduce the concepts and joy of making art!
CUMBERLAND FALL CLASSES
PASTELS
Thursday, October 8
1 - 4pm
PAINT LIKE VAN GOGH-ALMOST
Limited Palette and Palette Knife Painting
DON'T FORGET TO REGISTER
Late afternoon class
ART LEAGUE OF LONG ISLAND
A COMMON THREAD:AN EXHIBITION OF PORTRAITS & FIGURES
MY SELF-PORTRAIT IS ON EXHIBIT
Opens Sunday, Oct 4
Reception 3 -5
For Information and to register email me at artzoneny@earthlink.net or call 917 723 3362
Showing posts with label Palette Knife Painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Palette Knife Painting. Show all posts
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Spring Palette Knife Painting
After my first exposure to a limited palette via this workshop with Morton Kaish, I have tried to keep my paint colors to a minimum and mix as much a possible. It is liberating to me.
I designed a class to teach this approach and have been teaching "Paint in the Manner of Van Gogh" at Great Neck Adult Education Center and The Newark Museum. My intention is to inspire direct strong strokes with the use of a palette knife and challenge the learning process as you learn more about mixing colors.

This is a special workshop taught by Mort Kaish at the National Academy in 2009. The triad of colors is Cadmium Yellow Light, Ultramarine Blue, Alizarin Crimson and White. I am using acrylic paint on Masonite board toned with Ultramarine Blue acrylic.
Portrait of a Model, Over-Sized Head, Palette Knife, Limited Palette.
The charcoal sketch is painted over in black acrylic paint to facilitate fast drying. We are told to think of stained glass leading, where one area attaches to another, and is clearly outlined.

This is my finished outlined, leaded head.
The board is 24" x 18".
Beginning by premixing the paints for the skin tones, I begin to apply the strokes. It is an "apply scrape off the excess stroke". As one works the face, the under layers are drying and allowing for
additional color applications. There is a see thru effect, due to the scraping off of the excess paint. This is not about frosting a cake.
The "leading" allows you to separate the areas of the image. This provides clarity and acts as a road map. It also guides you toward selecting distinct colors and avoid too much blending. This is a new tool to most and a helpful approach to applying color.
Texture will inevitably occur as the under layers have been scraped. Acrylic paint allows for a lot of layering in 2, 3 hour sessions. You can see the variety of colored layers on the surface as they continue to build the form over the 2 sessions on this model.
The dark areas are mixed from the limited palette. I did not get to the background other then to make an outline.


The object was not a real likeness, but the color interaction and liberation of using the primary triad of color to develop all the colors needed. The "darks" are the most challenging because the value and color has to be deep.
I love this theory so much, it is my second time taking the workshop. Mr. Kaish has incorporated both the knife and brush in his own wonderful work.
I designed a class to teach this approach and have been teaching "Paint in the Manner of Van Gogh" at Great Neck Adult Education Center and The Newark Museum. My intention is to inspire direct strong strokes with the use of a palette knife and challenge the learning process as you learn more about mixing colors.

This is a special workshop taught by Mort Kaish at the National Academy in 2009. The triad of colors is Cadmium Yellow Light, Ultramarine Blue, Alizarin Crimson and White. I am using acrylic paint on Masonite board toned with Ultramarine Blue acrylic.
Portrait of a Model, Over-Sized Head, Palette Knife, Limited Palette.
The charcoal sketch is painted over in black acrylic paint to facilitate fast drying. We are told to think of stained glass leading, where one area attaches to another, and is clearly outlined.


This is my finished outlined, leaded head.
The board is 24" x 18".
Beginning by premixing the paints for the skin tones, I begin to apply the strokes. It is an "apply scrape off the excess stroke". As one works the face, the under layers are drying and allowing for
additional color applications. There is a see thru effect, due to the scraping off of the excess paint. This is not about frosting a cake.

Texture will inevitably occur as the under layers have been scraped. Acrylic paint allows for a lot of layering in 2, 3 hour sessions. You can see the variety of colored layers on the surface as they continue to build the form over the 2 sessions on this model.
The dark areas are mixed from the limited palette. I did not get to the background other then to make an outline.


The object was not a real likeness, but the color interaction and liberation of using the primary triad of color to develop all the colors needed. The "darks" are the most challenging because the value and color has to be deep.
I love this theory so much, it is my second time taking the workshop. Mr. Kaish has incorporated both the knife and brush in his own wonderful work.
Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Palette Knife Painting Demo

I have been using knives to mix paint, deliver clean color to a canvas, and sometimes along with brushes in paintings.The approach to this painting was:
(1) A very complete charcoal drawing of Jason on the18 x 24 board, pre-primed with Cobalt, or Ultramarine Blue/Shocking for a ground.
(2) The drawing and the patchwork quilt background were painted in black so that it appeared as the leading in a stained glass window or paint-by-number drawing. The color story was a limited palette of Alizarin Crimson, Cadmium Yellow Light, Cobalt or Ultra Blue, White, and later on Black.
I LOVE THIS TRIAD OF COLORS and enjoyed the huge vocabulary of primary, secondary and tertiary colors AND, premixing the colors, allows one to work very FAST and the colors stay BRIGHT AND CLEAN.

The application is to put on the color and remove, apply and remove, allowing for lots of under layers showing through, and immediate reapplication as the color is thin enough to keep going , on and on. I love to work fast, I love color, and I got very taken up with the movement and the multi color layering which was happening before my eyes.

Parts of the drawing fell away, and the portrait emerged. Additional colors and layers seemed easy, and the complexity of the surface was very gratifying. The drawing, and outlining, color mixing of the palette, and the paint application took two, three hour sessions. Not a lot of overworking, as the results seemed to say "finished" with no second thoughts on my part.

A fellow student took this one of me in process. I am so psyched with the Limited Palette that I plan to teach, and use it in the Taos Workshop, in June.

Here is an interesting shot, of the model (very warm colors) which really pops on this intense blue ground. Painting on grey grounds, makes for grey paintings, in my view.
This crazy approach kept my colors in a vivid, lively range, and I will be doing more with this approach for plein air landscape. Alternating with brush and knife is a totally awesome arsenal.

Coming into the homestretch, just adding color everywhere, and staying true to the fun and spontaneous nature of the application.
I will most likely push the background back a bit, as it is too close in value and intensity to the portrait. This had all the elements I needed to keep me challenged, and gratified and
NOT frustrated, or bored.

1) Clarity of drawing, and an armature to guide me, or to hide as I went along
2) Color that stayed clean, and lively, and allowed for multiple layers in a short period of time without causing mud, or overworking the surface. Can’t wait to pass on my new skills, and develop the premise further.
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