344798804the Beginner 39 S Book of Oil Painting
344798804the Beginner 39 S Book of Oil Painting
344798804the Beginner 39 S Book of Oil Painting
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The Beginner's Book of
OIL PAINTING
Surface quality and texture achieved by the use of a palette-knife in colour mixing
Colour schemes achieved with the mixtures above, and painted with the palette-knife
The Beginner's Book of
OIL PAINTING
ADRIAN HILL
F.P.R.O.I., R.B.A.
BLANDFORD PRESS
POOLE DORSET
Blandford Press Ltd, 1958, 1977
Link Llouse, West Street,
DEDICATION
Ftfr /;/)/ God-daughter
AMANDA FAITLOUGH
when she first takes
up her brush
INTRODUCTION Page 7
SUMMING UP 76
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Light folding sketching easel
Introduction
which you can redeem an oil painting that has got "stuck" than
ever there are when a watercolour starts going wrong!
And during each stage you will be learning how to painty the right
way of mixing your colours and the best method of applying
them in short the mechanics of the craft so that you can
presently concentrate on the way that you as an individual and
this is all important can best develop a personal technique, for
in the last analysis, it is this which will mark out your paintings as
different from the rest.
author's warning
In the following chapters I shall be giving you many hints and
warnings which you will have possibly read before and perhaps
already accepted. On the other hand, there may be other state-
ments which will appear to contradict flatly those presented in
other books. In both cases it would be wise for the reader to test
out for himself the truth (or fallacy) of such assertions.
7
beginner's book of oil painting
For instance, Ihave read recently that there is only one true blue,
Ultramarine, whereas Prussian blue is condemned as crude and dull
and of little use in landscape painting. Now it just happens that,
except in rare cases, I have given up Ultramarine for many years, as
I found it far too purple for the average sky blue, and even when
yellows. But in the end, the choice of these and other colours that
come up for review must be determined by trial and error and by
yourself.
And if I am in danger of over-emphasising the importance of
self-determination, it is because so many beginner's and adult
amateurs miss the joy of painting through the very fear of for-
getting the written word, the authority for which should be tested
out before being meekly accepted. Personal preference is born out
of individual experiment and enterprise.
CHAPTER ONE
FIRST, let us see what things you will wantthe bare essentials,
that is, because you can go on adding this and that as your
painting develops, but to start with only the absolutely necessary
tools need be purchased.
Paints, of course, head our list.
These should be students' colours, and get
the large-size tubes. A small number of nice
fat tubes is worth far, far more than a lot of
little thin tubes
however attractive the
colours on the outside may be. Here is a list
of safe colours which, when you have learnt
bottom and
^ ow to m^x tnem will give you all the varieties
>
8 o%. tube roll up tube of tints and tones you could wish for.
BEGINNER S BOOK OF OIL PAINTING
Flake white (i lb. size because you'll find you use more of it
The first is graceful in design, but as you will see has less room
for mixing your colours on, should always recommend the
and I
second, since you can use it indoors and it will fit into your paint-
box when you go sketching out of doors. A box therefore is
essential, and you can get a serviceable one at any artists' colour-
man. The size should not be less than i6"x 12", and get one that
10
TOOLS OF THE TRADE
isnot already filled with a lot of colours you do not want. Fill it
yourself with your own selection.
The paintbox will probably have a container for
your turps and a dipper, this you fit on to the side
of your palette and into which you put your turps.
Ordinary turps from any ironmonger is all you
want, and buy a good supply because you will need it for cleaning
purposes as well as thinning out your colours when you are
actually painting.
A palette-knife will complete our ^
list.This should be trowel-shaped,
because it is mainly used for scraping the surplus paint from your
palette after operations and is more flexible for actual painting. I
must not forget to add you will want plenty of old rags and news-
paper torn into sizes convenient for squeezing out paint that
remains in your brushes (between your finger and thumb) before
rinsing them with your turps.
Before setting out our palette, let me give you some additional
tips, however obvious they may appear. Squeeze your tubes from
the bottom and roll them up
empty. Always replace the cap
as they
on is firmly on. Do not rinse
the tubes after use and see the cap
your brushes in turps before you have semi-cleaned them with
If the colours are squeezed out near to the edge of the palette,
there is plenty of room for mixing, for it is this area within the
12
TOOLS OF THE TRADE
dotted line which must be kept scrupulously clean, and I mean
that. It is fatal to let pools of colour dry hard on this valuable space,
so that you have to scrape
them off such a waste of time! On the
other hand the colours round your palette can remain, indeed if
for some reason you cannot paint for some considerable time, and
do not want to waste what remains, immerse the palette in water
the kitchen sink or some shallow receptacle
and the colours will
remain moist for further use. You will see that by putting out the
colours as suggested I have kept whites as far away as possible
from my black, and the Prussian blue is in a corner of the palette,
as far away as possible from one's sleeve, because it is a terrible
colour for getting on everything and is the worst colour to clean
off!
certainly, one of the best, but there are other materials, and
it is
far less expensive. For our present needs, I suggest an oil paper
which you can obtain from any art shop. It is sold in large sheets,
which you can cut to the size required. It is especially serviceable
for your first exercise, which is making a colour chart. Canvas
boards can be used later, but these and stretched canvas are both
expensive.
A Colour Chart
FOR absolute beginner
the
making of colour
a
I would strongly recommend
chart. First squeeze out a small quantity of
the
each colour on your palette, and with your brush paint a small
square of each tint on a piece of paper or board. This will show you
exactly what the actual colour is, as it comes out of the tube. Now
mix white with each colour, making each tint lighter viz. red will
become pink, etc. You will notice the degree of difference in each
mixture as the proportion of white is added.
You have now a series of tones of the same hue the degrees are
as many as you wish to make
until they are all nearly white.
Now take your two blues (Prussian and Cobalt) and your two
yellows (Chrome and Yellow Ochre). First mix your Prussian blue
with your Chrome yellow strengthening the yellow
with each
mixture. Now do the same with your Cobalt blue and your Yellow
Ochre. Two completely different ranges of green will result (see
page 19). Next mix your Prussian blue with your Yellow Ochre,
and your Cobalt blue with your Chrome yellow, and yet another
scale of greens will result. It's quite exciting to see how many
different kinds of green you can make without using the actual
Viridian green.
Your chart as you can see, will be as you care to make
extensive as
it; because all these shades are dependent on the amount of one
colour you add to the other. But in adding colours, take care to
clean your brushes often enough have plenty of rag and news-
paper handy, torn into sizes convenient for squeezing out paint.
Now your three reds with your two blues Cobalt with Alizarin
or with light red or with Vermilion, and then your Prussian with
the same three reds
you can follow this with your two yellows
14
A COLOUR CHART
and three reds and finally you can add black to each colour on
your palette and see how this "degrades" the original tint.
In my experience such a chart gives the beginner a real sense of
colour its degrees, tints and tones and he will see with surprise
and delight what a vast range there is to paint with; and all are
obtained from your eight or nine original colours.
To the question "How do you mix a grey?" the answer is now,
"What sort of a grey do you want?" Black and white will make
a grey, but it's rather a dull grey, and you will discover that greys
in nature have a bias towards some colour
like a greeny grey, a
pinky grey and a bluey grey and all these subtle tints you can
now mix with confidence.
From this range of colours you can develop your natural or
personal colour scheme, because to achieve colour harmony you
must refrain from using too many different colours in one picture.
I have seen students use three blues (not shades of one colour)
but three separate colours Cobalt, Prussian and Cerulean in one
sky with distracting and discordant results. The fewer basic colours
you use, the more harmonious your painting will be.
WRONG WAY
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Up to now you have applied these various tints and tones with a
brush in a small space. You may now safely try mixing certain of
these colours, for practice, with a palette-knife, and applying them
to your canvas or board with the knife. They will be thicker in
texture and not so smooth
you will get slight ridges, uneven
surfaces which are very exciting and invaluable for certain places
in your future painting when you want to stress the solidity of some
object.
Not that painting with the brush need be smooth indeed I
16
CHAPTER THREE
17
beginner's book of oil painting
and darker in tint than, say, the oak, ash, chestnut, lime, or beech,
and, incidentally, the meadow, paddock, grass verge, in which they
grow, isnever the same green as the tree itself.
When painting evergreens, you can refer to your colour chart to
remind you what is the better blue to mix with your yellows
Prussian or Ultramarine, or Cobalt Yellow Ochre or Chrome. As
a general rule, it is far better to sacrifice the brilliance of a particular
green to something less bright but warmer in hue and which has
more quality. Generally I find beginners' greens are all too cold,
and that particular shade of apple green should be strongly resisted!
For such reasons, never use Viridian by itself, but always mix it
with your yellows, and with regard to the latter, never mix Cad-
mium yellow with a Chrome yellow it may turn your colour
black. I find Chrome ("lemon" and "deep") safer than Cadmiums,
and unless you want to risk a pretty colour scheme, cut out all
made-up greens and Cadmium orange.
A. First Trial
FOR your
shapes
first
are all
painting, I suggest a very simple subject. Simple
we want, as for instance this mountain scene.
You could not have anything much easier to draw and there are
plenty of big shapes to fill in with paint.
So why not start with a blue sky. Take up a quantity of white in
your brush, moistening your colour with a dip of your brush into
the turps first. Then start to add Prussian blue, but be careful not
to put in too much blue all at once, because it is a very positive and
20
A FIRST TRIAL
strong colour.We want it definitely bluer at the top of our paint-
ing than weVdo where it meets the silhouette of the mountain (so
as to achieve the dome of the sky). We should therefore add
touches of blue bit by bit until we have the right strength. By
gradually adding white to our blue as we descend, and by only
covering the area of canvas that our brush-load will encompass, we
will achieve the right gradation.
Having arrived at the mountain, you can use the same blue as
that of the sky, with one of your reds to make a bluish purple, and
by referring to your colour chart (for this is where it can come in
so useful), you can choose the particular shade you think best
suited for your purpose. Lay in the mountain shape with broad
flattish touches, and into this colour you can paint your shadows,
which are determined by where the light is coming from. If your
original shade of blue is on the dark side, you can save these portions
for the shadow forms and mix a lighter tint for the lighter side of
the mountain.
Now for the middle distance, which can be represented by a flat
tone of Prussian blue, with a touch of Yellow Ochre. If you intro-
duce trees, they will be seen in mass and again a mixture of Prussian
blue with a small quantity of Chrome or Yellow Ochre will give
you the right effect.
And here again you can refer to your chart to decide which
darkish green you think best. The distant bank can now be laid in
with a mixture of Yellow Ochre and a touch of Prussian blue, and
the edge of this bank can be drawn in with a loaded brush con-
taining a mixture of light red and Viridian green, as you will want
it to tell darker than the ground above.
21
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Alders on the Rother, by the author (Private Collection)
23
CHAPTER FIVE
Skies in Landscape
24
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they supplement the landscapes, which need a support hut not a rival in interest
BEGINNER S BOOK OP OIL PAINTING
effect which convey the dome-like nature of the sky. This I
will
recommend Without this gradation the sky will
as a first exercise.
resemble a blue backcloth. Once we have mastered this principle
of colour perspective we can introduce clouds of all kinds, cumulus
those majestic cauliflower shapes cirrus, elliptical or scaly
clouds, "puff balls", ragged storm clouds, in short, the whole
heavenly wardrobe, with which nature "dresses" the sky.
Of course our sky colour will not always be blue and it is not
necessary to cover the whole area with any one sky tint, especially
if there are a number of clouds forming a distinct design. But we
3
CHAPTER SIX
Still Life
grips with the problem of matching tint and tone with greater
accuracy than that afforded in any other branch of painting. In
front of the bodily image which is static and which in a steady light
remains the same in colour and tone, the beginner is free to con-
and continually refer his painting to the original.
centrate at leisure
Such an exercise teaches accurate chromatic vision and a proper
regard for tonal values. For the group to be painted, I suggest a
simple arrangement two or three bottles of varying sizes, shapes
and colour, against a background of some definite contrasting tint.
Too many assorted articles will only confuse the issue.
Composition, I need hardly add, as in all picture-making, plays
an important part. For it does not matter how few the objects, they
must be arranged in some pictorial order. A glance at the diagrams
on page 34 will, I hope, prove my point. By moving the objects
about, a suitable composition will be arrived at, and only by so
doing will the number of possible variations be disclosed. Second
or third thoughts are often proved to be better than the first.
And although this process of rearrangement may take time, it
is never wasted, for once it is settled upon and checked up, the
3i
STILL LIFE
right and the jug and glass take up new positions on the left hand
side. Composition, believe me, is all that important.
In my two examples of simple still life paintings (opposite),
a word or two about procedure may help. The group is first drawn
with charcoal, and the outlines brushed in with some such colour as
light red, or Raw Umber. Now the background and the objects
themselves can be stained with colour, approximating to the local
tint but not necessarily the exact colour, the desire being at this
stage to cover your canvas or board all over so that the broad
masses are established and you can see better what your picture is
going to look like.
Then with far less turps and far more pigment you can begin to
paint the background at full strength. It does not matter if you go
over the outlines of your bottles in fact, it is better that you
should, because you will then be obliged to paint back into your
background to recapture the outlines and thus obviate a hard
edge. It is impossible to detail the subsequent stages of your paint-
ing, as everybody must be free to follow their own personal
inclination. But I would add that it is advisable to paint from dark to
light i.e. your half-tones should be painted over your darks, and
i
33
Variations on a theme
STILL LIFE
natural reward for the self-discipline imposed by the rules govern-
ing the previous study, but I would add that freedom of execution
can only be fully enjoyed when the spade-work has been done.
In both cases keep comparing, through half-closed eyes, your
painting with the original, in order to retain balance and harmony.
When flower paintings are attempted, it is imperative that your
background colour should be well established first, so that the
flower forms are boldly painted over with a full and flowering
gesture of the brush. Only by this means will you achieve life in
the flower and depth in the background projection and recession,
the moving against the static.
35
CHAPTER SEVEN
36
This was the first viewpoint I chose, I had to do five more sketches from varying angles
before I got the composition I was really satisfied with. I then made the finished painting
which is reproduced on page 42
BEGINNER S BOOK OF OIL PAINTING
No. 3. I tried a drawing of the church by itself, taking up my
position behind the wall of the vicarage garden. I liked the solid
mass of the church and the light and shade would have made for
an effective painting.
No. 4. In this drawing, I took up a new position well to the
left
of the church foreshortening the nave which now obscured
all but the top of the tower. Also I was able to introduce a strip of
foreground. Again the shadows made happy shapes and the general
composition was compact in its masses.
No. 5. I had now walked round to the back of the church. I did
not spend any more time than it took to make an outline drawing
from this new position as I soon realized that I would never paint
the subject from this uninteresting viewpoint.
No. 6, my last study, is seen from a completely new angle. The
church tower dominated the scene. I now felt confident that I had
found what I felt to be the best composition and so my sketch
was completed in light and shade.
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CHAPTER EIGHT
respond closely with the original sketch, the charcoal lines were
then painted over thinly with an earth colour, in this case Burnt
Umber, as I had some over from a previous painting. I used plenty
of turps with which I continued to stain (rather than paint) the
rest of the subject. The colours I used were: for the sky, Prussian
blue, Yellow Ochre for the church tower, Burnt Umber for the
shadows and trees; and the ground area I brushed in stained is
AiM
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FROM ROUGH TO FINISH
mind that within this rangeyou will try and nearly match the
various by
tintsjudicious mixing. For even if you do not achieve
some particular shade exactly, by restricting your colour scheme
your painting will have an all-over harmony which is far more
important pictorially when viewed, as it will be, away from the
subject.
My palette in this instance was limited to Flake white, Yellow
WRONG
Ochre, Raw Sienna, light red, Lemon Chrome, Burnt Umber and
Prussian blue.
For the beginner, limit your number of brushes to three or four,
and always use larger ones than you think you can manage! Small
brushes, except for essential small detail, are death to broad, con-
fident brush technique.
Take plenty of colour and before applying the
for your mixtures
paint to the canvas, see that you have collected the paint on the end
of your brush. Keep your fingers as far up the handle of the brush
OPPOSITE
Ashbury Church. Final composition in colour
top: First stage bottom: Final stage
beginner's book of' oil painting
as you can and resist the temptation to "smell your painting"!
Having laid on a tint, don't keep stroking it backwards and for-
wards (a very common failing) but leave it and extend the opera-
tion with a freshly loaded brush, overlapping the preceding touch.
It happens always happens, I would say that after the painting
has been in progress some time, all on your
the available space
palette will be occupied by colour mixings and all your brushes
will have been used.
At this stage some light colour may be desired, some fresh tint
desperately wanted to brighten the effect. So often the beginner
dives with a soiled brush into the white or yellow, which is already
slightly discoloured or muted by a previous mixing, and although
more fresh colour is squeezed out it will be introduced into the
remains of the previous pigment, and worse still as a used brush is
pushed into this discoloured mixture, the hope of lighting some
leaden portion of your picture will be doomed to failure. It is on
these occasions that a general clean up is absolutely necessary.
Remove all the colour mixings from the inside of your palette
with your knife you can, if you wish, mix this residue and add it
to your colours round the outside of your palette, but I find the
result is generally a greyish green and rather a muddy tint at that.
Rinse through your brushes with turps, and having squeezed out
fresh paint you will be fresher yourself and will return to the attack
with renewed confidence, supported by clean colour and brushes.
In the lower illustration you will see how I have tried to over-
come the various problems that arise when completing a picture
away from the subject. The sky portion remained a "rub in" (as seen
in the upper illustration) until the rest of the painting had developed
sufficiently for a certain sky effect to suggest itself. Painting direct
from would have completed the sky first, as the mood of
nature, I
the day would decide the tints and tones of nature's forms under-
neath, which of necessity must be influenced by what is happening
in the sky above.
As I my sketches on a fine morning in June, I tried to
had made
recall the freshbreezy effect which prevailed at the time. The result
is overworked, but carried through purposely as a demonstration
to encourage the beginner to work out his own salvation by
44
FROM ROUGH TO FINISH
resisting the temptation to achieve a smart, slick effect. It is far
better to eliminate, soften orbroaden some portion of your picture
than try and introduce pictorial interest into an empty space! The
lesson of simplification will be more properly appreciated by this
method. Of course this should be done while the painting is still
wet, whereas precise accents can only be added with effect when the
underpainting is dry, for obvious reasons.
With regard to the time spent on one particular painting, it
depends of course on the degree of speed that comes natural to
each student, the degree of finish which is desired, and the degree
of progress you make with your painting. As freshness of execution
is such an important attribute to the beholder's enjoyment of any
oil painting, I would say that not more than two sittings, plus
finishing touches, are necessary for any picture up to the size of a
24" X 20", as any time spent after that is generally in attempting
some major restoration or retrieval, the success of which is highly
improbable. Better far to scrape it off and start again!
45
.
CHAPTER NINE
j l I i
Now there are a few hard and fast rules which govern a good
composition, which are so well known and so obvious when
pointed out, but are so frequently forgotten by the impulsive
student who is over anxious to get on with the actual painting.
And they can be all boiled down to the axiom that the painter must
lead the eye of the beholder into the picture and not across it.
Into the picture, may does not mean into the centre of
I repeat,
the picture, but towards the centre, to some focal point where the
eye can rest and be content to remain. In the following number of
diagrams I have tried to illustrate how this principle works, and
what happens when such directives as are necessary to guide the
eye are not sufficiently emphasized, or are omitted altogether. And
for the complete beginner, I have started by showing the elliptical
area inside the picture frame where the interest should be focused,
and outside which arresting forms or detail should be excluded.
47
Where the eye should come to rest
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In I, 2, and j, the lighting is the same, but in In 4 the gate is the principal character with the
2 and 3 the horizon has been raised and lowered trees as supporting interest only
giving an entirely new slant to the subject In j the tree and gate are rivals in interest
In 6 the gate acts as a link between the tree
forms, and balance is restored
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Two examples where strong cast shadows can make a good composition The buildings
on the right become solid, and the silhouette of cars on the left, with their shadows, direct
the eye across the road where the figure arrests the eje and leads it up the street
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The triangular cast shadow takes the eye down to the steps and up again to the central
house and down along the roof and dormer-window to the balcony in front
Silhouette of building in foreground unbalances the composition
1 ^
No central focal point
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CHAPTER TEN
Interiors
(3)
(4)
So if two flanking walls appear in our picture, in each case the line
of the ceiling and that of the floor, being parallel to each other will
also converge and meet at the vanishing point on the horizon line.
And if we remember that the horizon line (on which our vanishing
point must occur) is always on the level with our eyes we will notice that
the lines of the ceiling which is above our eyes appear to go down,
and those of the floor which is below our eyes, appear to go up.
Once that is properly understood (and you can prove it for your-
self, as you sit or stand in your room) then our picture will achieve
depth.
In nearly all interior subjects one or two walls will appear. I
have shown in the preceding diagrams how these principles of
perspective apply.
In painting an interior subject in which a window is shown,
whatever the local tint of the surrounding wall may be it may
even be white it must not be lighter than the sky seen through the
window. You can try this test for yourself. If you have a casement-
window, of which the framework is white, you will see more
clearly (if paradoxically) how dark a tone it is if you look at it in
comparison with the light of Nature, through half-closed eyes. That
is the surest test and notably where all light colours are concerned.
And it will surprise you to see how deep a tone they become where-
ever they approach the borders of a window.
In oil painting, whatever subject is chosen, and especially in an
interior, keep the portrayal of detail, especially high-lights, until
the very end. See your subject in simple broad masses. A painting
closes up, as we say, all too quickly and concern for detail will only
result in a catalogue of isolated objects. In a word
and I know it is
not easy try and retain your first impression of the subject all the
58
Example of strong direct lighting
60
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Heads
Full face, chin resting on or near where Profile, note position of head in relationship
linesA, B, C, D, intersect; medium light to the lines A % B,C t D
from the right; draped background
61
beginner's book of oil painting
drawn more than one and preferably draw your own head, full
face in a looking-glass. See that you have a window to light your
head, either from the right or left so that you get help from strong
shadow forms and when you have finished, draw it again and
again!
Do not strive after a likeness, but concentrate on making your
head solid
and well constructed eyes that can open and shut, a
forehead which discloses the bone formation of the skull, a nose
which has sides to it and appears to project beyond the lips and
see too that the mouth can open and that being set in the head will
follow the curve of the face and not appear to float in front of it.
Draw with a soft pencil, three-quarter life size and I promise you
you will learn a lot.
Only practice will familiarize you with the fundamental principles
on which all heads are constructed, and there are books dealing
specifically with portrait painting to which you can refer.
Canvas paper or board is adequate for your early attempts at
painting a head. First draw it in with charcoal and see that you
Dramatic lighting here reveals the distinctive To preserve the youthful nature of the sitter\ a
characteristics of the sitter's features and moderate lighting {from the left) has been used.
personality This will prevent over-modelling
FIRST STATE LAST STATE
Having fixed the proportions, the all-over Leaving the high-lights on forehead, nose and
rubbed in as a basis for the
flesh tint has been pupils of eyes until last. The features have been
lights to bepainted in later. The same pro- modelled as far as possible together. Local
cedure for the shadows, under eyebrows and colour on cheeks, and eyebrows, hair and
nostrils and moustache, so as to establish the moustache are added while underpainting is
broad masses of the head. Background tone has wet. Final touches to strengthen or soften the
been brushed in round the head
also coat modelling where required are now added with
precision and not overworked
Palette used: Flake white; Yellow Ochre; light red; Terra Verte; Alizarin crimson;
Cobalt blue; Ivory black
have the main proportions right especially the length of nose
(which beginners generally make far too long). Check the distance
of forehead, distance of eyes from wing of the nostrils, width of
mouth, length of chin. These are the essentials, and when reason-
ably correct go over these lines with your brush and a thin wash of
light red. Having established the lines of construction I recom-
mend you rub in the background colour with turps then the
tone of hair and shadow forms on forehead, sockets of eyes, band
of tone round the cheek-bone and side of nose. This tint can be a
mixture of light red and Viridian green or Terra Verte. Your palette
for heads should be limited and I suggest the following colours:
63
'
(Private Collection)
The Right Hon. Sir Winston Churchill during his wartime Premiership, painted by the author
65
St. Ives Harbour, evening, by the author (Private Collection)
CHAPTER TWELVE
Outdoor Subjects
BOTH mountain
beginner
and
for the
coastal scenes make excellent subjects
in oil painting, as mountains (or hills) present
large solid shapes, and rocks, cliffs, and water offer broad areas
which can only be tackled successfully with large brushes and thick
paint. The following illustrations are typical, I hope, of simple and
varied compositions which lend themselves to bold handling.
Detailed objects are for the most part absent, and there is no delicate
drawing to impede the sweep of the brush, and what detail I have
included for pictorial interest can be safely left to the last stages of
the painting. The barest outline only is necessary before starting to
paint. But that outline must be correct, for I hope
be noticed it will
that some of the compositions are better than others, and I have
shown, as I did in an earlier chapter, the changes which can be rung
on the same subject by heightening or lowering the horizon line.
66
Viewfinder to decide best composition of a wide-angled subject
>'
-*&*--- Hrt&lvLCOL .
Here the eye is directed up the mountain by the water-worn ravine y and height is
The central mountain is cupped hy the opposing hill forms which establish its height and distance
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The horizon line is above the top of the picture to convey the effect of looking down
The horizon line is introduced as high as possible and interest is centred on the broken
line of the rocks
A compromise between (/) and (2)
Incidents lacking in the water. Eye directed across from left to right
ARTIST'S CHOICE
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The telegraph poles were standing where they are drawn. Are they needed?
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Summing Up
Try above all to improve and develop your way of painting and
don't labour to emulate somebody else's technique.
Then, and then only, the art activity will always remain an
and rewarding adventure.
exciting
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GENERAL L
B8209362-02
ISBN LAI
LINK HOUSE, WEST STREI
2-25 net POOLE, DORSET BHI5 ILL