Leisure Painter - UK (2019-06)

(Antfer) #1

22 JUNE 2019 http://www.painters-online.co.uk


M


y aim in painting this scene
was to paint a traditional
watercolour by first layering the
larger washes then building up the tones
and detail using more well-placed washes
and utilising my brushes to the full. Only
when the painting was near completion
did I bring in the inks and gouache to
enhance the colour and highlights.
I enjoyed my first visit to the Loire last
September and was particularly excited

to visit the Château de Montrésor for the
first time. It is a medieval castle with a
Renaissance mansion built in the grounds,
located in the French village of Montrésor
in Indre-et-Loire. My artistic eyeballs were
on full alert for paintable scenes and
I was rewarded when I entered one of
the grand salons (above). The light
flooding through the window highlighted
all the rich fabrics and furniture, and
where there is light, there are nooks and
crannies. This was a ‘must-paint’ scene!

A note on colours
The Aquafine watercolours, which are
rich, free flowing and transparent, made
up the majority of this painting, however,
I added three Winsor & Newton pigments

to the process. Quinacridone gold
and permanent rose (quinacridone rose)
belong to a wonderful family of colours
that share the characteristics of
transparency, vibrancy and permanence.
They are my favourite pair and lay the
foundations for most of my paintings.
Cerulean tends to be a cool blue. It is
opaque with plenty of granulation and
I used it to balance the warmer hues
in the later stages of the painting.
The Aquafine gouache pigments,
namely cerulean and titanium white,
made another small guest appearance
to enhance the highlights. Cobalt blue
hue and cadmium red hue Aquafine inks
were also useful and brightened the
carpets and parts of the chair fabrics. LP

How to approach a complex scene and make the most of watercolour’s


transparent and vivid colours with gouache and ink, by Adrienne Parker


Watercolour magic


LEARNING OBJECTIVES
nPractise wet-in-wet, wet-on-dry
and dry-brush techniques
nMake sense of a complicated
scene

Watercolour plus


tThe reference photograph for this demonstration: a grand salon in the Château de Montrésor
Free download pdf