22 artistMarch 2020 http://www.painters-online.co.uk
WATERCOLOUR
meets a wall, where we think – or know
- there must be a line where they touch.
The same technique was used in Pale
Sun Lifting Mist (below), which shows
silhouetted trees against a misty lake,
where almost invisible edges to the far
banks were created, with darker paint
added below the structures and washed
down with clean water. Here I also used
the technique of lifting dry paint from
the picture surface using a damp chisel
brush and tissue to create soft edges.
Once the painted surface was dry I
used a damp chisel brush to draw the
suggestion of concentric circles on the
surface of the water around the coot in
t From the Eye, watercolour, 41 3 54½in
(104 3 138cm)
p Pale Sun Lifting Mist, watercolour, 34 3 46¾in (86 3 119cm)
the bottom right-hand corner, stamping
away the damp paint with a tissue to
create the illusion of movement. By
using a strong contrast between the
totally soft-edged background and the
hard-edged silhouetted foreground tree
and branches, which were painted wet-
on-dry, I created the illusion of depth