Watercolor Artist - USA (2019-10)

(Antfer) #1

26 Watercolor artist | OCTOBER 2019


“I leave paintings that are in progress
all around my studio,” he says. “I’ll
have as many as fi ve or six in various
stages. Sometimes I’ll look at a piece
for days or weeks, determining what
needs work. I don’t always know when
it’s fi nished; sometimes I’m still paint-
ing as I’m framing the darn thing.”
Popadics’ approach to brushing is
in keeping with the restraint and sim-
plicity of his vision. He doesn’t go in
for dramatic brushstrokes or spectac-
ular watercolor techniques, such as
dripping or splashing. Instead, he
uses an even touch across the work
with suffi cient action to keep the sur-
face lively and engaging but not so
much as to draw unwarranted atten-
tion to the handling.

Embracing the
Atmospherics
Th e strength of Popadic’s approach
is on view in Pilings in the Harbor
(on page 25), in which a luminous
gray sky sheds an ethereal light on
a limpid, misted sea. Th e rocks in the

foreground are rendered in high contrast with simple
shapes while the boats in the distance resolve to shim-
mering gray silhouettes. Th e painting as a whole evokes
the eerie calm and stillness of a foggy morning.
In other paintings, atmospherics and simplifi cation
become more complex. In Ground Mist, Shelburne Farms
(below), for instance, cattle are rendered as fairly sharp
silhouettes against a bank of mist. Behind this, the air
clears to reveal a delicate tree line while above, an early
morning sky radiates a warm orange light. Here the
artist uses fi ne control of soft and hard edges to alter-
nate clear outlines with more suggestive passages.
Th e way in which atmospheric eff ects can evoke
feelings is explored in Temple of Hephaestus (at right),
a painting the artist made on location in Greece.
Working on a gray October day, he found the brilliant
Greek light to be soft and damp, enveloping the temple
in a delicate shroud of thin mist. Th e trees are reduced
to soft, almost-fl at elements while the detail is picked
up again in the foreground via the stone steps. Th e
painting suggests some of the powerful feelings of
a deep historical past that the artist felt on his visit.

Creating a Sense of Connection
In the end, it’s this emotional response by the viewers
and the resulting sense of connection that drives
Popadics. “I think that as artists, our highest purpose

ABOVE
Temple of
Hephaestus
(watercolor on
paper, 10x14)

LEFT
Ground Mist,
Shelburne Farms
(watercolor on
paper, 22x28)
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