Leisure Painter — June 2017

(Wang) #1

Watercolour


I


n the last issue I shared the first three
of the six reasons I love painting in
watercolour. In addition to the colour,
bonuses and brushwork aspects, I enjoy
harnessing the capricious character of this
medium, exploring the different painting
surfaces available and, finally, the way it
responds, if you, the artist, work as a
partner in, rather than taking charge of
the process.
You need to play with watercolour to
discover what sends shivers down your
spine and by trying to control it too much
you may miss the surprises it has in store
for you. How do you tap into this most
rewarding and frustrating aspect of the
medium? I believe it is by just
experimenting with the water, different
surfaces, brushes, spray bottles and

28 JUNE 2017 http://www.painters-online.co.uk


Part 2Learn more about the nature of watercolour with Ev Hales. This month,


experiment with colour and different paper surfaces to develop your work


Wat ercolour rules!


LEARNING OBJECTIVES
n Work out your own style of
painting

n Draw into random colour
experiments

n Understand how different
surfaces can work for you

Victoria Dock, Hobart, wash and pen on Hot-Pressed paper, 15x11in. (38x28cm). In this
image I have splashed colour expressively on a sheet of paper (a gestural happening my
students know as a splodge) then superimposed a pen drawing upon it. The energy of the
colour is a great foil for the pen drawing. The end result is a more energised image than can
be achieved by painting a wash over a drawing. This is because the colour has a complete
entity of its own, separate from the drawing.

t

TRY THIS!
Using no more than two or three colours,
try wetting the paper with a spray bottle
and dropping colours randomly into the
wetness, or try making expressive random
brushmarks. Do not stir the colour on the
paper. Ensure you have a variety of hard
and soft edges and leave plenty of white
space. The colour design should look good
from any angle. Let it dry then see what
you can discover in the colour you have
used. This exercise can be used as the
basis for a painting or you may draw over
the colour with a black waterproof pen.
Resist the urge to cover everything.
This process allows you to start looking
at what the medium can do without any
preconceived notions about subjects.
Learn to look at what the paint is doing
and think about how you can use the
results. If you are going to draw with pen
then the Hot-Pressed or smooth paper is
easiest to draw over; a textured paper is
not kind to the pen tip.
Drawing into a splodge is the beginning
of an artistic partnership between colour
and pen. Other media, like oils and
acrylics, do not require such thoughtful
immediacy because you can keep adding
layers until you achieve a desired result.

LP06 28-31 Hales_Layout 1 05/04/2017 13:21 Page 28

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