Artists & Illustrators — June 2017

(Nandana) #1
54 Artists & Illustrators

MASTERCLASS


8 WORK ON THE MIDGROUND

With the weather closing in and showers
more frequent, I work quickly with the round
flat size 1 brush. I add more detail and work
on the sunlit midground fields with stiffer
mixes of Permanent Sap Green, Cadmium
Yellow Light and Titanium White. With the
same mix as the sky, I paint the puddles and,
with a touch of grey, the granite gateposts.

7 CREATE STRUCTURAL MARKS

Using mixes of Yellow Ochre with Burnt
Sienna and Cadmium Yellow Light with
Permanent Sap Green – both with a touch of
Titanium White – I begin to define areas of
colour. The round size 4 brush is used to add
structural marks to the painting. The wall is
added with a mix of French Ultramarine,
Burnt Sienna and Titanium White. I always
aim to mix my colours with a palette knife
but, as enthusiasm or time gets the better of
me, I normally end up mixing with the brush


  • hence the touches of green in the wall.


6 ADD IN THE SKY

I begin to block in the sky with mixes of
French Ultramarine and Titanium White.
The sky is changing very quickly, as is the
landscape, but I need to get some colour into
the sky that would make it easier to asses
the tones for the distant moorland. The large
flat brush covers the area quickly without too
much fiddling.

5 WORK FAT OVER LEAN

My particular method is to work as slowly as
the time allows me, building up the painting,
starting with dilute mixes, progressing to
thicker applications of paint: essentially the
‘fat over lean’ method. I begin to build up the
structure on the hills with mixes of Yellow
Ochre and Burnt Sienna, and the foreground
with Yellow Ochre and Permanent Sap Green
using the flat size 16 brush, strokes of which
describe the shape of the land.

3 PLACE THE STRUCTURE

With the round size 4 brush and a mix of
French Ultramarine with Burnt Sienna,
thinned with water to a wash, I loosely place
the underlying structure of the painting,
indicating the main forms to establish the
composition. If any adjustment is needed,
then I wipe the marks from the board with
an old piece of rag.

4 BLOCK IN COLOURS

The subject is a tricky one with the light
changing by the minute. Working with very
watery mixes of Burnt Sienna and Permanent
Sap Green, I begin to block in some of the
greens and browns that give a suggestion of
the tonal range and placement of colour.
The large flat brush is used vigorously,
scrubbing marks onto the panel.

Top tip
Create the impression
of sunlit branches
by scratching
them out with a
palette knife

52 Masterclass.indd 54 07/04/2017 10:25

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