The Artist_s Magazine 2016-03__

(avery) #1

54 http://www.artistsmagazine.com


I


AM A FAST PAINTER; I don’t paint with a


slow build-up over many painting sessions.


So am I or am I not an alla prima painter?


h at’s a good question! When working on


large studio oils, I can start painting at 10 a.m.


and by 4 or 5 p.m., many of the paintings are


i nished, but some are not.


At times I like to get a bit more, if I can,


from my alla prima paintings without chang-


ing the theme of the painting or losing any


of the vitality and energy from the initial


session. If there is anything to modify by


glazing or subtly pushing or pulling parts of


the painting here and there to obtain more


atmosphere, I don’t want to have to wait until


the surface dries.


What follows here is a system for keep-


ing the verve of the alla prima impulse while


adjusting to the practicalities and limitations


imposed by time. Important to my method is


giving the painting I’ve started a thin coat of


Winsor & Newton Liquin in order to rewet


the dried surface and bring all the colors back


to the same gloss level. h is allows me to pro-


ceed thoughtfully (rather that rashly) until I


can get a bit more resolution and feel happier


about my alla prima painting. So, if I’ve modi-


i ed what I’ve painted after a i rst, fast session,


am I still an alla prima painter? You decide.


(See Every Stage Is Beautiful, below.)


In Praise of Plein Air


Many landscape painters extol the virtues of


working en plein air. I strongly believe that


if you’re going to paint trees, you should do


what you can on location, but I often create


large studio paintings. h ere’s nothing like


studying and drawing trees in their actual


BELOW: Every

Stage Is Beautiful

(oil on linen, 18x24),

an alla prima paint-

ing, is an extreme

example of my

letting the transpar-

ent underpainting

remain visible. If I’d

thought I could have

added anything

to this painting to

enhance the sub-

ject—the decaying

tree—I’d have done

so. Viewers might

consider the work

beautiful as is—or

simply unfi nished.
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