interiorview,creatinga subgenreof
theirveryown.
If westarttothinkofthewindowas
oursubjectinthisway,it opensup
possibilitiesforinteriorandstilllife
setups.Perhapsyoumightwantto
includethewindowframeorpartofit,
stillgivingprominencetothescene
outside.Thenextstepis thefuzzy
boundarybetweeninteriorandstilllife
painting,asweexpandourframeto
includepartoftheroomsurrounding
thewindow.Unlikelandscapes,you
havecontrolovertheinterioraspect
ofthecomposition,soyoumaywant
toarrangepropsorsubjectsthat
harmonisewiththesceneoutside.
Returningtotheever-changing
natureofwindowviews,don’tfeel
restrictedtopaintinginthemiddleof
theday.Muchvarietycancomefrom
dawnordusk,differentweather
conditions,orevenworkingatnight.I
madeanink-and-washdrawingfroma
windowatnightthatprovidedan
interestingchallengeintonaldrawing.
Asa subject,theviewfroma window
canberevisitedrepeatedlytoo.We
canlookstraightthroughit ortreatit
asa keypartofaninterior,andwe
canexploretheviewatdifferenttimes.
I hopethishasgivenyousome
ideastoconsiderwhileyougazeout
ofyourwindowathome.I’dliketoend
witha fewtipsandtricksthatI’ve
pickeduptohelpyoualongtheway:
- If youaretacklinga largerscene,
it is a goodideatofirstidentifythe
biggest object and place it in your
picture. This can help you judge the
scale of all other elements against
that, and also means your picture is
less likely to spill off the page.
- Rough out the contents of the
rest of the scene early on. Even if you
justdrawlooserectanglesfor
buildingsandblobsfortrees,youcan
quicklyarrangesubjectsina busy
scene.Thatsaid,don’tbeafraidto
adjustthemasthepictureprogresses. - Savethedetailsuntillast.Adding
themis alwaysa temptationwhenour
eyesfocusonsomethingandwe
struggletopullaway.Keepthinking
“bigtosmall”– startwithlarger
elementsandprogresstothe
smallerones. - Likewise,it canalsohelptowork
neartofar– thinkofit asif youare
drawingintothepage.Subjects
closesttoyouwillobscurepartsof
moredistantones,soobserving
theseoverlapscanadda greater
senseofdepth.
http://www.lancelotrichardson.com
ABOVE Adolph
Menzel, View
from a Window in
Marienstrasse,
1867, gouache and
chalk on paper,
23x29.5cm
TOP RIGHT Lancelot
Richardson,
Cloudscape Study,
watercolour on
paper, 21 x14.8cm
KUNST MUSEUM WINTERTHUR, OSKAR REINHART FOUNDATION