Monday, March 19, 2012

My first painting

(Brendan)

I recently completed my first painting, a gift for my sister and her new husband as a wedding present from both Molly and I. Unfortunately, I wasn't able to start the painting until after their wedding (which was in November of last year), and so this is a rather belated wedding present. Better late than never!

I've been slowing teaching myself classical methods of drawing for quite a while now, always with the intent of painting at some point. Original artwork is expensive, and I've always wanted to have a house filled with beautiful art and so I figured I'd have to do it myself. After all that time drawing (see some previous projects here) I was finally ready to take a crack at painting, and the fact it was a gift was great motivation to get it completed.

In 19th century French art schools, after a long time of learning to draw, the first painting was done strictly in black and white in order to allow the opportunity to adjust to the new medium of oil paint and restrict mixing of color only to gradations of gray. Subsequent paintings would start introducing colors, which is yet another complex skill to master over time. Given all that, my first painting was limited to black and white, and I used the sight-size method as I did in my previous charcoal drawing of a statue of Mary.

I purchased a statue off of Craig's List for a very good price in order to use it as the center piece of the painting. The statue I purchased happened to be a reproduction bust of Apollo, which is the head of a famous and much larger full-body statue, Apollo Belvedere, from ancient Greece. Typically a white statue is used so that shadows are easier to denote, and a statue is a good way of painting from life without worrying about the subject moving :-)

Here are some photos of the painting process from sart to finish. Unfortunately, the best camera I have right now is the camera on my phone, so the pictures don't allow a great comparison between the set-up and the painting (the camera can't adjust to the light on the statue). Oh well, you'll get the idea.

(Click any pic to enlarge)

Image
The very ad hoc set-up in our storage room.

Image
The viewpoint for comparison between set-up and painting.

Image
The beginning of the charcoal under-drawing. Initial gridlines placed based on major landmarks.

Image
The block-in.

Image
The outline.

Image
The completed charcoal under -drawing, showing the major shapes and shadow areas.

Image
Closer view of the under-drawing.

Image
My first-ever brushstrokes, the beginning of the under-painting, which is meant to map out the large gradations (or "values") with thinned-out paint.

Image
The completed under-painting.

Image
Closer view of the under-painting.

Image
The beginning of the final painting. You can see the much more opaque paint in the  shadow of the statue.

Image
The background and cloth below the statue is completed.

Image
Finished with the most tedious part, the hair.

Image
Closer view of the hair.

Image
Completion of the face and the sash.

Image
The completed painting.

Image
Closer view of the completed painting.

Image'

Image
The framed painting.

Image
Bust of Apollo Belvedere
Oil on canvas
24"x18"

Image
My sister and new brother-in-law with the gift, a relief to finally have it in their hands (meaning it miraculously escaped damage by our crowd of rollicking children :-)  This was a special gift from Molly as well, she donated a lot of our time together so that I could get this done in the evenings.