Sunday 25 February 2018

Black Tutu

Ballet dancer in black tutu, watercolour
Before each painting, I try to visualise the finished picture and plan the light and dark areas. This is the time to decide which parts of the picture should be a focal point.

At first, I thought it should be the black tutu, but then decided on the dancer's head and arms.  That is why I chose a dark background, painting it in the same colour as the tutu (mainly Teal from Ken Bromley with ultramarine blue and permanent alizarin crimson), but in different tonal values.

Sunday 18 February 2018

Red Umbrella

This is painted from a reference photo taken on my iPhone on a wet day in February. For once I took pictures throughout the painting process to show as a step by step for those who would like to know how to approach such a subject.



I usually start a landscape painting with the sky, taking care to keep the tones light. I used Turner Turquoise Blue mixed with burnt sienna for the clouds and washed over the light walls with raw sienna.




For the next step, I don't have a usual approach but start with the shape that stands out to me, in this case the dome of the building. I painted this darker tone with cobalt blue and permanent alizarin crimson. The shadow sides of the buildings are a mix of turquoise blue mixed with raw sienna and burnt sienna to give a grey. The small roof is pure turquoise blue.



I started to lay in some darker washes for the buildings (Teal from Ken Bromley mixed with ultramarine blue and alizarin crimson) and painted the couple with the red umbrella (alizarin crimson), which was one of my focal points.


For the reflections on the ground, I wetted the paper to create a diffuse effect.



The crowd of people in the distance provides further dark tones (cobalt and ultramarine blues mixed with burnt sienna and alizarin crimson)  to contrast with the lighter ground.



At this point, I decided that the church in the background needed to be knocked back, so I lifted some colour off with clear water. The finishing touch was the lamp post on the right, painted with teal, ultramarine blue and alizarin crimson. I like to include some street furniture, as they make interesting stopping points in an urban painting.


People sometimes ask me how long my paintings take; this one was painted over three days and took mainly that long because the washes took some time to dry.

Thursday 15 February 2018

Three Ballet Paintings in Watercolour







Painting dancers is always a great opportunity to practise drawing the figure.  I love the beautiful lines dancers make. Tutus also create fantastic shapes, and they are a linking device in the first painting.

I found the red tutus easier to paint because I could create them with brushstrokes, rather than having to paint around them, as in the other two paintings. In pure watercolour, white can only be achieved by painting the negative shapes.

Monday 5 February 2018

Bridge House

Bridge House, Watercolour

I have been meaning to paint this old local house for a while. I loved how the sun lit up its white facade and took a photo to paint from later.

The bridge the house is named after is not visible from this angle, but it spans a canal which runs between the white house and the dark building behind it.