Painting Large, Part 2

In this phase of the painting, I'm covering most of the red canvas in the background trees.

In this phase of the painting, I’m covering most of the red canvas in the background trees.

Continuing my work on this large painting, I have used wide brush strokes and bold colors in the foreground and left quite a bit of the red canvas.  As I work back toward the trees in the distance, I’m doing more mixing to lessen the intensity of colors and covering most of the red.

Although I exaggerate colors, I want to keep the light and dark pattern of the small study.   I use my camera on the black and white setting to check the values.  Notice that the red of the canvas is a middle value.  Once I establish the lights and darks at the beginning, I can cover the red with middle values of blue and green without changing the value structure.

Making a black and white photograph helps to see the value structure.

Making a black and white photograph helps to see the value structure.

I have found that painting larger pieces in oils has made me work more slowly and deliberately. Of course, more paint is required and mixing takes longer.  I have to think more about the size and direction of the brush strokes even in areas that may have been solid shapes on a smaller scale.  The challenge is to keep the freshness of the small study while making any needed improvements.

 

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