painting Lake Louise and the Rocky Mountains....
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"I
often travel to the Rocky Mountains and have been inspired by the endless
vistas these majestic mountains have to offer. Lake Louise is easily
accessible being only about an hours drive outside of Calgary, Alberta..
The summer views of Lake
Louise seem to offer the most colorful time of the year - contrasting
the glistening white snow fields with the varying shades of browns and
greens in the valley below. This canvas is 24" x 36" and I
have started with a rough sketch of the mountains and snow fields and
have indicated some reflections in the lake below. I have also laid
in some of the base for the areas of blue sky that will appear through
the clouds."
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| "I
work from the top to the bottom and from left to right on all my canvases.
The stretched canvas is laid on the edge of a large table in my studio
and I work sitting down with the canvas tilted on the edge of the table
and the bottom edge usually resting on my knee. In this position I can
steady my hand by actually resting it on the canvas. My hand does not
(usually) get into the paint because I am working top to bottom and left
to right. The under lying drawing does tend to get smeared a bit but using
a fairly hard graphite pencil tends to keep the canvas relatively clean.
The image to the right
shows how I have started to lay in the clouds after extending the area
of blue sky." |
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"The
blending techniques I use are done only with the knife. It involves
a scraping motion with the edge of the knife and you can see from the
transition of the picture to the right and the next image below that
the clouds have softened and are starting to take on a more puffy look.
There is not a lot of paint on the canvas in fact I have taken some
paint off the canvas that was applied in the initial laying in of the
clouds. The 'scraping off' of the paint leaves more of a stained effect
and the result is a softened look."
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"A
close comparison of the clouds to the right and those in the previous
image reveal how to the edges have been blended out giving the clouds
a more transparent edge. The blue area of open sky has had the blue
intensified to heighten the contrast of the billowing clouds against
the open sky"
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"It
is often hard to feel where your painting is going when you have only
worked on a relatively small area. One
of the more difficult things for many artists, is to learn how to see
the overal canvas and visualize the direction you want your painting
to take. I try to look at the canvas in an unfocused way from time to
time while I am working (seeing the image but not really focusing on
the surface of the canvas nor on any one spot. This approach helps me
get a feel for how things are coming together. If something is not quite
right it tends to jump out and the eye will focus automatically on that
spot."
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knife techniques -
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