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Showing posts with label imprimatura. Show all posts
Showing posts with label imprimatura. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Indirect Painting or Flemish Technique: Step 1 - Imprimatura (cont.)



Indirection Painting or the Flemish technique can be broken down into five steps:
  1. Imprimatura or Ground 
  2. Underdrawing 
  3. Underpainting / Dead Color 
    • Brunaille 
    • Verdaccio 
    • Grisaille 
  4. Overpainting 
  5. Semi-Transparent Glazes
It is important to note that throughout time each artist or academy had slightly different approaches to the style, but the basic stages were the same. Today I will be covering Step 1: The Imprimatura. (I have already written about the imprimatura, which you can read here. If you have not read that post, I recommend reading it. There will be overlap between the two, but somethings are different.)

Why the Imprimatura? 

The imprimatura, or "first paint layer," is the initial stain of color painted over the blank ground of your support. This is usually done before a sketch is laid down. Using an imprimatura is as common in oil painting as white paper is in watercolor. The imprimatura can help create a unified color harmony throughout the colors painted on top of it and reduce the time and effort needed to arrive at a certain value range. If, while painting, you ever stand back and feel that your colors don't quite "match," try starting your work with an imprimatura. This can help create balance and unity.


Colored Imprimaturas 




Traditionally the imprimatura was almost always moderate in intensity and value, and tended to rely on the low cost and quick dry qualities of earth pigments. Below is a list, from the Complete Oil Painter by Brian Gorst, of colors commonly used for imprimaturas. Where I can, I have included links to examples of each color being used in the description.    


1. Gray: The main function of gray is to remove the glaring whiteness of the original ground. A light-toned gray is the multi-purpose imprimatura and is useful for all genres. It also allows flexibility when your color scheme is still undecided. It was sometimes used by artists such as Monet

2. Terre Verte: This earth green was often used under areas of flesh by Byzantine and Medieval painters, such as Duccio, of the 13th and 14th centuries, but had continued use even past Michelangelo. The green helps neutralize the effects of strong pinks and reds, allowing for a natural skin color. 

3. Earth Red/Burnt Sienna: Used by landscape artists to give breath to green foliage, it also creates a mauve hue when sky and clouds are painted over it. This effect can be seen in works by Turner. These colors are also used by figure and portrait painters to help establish warm shadow masses, and was often used in the French figurative tradition by artists ranging from Poussin to Degas

4. Dark Brown or "bole:" A bole ground is usually an opaque mixture of Earth or Mars Red, black, and a small amount of Yellow Ochre. Still used today by traditional portrait and figure painters, a bole background came into style by artists such as Caravaggio and the young Velazquez.   

5. Yellow Ocher/Raw Sienna: These earth yellows provide a rich, warm imprimatura which maintains a sense of luminosity. Used by landscape and portrait painters to give a work a warm, golden undertone. You can see this used in works by Rubens.

6. Burnt Umber/Raw Umber: Both are cheap, quick-drying, and semi-transparent, making them ideal for a thin imprimatura. These colors were used by artists such as da Vinci and Van Eyck.  

7. Light Blue: Sometimes preferred by alla prima painters as a luminous base, using a blue imprimatura allows for water, skies, and atmospheric effects to be developed quickly. I have no idea who starts out with blue. 

8. White: A plain white imprimatura is the most luminous imprimatura for glazing. The drawback is that it makes opaque paint appear darker by contrast. The white ground was first consistently used by Manet, and then later by artists such as Seurat and Derain

Looking back through art history's use of imprimaturas can help you decide on the look and feel you would like to have in your own paintings, and is always the first step in copying a master's work. 

Monet vs Manet 

Looking at the top image of this post you will see two paintings by famous artists, Monet and Manet.

Manet was known for using white as his imprimatura, and this is exactly one of the reasons why the French Salon rejected his work. A white imprimatura can be difficult to work with when you do not understand how it can affect your color palette.

Using a white imprimatura should be done with purpose, as Manet did. You can see in Manet's Luncheon on the Grass how the white creates an unbalanced color harmony. The darks become too dark and lights too light against the white background. The blues and green seem to stand apart verses meld together and the yellows don't quite work wth their surrounding browns.

Manet did this on purpose. If this is also your purpose, run with the white, but be careful and aware that sometimes it just doesn't work out.



Monet on the other hand almost always used a colored imprimatura. While he did occasionally use white, you will usually see light blue (left), gray (middle), or yellow (right) coming through his works. His use of the imprimatura is a perfect example of how the correct imprimatura can help brightly painted, multi-colored works maintain a balanced color harmony.













Friday, August 28, 2015

Colored Grounds / Imprimatura: What is It, What Colors to Use, and Who Used Them...




Before we get too deeply into the characteristics of Direct and Indirect painting, I would like to first talk about something they both utilize: colored grounds. By which I mean the initial tonal coloring of your canvas before any other work starts.

There are several different colored grounds that have been used throughout art history in order to create a specific feel or look. Before we get into those colors, I will first cover some terms, what the color of your palette can mean, and why we use grounds.

Terms 

"Ground" is actually not the correct technical term. A ground or sizing is what covers the raw canvas or board to protect it from the oil paint. Things like rabbit glue and gesso are grounds. The imprimatura, or "first paint layer," is the initial stain of color painted over the ground.

Throughout the internet these terms are confused. Most people think the imprimatura is the underpainting, which it isn't, so from here on out I will be calling our colored grounds by their proper name, the imprimatura.

Matching your Painting Palette 

The color of your imprimatura should match the color of your palette, as you can see in the above photo. This is so that the color you are mixing on your palette appears as the same color when applied to your canvas. Otherwise you can get very frustrated when mixing what appears to be the "right" color, only to find that it looks different up on the canvas.

Allow me to give an example: an artist who has a natural wood palette and paints directly onto a white canvas may run into a color-mixing problem. When making colors on his palette, the color his eye sees is influenced by the color of the palette. When he takes that paint and puts it onto a white canvas the color will appear to be different because now it is being influenced by the pure white of the canvas verses the tan color of the wood.


Glass palettes can allow you to have more freedom with your imprimatura by simply placing different colored pieces of paper under your palette. That being said, this is a rule that lots of artist break. Me included. 

Why the Imprimatura? 

Using an imprimatura is as common in oil painting as white paper is in watercolor. The imprimatura can help create a unified color harmony throughout the colors painted on top of it and reduce the time and effort needed to arrive at a certain value range. If, while painting, you ever stand back and feel that your colors don't quite "match," try starting your work with an imprimatura to help create balance and unity. 

Colored Imprimaturas 




Traditionally the imprimatura was almost always moderate in intensity and value, and tended to rely on the low cost and quick dry qualities of earth pigments. Below is a list, from the Complete Oil Painter by Brian Gorst, of colors commonly used for imprimaturas. Where I can, I have included links to examples of each color being used in the description.    


1. Gray: The main function of gray is to remove the glaring whiteness of the original ground. A light-toned gray is the multi-purpose imprimatura and is useful for all genres. It also allows flexibility when your color scheme is still undecided. It was sometimes used by artists such as Monet

2. Terre Verte: This earth green was often used under areas of flesh by Byzantine and Medieval painters, such as Duccio, of the 13th and 14th centuries, but had continued use even past Michelangelo. The green helps neutralize the effects of strong pinks and reds, allowing for a natural skin color. 

3. Earth Red/Burnt Sienna: Used by landscape artists to give breath to green foliage, it also creates a mauve hue when sky and clouds are painted over it. This effect can be seen in works by Turner. These colors are also used by figure and portrait painters to help establish warm shadow masses, and was often used in the French figurative tradition by artists ranging from Poussin to Degas

4. Dark Brown or "bole:" A bole ground is usually an opaque mixture of Earth or Mars Red, black, and a small amount of Yellow Ochre. Still used today by traditional portrait and figure painters, a bole background came into style by artists such as Caravaggio and the young Velazquez.   

5. Yellow Ocher/Raw Sienna: These earth yellows provide a rich, warm imprimatura which maintains a sense of luminosity. Used by landscape and portrait painters to give a work a warm, golden undertone. You can see this used in works by Rubens.

6. Burnt Umber/Raw Umber: Both are cheap, quick drying, and semi-transparent, making them ideal for a thin imprimatura. These colors were used by artists such as da Vinci and Van Eyck.  

7. Light Blue: Sometimes preferred by alla prima painters as a luminous base, using a blue imprimatura allows for water, skies, and atmospheric effects to be developed quickly. I have no idea who starts out with blue. 

8. White: A plain white imprimatura is the most luminous imprimatura for glazing. The drawback is that it makes opaque paint appear darker by contrast. The white ground was first consistently used by Manet, and then later by artists such as Seurat and Derain

Looking back through art history's use of imprimaturas can help you decide on the look and feel you would like to have in your own paintings, and is always the first step in coping a master's work. 

For more about painting check out my main Tips and Techniques page. 

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Direct vs Indirect vs Combination Painting: Differences, Terms, and Artists

Understanding the strict difference between Direct or Indirect Painting will help you create your own painting method and style. Here we will be covering the terms, along with a few examples of those who used the different methods. Each method will be covered in more detail in their own, individual posts.

Direct Painting 


Sargent, Self-Portrait (detail), 1907     Monet, Woman with Parasol, 1875                    Vincent Van Gogh, Room at Arles, 1889 

The Direct Painting Method is referred to by many names: Alla Prima, En Plein Air, Wet-on-Wet, Impressionistic/Impasto, etc.

The basic idea is that a true Direct Painting is finished while all layers are still wet. This can be done in one session or several, as long as the different layers are worked into wet, versus on top of dried layers. Direct painters who paint over several sessions prefer their paint to remain wet for several days in order to work as long as possible. Two mediums that allow for such a length of time are poppyseed and safflower oil.

The Daily Painting movement are artists learning to be strict direct painters. Direct painters tend to have more spontaneous, colorful, and effortless (looking) works. If you are an artist who would like to have more color and freedom in your works, I highly recommend checking out Carol Marine's blog, as well as her book, Daily Painting: Paint Small and Often in order to become a more Creative, Productive, and Successful Artist.

Below is a short video from the Web Art Academy talking about Direct Painting, as well as a great demo by David Kassan.




Indirect Painting 













Raphael, Madonna of the Meadow, c. 1506    Titian,  Bacchus and Ariadne, 1520-1523          Poussin, Et in Arcadia Ego, late 1630s

Indirect Painting is done in stages or layers, with each previous stage dried before continuing.

The basic stages to Indirect Painting are:
  1. Imprimatura or Ground 
  2. Underdrawing 
  3. Underpainting / Dead Color  
    • Brunaille 
    • Verdaccio 
    • Grisaille 
  4. Overpainting 
  5. Semi-Transparent Glazes
This is the "classic" method to oil painting, also called the Flemish Technique. Name any Northern or Southern Renaissance or Baroque painter and this is the way they painted. 

Note: You will sometimes see people refer to the "Seven Steps of the Flemish Technique," they just break my own steps 4 and 5 into two additional steps. 

Combination Painting 

To be fair, most artist are a combination of the two. Sargent was one artist who would paint the majority of his work directly, allow it to dry and then do final color-correcting glazes over the top. Some other famous artists who used both methods were Rubens, Frans Hals, and Rembrandt.


Again, each method will be covered in greater detail in separate posts. For more about painting check out my main Tips and Techniques page.