I'll be teaching at the studio of artist Julie Friedman, in Morristown, NJ. March 17th. & 18th., 2012. More info to follow.
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Thursday, December 29, 2011
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Progress
Detail
Charcoal, Conte and White Chalk
@ 8" x 12"
Casey Klahn
Okay. I fixed the eye placement and the lip. It is fascinating how once good abilities can evade me after too many years out of practice. Figures and heads require lots of practice, and then there's the art part, too.
This is done on newsprint.
Monday, December 26, 2011
Detail of a Head
Detail
Charcoal, Conte and White Chalk
@ 8" x 12"
Casey Klahn
This drawing was a failed start. But, this detail is nice. I'll try it again tomorrow.
Friday, December 23, 2011
Subjects - A "How To"
This is the second installment on subjects. Originally published a year ago.
Cindy Michaud asked me to follow up on the previous post about what to leave in, and what to leave out. In that post, I wrote about finding your subjects, and gave my examples of the river and the prairie. But, how to find them is the core question.
Would it be obtuse of me to say that your subjects may find you? Here's what I mean. Decide what your best recent works are. Perhaps you have 6 or 10 of them framed that you really feel represent your best work. What are the subjects? You find when painting these given things, such as botanicals or wildlife or city streets, that you do your best work. These are the subjects that sing for you.
Concentrate on these few things that you've identified. Spend your next several studio sessions just painting these things. Right now, for me, it is a river in the forest. Specifically, the Little Hoquiam River, on the coast in Washington state.
Cindy Michaud asked me to follow up on the previous post about what to leave in, and what to leave out. In that post, I wrote about finding your subjects, and gave my examples of the river and the prairie. But, how to find them is the core question.
Would it be obtuse of me to say that your subjects may find you? Here's what I mean. Decide what your best recent works are. Perhaps you have 6 or 10 of them framed that you really feel represent your best work. What are the subjects? You find when painting these given things, such as botanicals or wildlife or city streets, that you do your best work. These are the subjects that sing for you.
Concentrate on these few things that you've identified. Spend your next several studio sessions just painting these things. Right now, for me, it is a river in the forest. Specifically, the Little Hoquiam River, on the coast in Washington state.
Studio Hoquiam River Scenes
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Your Subjects
This post was first published a year ago. It is in two parts, starting with What To Leave In, What To Leave Out.
It was interesting to see a great pastel artist list his focus on a narrow range of subjects in a book I read recently. The book is a dated one by Albert Handell: Pastel Painting Workshop. He likes the Southwestern landscape with arroyos and pueblo-style structures. He does trees, rock boulders and waterways. In his figurative work, he likes vignettes and portraits.
It is good to be aware of what your subject matter is before you go off to the field to paint on site. Why be narrow in subject matter? My own feelings are that you may delve into a subject as deeply as you wish, and may never run out of inspiration. If your goal is to "draw things", then you may wish to pursue every possible subject one after the other. But, if you are wanting to produce paintings with depth and with good technique, then limiting yourself to a handful of subjects will provide you a greater opportunity for depth.
It was interesting to see a great pastel artist list his focus on a narrow range of subjects in a book I read recently. The book is a dated one by Albert Handell: Pastel Painting Workshop. He likes the Southwestern landscape with arroyos and pueblo-style structures. He does trees, rock boulders and waterways. In his figurative work, he likes vignettes and portraits.
Why be narrow in subject matter?
It is good to be aware of what your subject matter is before you go off to the field to paint on site. Why be narrow in subject matter? My own feelings are that you may delve into a subject as deeply as you wish, and may never run out of inspiration. If your goal is to "draw things", then you may wish to pursue every possible subject one after the other. But, if you are wanting to produce paintings with depth and with good technique, then limiting yourself to a handful of subjects will provide you a greater opportunity for depth.
Limiting your subject matter will put you in good company.
Limiting your subject matter will put you in good company. Van Gogh stayed with agricultural landscapes in France that revolved around trees, waterways, fields, buildings and bridges. He did portraits and still lifes, but he stayed with common themes. Degas stayed with interior and theatrical figures, such as orchestras, singers and ballerinas. He did nudes at the bath. He also liked the horse track, and some industrial interiors. Daniel Greene stays with the portrait, but in his figurative work he focuses on painting his wife, artist Wende Caporale, in the New York subway with tile mosaic backgrounds. Of course, he does other works, but his series work is a method of staying focused. Harvey Dinnerstein does self portraits where he is painting bare chested, and Andrew Wyeth stayed on the Helga series for a number of years. His Helga series kept true to his own ouevre of rural interiors and moods.
Limiting my subject matter helps tremendously in finding compositions.
My own oeuvre features trees, forests, rivers and the prairie. Sometimes rural buildings are featured, and rarely do I bring in the sky, horizons or light. It's interesting to think of what I purposefully omit. The horizon is too much landscape - too boilerplate. Light is not much of a part of my environment, especially where I grew up on the Washington coast. The sky is better left alone, unless to add a pushing or pulling event, or to set the color concord.
Some of the content of this post was brought forward from a previous tips post, and updated with new material.
Some of the content of this post was brought forward from a previous tips post, and updated with new material.
Monday, December 19, 2011
Color Rules, as in, "The Roost."
RYB
This article was published at The Colorist, and I want to develop these color ideas here, too. Enjoy:
There has been some call for me to reveal my opinions on the use of color. When I demonstrate in person, students invariably wants to know why I pick each color as I work. This series of posts will be my attempt to draw back the curtain on my ideas about color.
After perhaps six, or maybe ten, of these posts, there will be some organization to what I am saying. For now, I'll just write things down as they occur to me.
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Color choice is a very personal thing. I mean that in both intention and in talent. You have your own color sense, and it is up to you to let it reveal itself. Choose the color you want. WANT!
Kandinsky got it wrong when he assigned meanings to color. That is, I think that the artist's job is to make the patron see his, meaning the artist's, own meanings. One should not pander to perceived ideas of what colors may mean to the viewer.
...umber comes from the earth already umber.
I use the RYB color theory. Red, yellow, and blue. The reason I do is that I am not submitting my artwork to the printing press or the camera, at least not at the conceptual stage. I will become involved in color mixing, and the RYB color space works well for this.
In thinking about color theory, and in spite of the fact that I use the "old school" RYB method, I do think in terms of modern, or contemporary, color. That is to say, we have the fattest color array available today. Raphael would have given his left arm to work with this many colors.
I begin with the hue. More on this later, when I lay out for you my own theories on what is most important in approaching color. By the way, I hope you are arguing with me about these things.
A Color Solid is a fun and useful tool, also. I have seen it used with the Munsell theory, so I just make adjustments in my head to see it my way. Someday I will construct a Color Solid as I see it.
Just because you know that color theory has evolved over time, does not make you "right" in your opinions about color theory. It does reveal that opinions are subjective. I need to focus on what works, and my tools are laid out before me. It is important for the artist to know how to mix a brown he likes, but please also realize that umber comes from the earth already umber.
Homework:
Robert Gamblin has a great video about his Color Space theories. I differ in that I think of each hue as a two-part system named by its color, but not by its temperature. More on that later. I say, "blue-red" and "yellow-red," not cool or warm red.
Friday, December 16, 2011
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
The Hans Hofmann School of Fine Arts
This was posted in the sidebar at The Colorist, but I favor it so much it needs air at Pastel Workshop.
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Artistic Authenticity
"Ignore Everybody,"
Hugh MacLeod.
Technical skill is not critical to being authentic, although it may help to more easily say what you mean with your artwork. More importantly, I value being comfortable with line, composition and color. The formal elements of all artworks can be a huge distraction when a painter doesn't use them with intention and ease.
One obsolete meaning for the word, "authentic," is "authoritative." This is where my focus lies. Having the merit of authority – unimpeachable work. I once lunched with Donald J. Wiseman, the man who excavated ancient Babylon. Here before me was a living textbook footnote, for he was certainly the authority in his field.
Wiseman.
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
New Blog Name: Pastel Workshop
Pastel will now be Pastel Workshop.
Since there is a demand for me to teach workshops, and because I have been doing just that this past year, I have decided to recruit this blog as an information center to provide lessons and data about upcoming workshops. For those who have followed Pastel over the years, I thank you and want you to know that I will still be offering the same content as before, along with improved access to instruction and to my artworks posted here and at The Colorist blog.
Requests for future workshops have been made for Portland, Oregon, Berlin, Germany, Morristown, New Jersey (not far from New York City) and also for eastern Canada. No calendar is yet published, but if you are interested in any of these, please leave a comment here, and I will put you on my mailing list for workshops.
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
The Winter Studio
Sort through old supplies...
Winter backlight, or, It looks like my head is Photoshopped on...
Gray days ahead, but that's what I like!
I was motivated by Maggie Latham's post, Ten Clutter Busting Ideas, to clean up my own act in the studio. First: my desks! They are the worst clutter keepers offending me right now.
If I have any tips for you, I will pass them along next time.
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Riva del Garda
Hotel of the Sun, Garda
@5" x 4"
Pastel
Casey Klahn
I posted this somewhere before, but here is the formal photo.