Showing posts with label Laurie Pace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laurie Pace. Show all posts

Monday, October 28, 2013

Line Shape Form Space Value COLOR... Color is our next element of Art by Texas Artist Laurie Pace

Line Shape Form Space Value Color 


"Colouring does not depend on where the colours are put, but on where the lights and darks are put, and all depends on form and outline, 
on where that is put. " (William Blake)


ThPumpkins began to bloom in the studio and it is now time for color.  Working in Acrylic, which is not the medium of choice for me for still life painting, I plunged ahead with student Lisa eagerly jumping into the challenge.


Both of the above are my pieces.

Remember last week, we began with just values using black and white. Now it is time to begin applying color.  I found it easier with the acrylics to do it layers letting some bleed through from below and you can watch as some change through the process.

This is Lisa at work and her progress with her pumpkins. She will be back tonight for more and we will be gearing up for TEXTURE! ( I really see a lot of texture in her current work.)




Here are my pumpkins as they are sitting right now. Some are finished, some are not. Some I am tempted to jump in with oils!





Hummm... what to do tonight with texture. Lisa and Sheryl are you ready?


Thank you again Rebecca Zook for your inspiration with values into paintings. 
Click here to see Rebecca's incredible work using this process in her paintings.


As surely as I valued your life today, so may the Lord value my life and deliver me from all trouble.”  1 Samuel 26:24  

Monday, October 21, 2013

Value... Elements of Art by Texas Art Teacher Laurie Pace

Line Shape Form Space Value


"Color is an inborn gift, but appreciation of value is merely training of the eye, which everyone ought to be able to acquire. " John Singer Sargent
  




Value, or tone, refers to the use of light and dark, shade and highlight, in an artwork.  One of my favorite painters current day that uses this in many of her pieces as an underpainting before she paints her colors in, is Texas Artist Rebecca Zook. Her work is incredible.  Working in acrylic, she lays in her values before layering the colors on top.  Texas Artist Nancy Medina, sort of does this but with transparent colors creating the forms and backgrounds of what she is painting.  When I took one of her floral workshops we worked with browns and moved forward.  

With this lesson being on values... I want to take Rebecca's challenge of the black and white acrylic painted first and then layering of color...so this week I have examples of two pumpkin paintings because I loved her pumpkin painting and Terry specifically brought me home pumpkins to work from.  Value paintings can indeed be done with any ONE COLOR (blue, green, red, etc) and adding just white or black to make dark values and intermediate values and light values. Following the thought behind Rebecca's work is to stay true to the values using black and white and all in between.  If you can access this link, you can see quite a few of her pieces she just completed using this technique by clicking here.

Okay, so I took off into the studio with two student grade canvas panels, my pumpkins and charcoal.

I find sketching in charcoal allows me freedom to easy change my areas as I sketch them in.

This is the first one with two neighboring pumpkins.


First I painted in the darkest area and the 'atmosphere' around it. I have never tried this, so we are doing it together as a first.   I normally use acrylics to form up backgrounds for my oils.. but I use one color, so painting with a brush feels strange too.


I am wondering if my values are too dark, but I am assuming until I try it I will not know.










This is actually the pumpkin we will carve. It is the tallest of the group we brought home from Whole Foods.  Terry has plans for roasted pumpkin seeds and a fresh pumpkin pie.








I snapped one a bit closer up so you could see some of the light I was trying to capture off the top of the pumpkin.  Rebecca must have so much patience to paint like this!

This is the final on this one but I forgot to finish the leaves I was going to place in the background... using imagination of the pumpkin patch itself.   

Next week I will have color added to this. Perhaps not as beautifully as Rebecca does because I am not an acrylic painter and it definitely is much harder than oils!

So get your brushes out and buy some of those little pumpkins and gourds in different colors. There are some really cool choices out there. Call it painting the gourds and get painting!

"When beginning artists understand and use values for the first time, there is usually a quantum leap in the quality of their painting." Paul deMarrais

Monday, September 19, 2011

Sketch Books are a Must!

Sketches in every Moment for the old and the Young!



Sketching is essential to capturing events and things around you all through the day.  I like to write on my sketches the date and thoughts I had to make me want to sketch away.

My first suggestion to you is to always have a small sketch book in hand.  

I remember when we traveled to New York for the first gallery show of the Five Graces, Conni Togel had her sketch book in hand at all times and in most places.  It was valuable for me to realize that as an artist, it is a tool I need all the time.

You can find them small or mid-sized. The smaller ones will fit in your purse or backpack and not take up much room.






 This is one of my favorites and it is available on Amazon.  It is only 3 x 5 inches in size.

Moleskine Small Sketch Notebook

Technical Details

  • For drawings. 80 pages of fine quality white paper. Imported from Italy. 3" x 5"
  • Purchase in quantity today to best build your Moleskine bookshelf. The future is unwritten. Take up your pen and shape it.
  • Each Moleskine has a rigid, oilcloth bound 'moleskine' cover, and the acid free paper pages are thread bound.
  • They also have an elastic closure and an expandable inner note holder made of cardboard and oilcloth and a removable card with the moleskine history.
  • A great way to get things done! Pocket-sized - junk your PDA!

Friday, May 9, 2008

First Lesson

TAKE A BITE OUT.... Try it you might like it!

MAKING ART

Lesson One The Chocolate Chip Cookie

Recipes are wonderful for the cook in the kitchen. Recipes are wonderful for artists as well.
Beginning artists must first learn though that the ingredients in are are quite a bit different than the ingredients in a regular recipe.

If you buy a cookbook it is filled with recipes from everywhere. Usually with every recipe there is an ingredient list for shopping. When you go to the supermarket you walk in and face literally millions of ingredients that can be used in recipes.

Art is similar but strangely much simpler. There are only seven main ingredients in art.
I usually teach this lesson with Children and we make chocolate chip cookies.


I ask them what goes into making the cookies. They tell me eggs, flour, sugar, salt, butter.... the normal things that are in cookies. I have everything out on the counter, premeasured and ready. We also talk about other recipes, like what might go into Meatloaf, or a cake, or into pancakes. We talk about how different foods have different ingredients and how they all taste different, but use some of the same things in making them; and how they all look different too despite having the same ingredients.

They take turns adding different ingredients and we stir them together watching how they change as they blend.


Then we take turns scooping out the cookie dough onto the pans. Of course every one has one extra spoon to take a bite of the creamy cookie dough.


I slide the cookie sheets into the oven and we begin to talk about art now as they bake.



The finish is milk and cookies for the rest of the lesson.




In art there are only seven ingredients. Unlike the grocery store with all those items stacked ceiling high, art only requires seven main elements. They are line, shape, space, color, texture, form and values. Only seven. Now there are other things that will play into the development of these seven but for the first intro to art, lets just talk about these seven things. In future lessons you will be asked to use these elements. As we progress into other art projects and lessons you will need to be able to identify what elements are in that particular piece of art.

Line

Line is the path of a moving point. Lines define the edges of shapes and forms.

Shape

Shape is an area encolsed by line. It is 2 dimensional and can be geometric or organic.

Form

Forms are three dimensional. They occupy space or give the illusion that they occupy the space.

Color

Color is the most expressive element of art and is seen by the way light reflects off a surface.

Value

Value is the lightness or darkness of a surface. It is often referred to when shading but value is also important in the study of color.

Texture

Texture is the actual surface feel of an area of the simulated appearance of roughness, smoothness or many others.

Space

Space is the illusion of objects having depth on the 2-dimensional surface. Linear and aerial perspective are used.


I will leave you to ponder these seven elements! Look through magazines now and see if you can find examples of Line for our next lesson. Clip out the picture and paste it in your sketch book. We will have our next lesson on "LINE". Have your sketch book ready, markers, pencils, what ever you like to make lines with...charcoal, anything. Just a simple lesson to introduce you to line.

from my heART to you.
Laurie

Supplies: Next lesson have your sketchbook ready with your example of LINE glued into it. Have something to make lines with too.

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