'Simple Beauty' 5x7 pastel ©Karen Margulis click here to purchase $75 |
I needed to do a quick painting. I was testing a new technique. More on this tomorrow. I am in the middle of packing supplies for two workshops. I didn't really have time for a larger more involved painting. So I turned to one of my favorite ways to start a pastel painting. It is quick and it is easy. Enjoy the demo photos and commentary!
I begin on a piece of toned Uart paper 500 grit. I am working small, 5x7. I do a quick sketch with a piece of dark blue Nupastel.
Normally I take a few minutes to choose my palette. This time I decided to use a tray of pastels that I had used for a larger painting last week. I had not yet put them away and they looked like they would work for my subject.
I begin by blocking in all of the dark shapes with a dark blue Nupastel #305
Next, I block in all of the light shapes. In this case that would be the sky. I use a pale peach.
Next I block in the area of the most intense color. This would be the bright section f golden marsh grass.
The next step is to fill in the rest of the paper with a medium value color. I chose a burnt orange to give some warmth to my Autumn marsh.
At this point I have blocked in the entire painting with the extremes. I know what will be dark, light , middle value and intense color. I develop the tree first with some cool greens in the shadows and warm greens in the sunlit side.
Next I develop the sky with a few light pastels....I use blues and peaches and creams. It is hard to see in this photo. I use the cream to make a few sky holes in the tree.
I decide to spray the foreground with some workable fixative so I can get a little texture. I want to suggest the scrub grasses and bushes with just a few strokes. Now it is really dark!
In this photo you can see where I am placing some lighter greens and peaches over the darkened foreground. I added some layers to the distant golden grasses including reinforcing the intense gold of the underpainting. I also add light to the tree with some warm yellow greens and oranges.
As usual I forget to take a photo as I am finishing the foreground. It was just a matter of adding a few grasses and some marks to indicate blooming weeds. I thought I was finished so I signed the painting. I put it in a frame to evaluate it and felt that the tree holes were to regular and the foreground needed a few more spices. I put it back on the easel for those final marks and then I was done!
Love seeing how you work. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteKaren, thanks so much for easy to follow demos. I am new to pastels and have a quick question about cutting paper size. Do you cut it exactly 5x7 or leave a little extra for framing? Thanks. Jan
ReplyDeleteGreat demo! Loved the way this went so fast and how beautifully detailed it is. Such a sense of depth and space in a very small format. Great textures in the foreground and the tree!
ReplyDeleteCool to use the same palette again before putting the pastels away. That really worked!
Hello Karen!
ReplyDeleteI am learning so much from your demos, which are you so generous to share! I love your video demos too.
Thankyou, Tracy