Friday, November 30, 2018

Original Oil Painting Yellow Roses with Delphiniums


Yellow Roses with Delphiniums

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16" x  20"
Painted on Ampersand Gessobord

This is one of the paintings I made for my online course with Elizabeth Robbins. I used her photograph to paint from that is shown below. I hope to post a better photo of my painting above after it is varnished. The table top and blue blossoms are darker and have more hue in them. I will photograph it on a sunny day.  



This is her painting she did for us as a demonstration. She painted it in two hours roughly. Of course my painting took about 8 hours. 



Here are some of my in process photos posted below.

The first step was to block in the shapes I see without thinking about what they represent. Basically just think of them as abstract shapes.


Next I worked on the background and table which will help me get the values right in the roses. I noticed right away they where way to light.



Now I start on the large left rose. Adding more detail and contrast. Unfortunately I became very frustrated and moved on to the other roses. I found out using a little less detail and more soft edges made the rose look like real roses. I knew all the roses will need more work but I needed to take a break so I worked the glass vase. What fun!


The next day I revisited the roses adding less contrast in the left rose and finishing the vase and table scraps.


Checking the highlights and adding new paint to freshen them up if needed. I also decided the background hue was to saturated and too gold. I spent an hour working on just that. I hate it when I get the background wrong but I am much happens with the less saturated darker hue. I used a transparent oxide red, olive green and gray violet to wash over the background colors.



Well I thought I was done. I photographed it, loaded it on the computer and stopped. I could not take my eyes off the glass reflection. When my eyes settle on a spot and stop moving I know I got a problem. The reflection is competing with the flowers. I need to calm it down so you do not notice it as much as the flowers.

This is my finished painting below. The table hue is much like the photo above but the day light was getting darker and the colors look washed out in this photo.