Once of the upsides of the failed attempt to paint this on aquaboard is that I knew of one major pitfall in this piece - it wasn't very smart of me to have Uldor's sword and Maglor's spear convene in a space that was cluttered with horse and saddle and leg. If I hadn't abandoned the last attempt, I already knew I'd have run into huge readability problems there. Redoing the piece allowed me to work with that. (Of course, it might have been smart to just de-clutter the middle, and yeah, that's what good artists do thumbnails for), but that's one of the things I find hardest to change - to have an image where the dynamics and the poses fit, where I managed to avoid tangents, but then to move elements around to have empty spaces where I want them.
It is possible to de-clutter areas with colour and values, and I went about that here, muddying the horse, saddle and Maglor's leg in earth-tones so that Uldor's sword will stand out in paler steel blues.
I'm still listening to the audiobook of "No Man's Land" by Simon Tolkien (yes, the grandson) while painting, and I have to confess it's weird to listen to the German soldiers being called "the Huns", while painting Easterlings who were probably modelled on Mongols, and end up on the same evil side of the conflict from a British point of view - and then I remember that my grandfather was one of those Huns at Verdun. I never met him; he died a few years before I was born. Sometimes it feels as if this war is so incredibly far removed, and yet it's only two generations from where I am...
Meanwhile, welcome to four new Patrons - Yolante, Cat, Caitlin, and Roxanne!
Jenny Dolfen
2019-03-06 06:49:46 +0000 UTC"Blade" McMicking, D.I.
2019-03-05 22:43:56 +0000 UTCJenny Dolfen
2019-03-05 20:43:08 +0000 UTCLitsen
2019-03-05 19:57:25 +0000 UTC