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Grisaille Painting, Part 5, Real Time

Working on finishing a portrait painting can be one fo the most difficult challenges you can face as a painter. The struggle is real! Trying to attain a great likeness of the model while keeping your colours and values fresh are just a few of the challenges that are “up in the air.” In this lesson I focus on teaching you about simple and actionable goals for this final painting session. In my experience this is the best way to help you stay focused and moving forward. 

1. Let’s talk about blending and how much if it is okay to do. This is often a misunderstood practice in painting and during this session we are going to make a good use of it.

2. This is the final moment to bring a sense of balance and harmony to the elements in your painting. In order to do this the details in the focal areas have to be crisp enough to draw the viewers attention. In this lesson I will show you how I approach the application of the final touches to the features of the face.

Grisaille Painting, Part 5, Real Time

Comments

Hi Daniel- the difference is one of a "by the book" application of a process vs. an expedient one. Also the grisaille process shows the integration of a background and therefor a more complete visual impression. As for preference- it varies. I think that grisaille to color painting is a tool primarily for students these days, but really that depends on the time that you have to complete your painting.

Stephen Bauman Artwork

Hello Stephen. What in your mind is the primary difference between this painting here(a fully developed Grisaille Painting plus the Colorafter that) vs. say the Limited Palette Portrait you did as a tutorial before (of Sasha, doing a drawing, then a Raw umber/white Underpainting, then full color, which was done at the end of 2019, as I checked)? Both of these paintings do have underpaintings (this one a more developed grisaille for sure, but the Limited Palette tutorial one also had an under painting), so it perhaps is not only about that. Of course, this portrait in grisaille (then color) does take many many more hours than the Sasha Limited Palette one to complete, even though both paintings go through an underpainting stage. So is it just time then as the difference (which consequently allows for more careful modeling of form, for sure), or is there something else in your mind? For instance, perhaps you are thinking more in a “Direct Manner” (despite there being an under painting)for the earlier tutorial, and more in an “Indirect Manner” for this painting? Lastly, in your normal studio practice, which of the two do you yourself prefer? (perhaps it depends on the project at hand?) Thanks, Daniel

Daniel Morris

Oh yes, great product range. And Jacksons sells them in the UK. Perfect. Thanks

Ted Townsend


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