Very interesting link

Singer Sargent

This week on Facebook I came across a very interesting blog. A number of painters was asked for their palette and what medium they use. Complemented by a number of palettes of already deceased painter this website gives a very interesting insight into the kitchens of these painters:

Paul Cezanne, Gideon Bok, David Campbell, Lin Chen, Christopher Chippendale,Susanna Coffey, Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot, Lois Dodd, John Dubrow, Robert Dukes, Emily Eveleth, Janet Fish, Israel Hershberg, Diana Horowitz, Alex Kanevsky, Catherine Kehoe, David Kelley, Tim Kennedy, Ken Kewley, Susan Lichtman, Dik F. Liu, Sangram Majumdar, Nancy McCarthy, George Nick, Richard Raiselis, Harold Reddicliffe, Joseph Ryan, John Singer Sargent, Maggie Siner, Peter Van Dyck, Susan Jane Walp.

Check out this link

John Singer Sargent:. An Artist in his Studio
John Singer Sargent:. An Artist in his Studio

San Anton´s bonfires

Fiestas de San Anton Chelva
San anton
Bonfires in the narrow streets of Chelva

San Anton: This weekend people in Chelva make big bonfires, to celebrate the feast of San Anton. The village also hosts an international oral storytelling festival: Cuentanton.  Fantasy weaves around our homes.  Imagine you are walking behind a magician through the narrow mediaeval streets. Suddenly, the group stops at a small square. Somewhere a window opens and a narrator starts telling a beautiful tale. The window closes, the procession continues then halts again as another window opens for a new story. It is completely enchanting.

Afterwards people return to their own bonfire. (More than two hundred fires will burn in the village).  Then grills emerge and local sausages are roasted on the fires. Wine flows freely. But beware, not too much because at midnight the old tradition of empujon begins where young and not so young clogg the narrow streets with their bodies, gently pushing and jostling as shouting and laughing compete with folksongs.

On Sunday morning, domestic animals are blessed by the priest and you see a procession of  horses and donkeys, cats and dogs, canaries and turtles, goldfish and hamsters and more go by. San Anton is one of Chelva´s traditional fiestas that I like the most!

Preparing our bonfire
Preparing our bonfire
The " Crew"
The ” Crew”
Our bonfireour in full splendor
Our bonfire in full splendor.

 

About composition

about composition

Portrait painting and composition.

For a long time the doctrine of composition was inaccessible to me; I could not understand how it worked.  So, because of my allergy to all kinds of theories, I ignored it. However, some years ago I engaged again with the subject and discovered that maybe it was not so complicated.  This was when I learned there are a number of basic design systems.

I am going to share two of these approaches to composition with you.

The rule of thirds.

Divide the two sides of the rectangle into three equal parts. The “hotspots” lie on the intersection lines.  Make sure that your point of focus is located at one of those four points.

rule of thirds

The armature of the rectangle. The formal subdivision.

Start with two diagonals and connect all points as show in the example. This armature provides the limits of the composition. Within these limits the composition can be varied. But where and how?formal subdivision

composition

Look what I did with this portrait. I started the photography, at the client’s home, without having any idea of the composition. As always, I found my way while taking photographs. Later, when I made the sketch, I explored if I could capture the whole image in the armature of the rectangle. (In this case, the client wanted a square painting, but the theory is similar ) I added the emphasis on the right to strengthen the horizontal effect which starts at the model´s  arms. As simple as that is.  I liked the rhythm of the upper arms and also the left hand that follows one of the composition lines. The whole figure fits more or less in the triangle outline, from the top centre to the baseline.

Composition is an essential element in painting, and on the internet you can find an endless list of websites. The risk, however, is that you become dizzy with choice. Take what you like and forget the rest!