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Thursday, December 13, 2007
Paints for a Desert Island
I want to explore a theme that has been rattling around in the back of my mind for some time. Years ago I listened to a public radio station in New York that had a program called Desert Island Disks. The premise was simple. A guest musician for the weekly program would be asked to select only eight pieces of music to take to a desert island. Which albums would he choose as the only things the guest artist would ever be able to listen to for as long as he lived? Yes, it is a bit overdramatic, but you get the point. Certainly, this exercise is about the choice made, but I find it intriguing to consider the scope of the music that had to be left behind.
What if we were to play this game with paints? Which ones would you take to a desolate location to be the only things you could paint with forever? Let’s limit the palette to 8 colors. That should be generous enough. As a bonus, black and white will not be counted as part of the eight pigments. To put it into modern day practical thinking, the airline taking you to this land without art materials stores is limiting your checked bag volume to 12.5 ounces of paint in tubes that do not exceed 1.25 ounces; hence, 10 tubes of paint. No substituting two other colors for the black and white. In fact, white will be mandatory.
Limited palettes create discipline, and who could not use a bit more discipline in their lives? This exercise makes us think of what is really important about selecting a color. It makes us think about what colors we use as convenience mixtures, and which ones we cannot make by any other means.
Thinking through this strategy from various perspectives, you could select a suitable yellow, red and blue pigment so that you will not have to bring the secondary colors of orange, violet and green. That leaves you with 5 more color choices.
For split primary devotees, the 3 most obvious choices would be the other yellow, red and blue colors to create the warm verses cool separation. For those who do not paint with a split primary palette, the field is wide open.
An artist might start with yellow, red and blue hues that are transparent, followed by 3 opaque primary colors. Since a few of the blue hues we may choose tend to make weak greens, an obvious choice would be to select one secondary green to fortify this side of the palette. The 1 or 2 (if a secondary green is not chosen) remaining open choices, once the first round of decisions is made, require careful consideration.
The color to select beyond the mandatory ones should be unique in their ability to extend the range of the hues that have already been selected. What colors cannot be made from the hues selected thus far? How difficult is it to mix some of the desired hues and select one or two convenience colors to make painting easier? If a maximum range is sought, an artist must become comfortable knowing exactly what colors are attainable with the 6 he first selected. Some artists find that mixing earth tones is a bore so they will supplement their palette with an ochre, umber or sienna. Others find some unique working property of a pigment that allows them to have a tremendous range of hues, using one or two well-planned selections.
In summary, here is the challenge that I would like you to ponder.
Select a palette of 8 colors, with black and white having permanent status, that you would take on a trip that required you to limit your equipment. The environment will vary, so just imagine that all landscape possibilities will be presented for you to paint. Post your replies for all to see: which palette will supply the widest possible range of color mixing solutions, and justify your choices. Let’s see who comes up with the most unique solution. Similarities will abound, but as each artist approaches color mixing in a somewhat unique way, I believe that we can all learn from each other. I will post my choices in a later entry on this blog.
Returning to the musical theme that I started with, selecting 8 colors for your palette is similar to finding a set of audio speakers with the greatest dynamic range. We don’t think of colors in that respect, but this is exactly the goal of this exercise. Find 8 paints that will create the greatest number of colors to suit the demands of any landscape painting.
I feel we are far better at predicting the limits of a color than knowing just how far a pigment will expand to produce a wide array of color combinations. It takes a bit of exploring to see just how much we can “squeeze” out of a color. In landscape painting we rarely exploit the highest chroma achievable with any color, since the natural world is somewhat muted and we mix paint to deliberately dull down colors.
I look forward to seeing your posts. And because you're no doubt in the midst of the holiday rush, I'm going to offer an incentive. The first three artists who post replies will receive a free one year's subscription to
The Artist's Magazine.
Once at least ten replies have been posted, I'll award another free one year's subscription to the most interesting argument for Eight Colors To Take To A Desert Island. So, what are you waiting for?
Palettes
12/13/2007 8:30:50 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Comments [14]
1/5/2008 12:02:47 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Considering the selection of a limited "desert island" palette:
1)Cad Yellow Med, 2)Ultramarine Blue, 3)Aliz Crimson,4) Cad Red Med, 5) Phthalo Green, 6) Naples Yellow, 7) Prussian Blue, 8)Raw Umber. I have little experience with sophisticated color mixing. Currently I have been challenging myself with "limited" palette choices on comparative compositions to experience the differences reflected in the finished and the process to get there. I have miles to go and 100's of painting yet to do. Given where I am today these are my personal preferences.
Donald Keith Montgomery
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dkeithwaveAT NOSPAMaol dot com
1/8/2008 3:28:27 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I'm just a beginner when it comes to choice of paints though I am a 'colour junkie'.
Thinkng about the selection for the desert island palette I think I would end up with the following acrylic paints - lemon yellow, azo yellow medium, quin red, permanent rose, ultramarine blue, phthalo blue (GS), dioxine purple and burnt sienna. I know this might not be perfect but I think I could manage a pretty reasonable range from this limited palette.
Sharon Irving
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catswhiskerAT NOSPAMblueyonder dot co dot uk
1/8/2008 4:26:43 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I would bring three sets of primary colors-- a warm set, and a cool set, and I'd bring yellow ochre and burnt sienna. These, along with black and white, have been all the colors I've ever really kept in my palette, other than an assortment of greens. But I've found that I can mix infinite combinations with these.
There are cool reds that tend a little toward the blue side, and warm reds that tend towards orange. A "cool" yellow leans towards it greenish neighbors, while a warm yellow drifts near orange. Pigments and paints in tubes are not so pure that combining A cool blue will be just a tad purplish, while a warm blue hints at green.
To keep one'c cool tones cool, one must blend cooler colors, while a warm red mixed with a warm yellow will produce the warmest orange. Earth tones are easier to mix with umber and ochre, but my favorite use of those is for ease of creating a vast array of human "flesh" tones. I love to draw and paint portraits, whether from life, from memory, or photos. And I'm an incurable extrovert. I may be going to a desert island, but I can paint an imaginary companion, or many, with whom I'll enjoy the sunsets on the beach, and my paintings of them, with bathers and swimmers aplenty.
Susan Molenda
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Sue dot MolendaAT NOSPAMinmar dot com
1/8/2008 5:38:42 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I'm a watercolorist. I'd bring ultramarine blue, cerulean blue, diox violet, quinacrodone rose, raw sienna, burnt sienna, quinacrodone gold, and sap green. Since I often paint from my imagination, or twist my landscapes and models to suit my imagination, these colors would do the job quite well, I think.
Allison Stein
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asteinAT NOSPAMnoblefusion dot com
1/8/2008 7:15:02 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I've made an asumption that we're stuck on a tropical island. My selections would be Deep Sea Ultramarine, Fire Coral or Sunburn Red, Tropical Parrot Green, Hawaiian Poi Violet, Shipwreck Grey, Coconut Milk White, Octopus Ink Black and of course Corona Beer Gold. What else would you need? - Joe
Joe Milligan
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e54s2800AT NOSPAMcomcast dot net
1/8/2008 7:16:15 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
These colors pretty much can make most anything needed for landscape.....
(Black & White)
alizarine crimson
ultramarine blue
cadmium red light
cadmium yellow light
transparent red oxide
yellow ochre
viridian green
cobalt blue
sandy mcneal
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sknp2000AT NOSPAMyahoo dot com
1/9/2008 11:58:11 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I'd bring only 5 colors. The primaries and black and white. If I'll be mixing colors, I might as well just mix into infinity and create my own ultra marines and cadmium reds. My color pallet would start high chroma so I could dull it down if I wanted. Also, I could extend the life of my paints by doing this because I can bring twice as much of each color along!
Matt Hull
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hullmat2AT NOSPAMmsu dot edu
1/9/2008 2:26:07 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I am a watercolorists and find the exploration of color integral to this medium. I would bring a limited palette of some pure colors and some earth colors. Of course the primaries would be needed. That would include:
Holbein's Opera (a glorious pure pink)
Cadmium Red
Ultramarine Blue
New Gamboge
Sap Green
Quinacridone Violet
Burnt Sienna
Indigo
These are my favorites and the ones I find my brush just naturally seeks.
Carolyn Rotter
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carolynmAT NOSPAMoptonline dot net
1/10/2008 2:13:10 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I would take Cadmium Red, Alizarin Crimson, Cobalt Blue, Ultramarine (or Prussian) Blue, Cadmium Yellow Deep, Citron Yellow, and because I am lazy sometimes when it comes to mixing, I'd have to include Payne's Gray and Hooker's Green. You can keep the black- I rarely, if ever use it. Those are the colors I tend to paint everything with. I mix my colors as I paint, though I must fess up. I recently added the Siennas and Yellow Ochre to my palette because it is easier than mixing, and it affords me greater shade consistency for touch-ups.
Dorothy Joan Riley
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dottieriley1AT NOSPAMverizon dot net
1/10/2008 8:33:39 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Turquoise blue
Quinacrodone magenta
Olive green
Lemon yellow
Transparent orange
Indigo blue
Cadmium red
Transparent purple (as I find it almost impossible to make a truly lovely transparent mauve/purple with red and blue! - suggestions from anyone would be welcome!)
I mostly paint flowers and would be in heaven painting all the tropical flowers on a desert island. I would need the turquoise for the sea if I painted seascapes but there would usually be some flora in the foreground of those too. Turquoise also makes some interesting greens mixed with the other colours I would have.
I am from the UK so the thought of being on a desert island in glorious sunshine and being able to paint outdoors is very appealing!
Elva Brabham - elvabrabham at hotmail dot com
Elva Brabham
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elvabrabhamAT NOSPAMhotmail dot com
1/10/2008 1:44:12 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
My colors would be UltraBlue-Thalo Blue-Alizerin-Cad Med-
Cad light- yellow ochre- Cad Yellow Med - Burnt sienna. I think that does it all quite well.
Paul Adams
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pea07AT NOSPAMcomcast dot net
1/28/2008 3:11:46 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
the same colors i use for everything else:
alizarin crimson, cadmium red, cadmium yellow medium , cadmium yellow light, cobalt blue, thalo blue, paynes grey, burnt umber.
Anna Monaghan
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shoveltrickAT NOSPAMyahoo dot com
2/8/2008 11:39:13 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
What an interesting array of choices.
I have tried to pare my paints down to warm and cool of each but I also like some tube colors.
Ultramarine Blue, Thalo blue, Sap Green, Thalo green or viridian, Alizarin, Thalo Red Rose (or Permanent Rose)Cad Red light, Cad orange, Cad Yellow Med, Cad Yellow Light.
I find that I can't get the bright pinks without the Thalo Red Rose. I don't use earth colors as much as I used to but I love them.
Mary Sheehan Winn
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wendl15AT NOSPAMverizon dot net
2/13/2008 4:22:58 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
When I travel I usually take with me the following:
Lemon yellow
Cad yellow medium
Cad red
Alizarin
Cerulean
Ultramarine
Black and white
As I love mixing and creating colors, very often I use the same range in the studio plus an Ochre yellow and a Burned sienna.
mariela
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marielaAT NOSPAMotenet dot gr
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