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Monday, June 11, 2007
Plein Air Painting and Golf
I've come to realize that for me, golf and plein air painting have a symbiotic relationship. A soft-pack golf bag made to take clubs on airplanes serves as a suitable container for my clubs, as well as a tripod, hardboard panels and assorted other items needed for
plein air
painting. It creates the heaviest set of golf clubs checked onto a flight, but I figure if I don’t exceed my 50 lbs. limit, it should be fine. Since I don’t take a full set of drivers and wedges on trips, the initial weight of my set of clubs is less than that carried by a typical player. For this trip, my total bag weight was 39 lbs. along with my panels and tripod.
So while golfing and painting during a recent vacation in California, I got a chance to experiment with a limited palette that I’ve been anxious to try. (No, I did not golf and paint at the same time. This combination slows down the game too much and really upsets the course officials.) I must credit this palette of colors to Scott Gellatly, Technical Support Representative at Gamblin Artists Colors Co (
http://www.scottgellatly.com/
). His paintings are amazing. While the palette I’m about to describe isn’t his exclusive palette, Gellatly and I discussed it as an alternate limited palette during a past visit he made to Washington.
It’s a fairly simple three-color primary palette composed of Indian Yellow, Quinacridone Violet and Prussian Blue. (You can substitute Phthalocyanine Blue for Prussian Blue without any drastic modifications.) Each color alone and the combination of colors to create secondary hues provide a fairly muted palette. Each of the primary colors is somewhat low in chroma and value. Adding a bit of white helps to bring out the full extent of their character. I liked the range of greens made with Prussian Blue and Indian Yellow. The violets are fine made of varying combinations of magenta and blue. Orange hues are fiery and a good start for making earthy browns when mixed with a bit of blue and black. Adding white to the secondary green mixture doesn’t create acceptable green hues for landscape painting. Titanium white turns mixed greens into pale, minty hues that are not within a range I like for landscape foliage. Interestingly, Indian Yellow combined with titanium white makes the yellow appear to be sullied with a blue grey cast. This is one case where the cool bluishness of titanium dioxide works against the combination of yellow pigments used in Indian Yellow. This effect is partly due to Indian Yellow being transparent and susceptible to the overpowering influence of a strong, opaque, cool pigment like titanium white. This mixture might look better with a less powerful, semi-transparent mixing white. As I said at the start, the overall palette is muted so when I need to achieve high chroma colors akin to permanent green light, cadmium yellow medium or cadmium red, I really need to add those to the palette to achieve a broader range. I don’t mind doing that, since the need for opaque pigments to round out this palette is welcome. The missing component is an opaque blue. Cerulean does not really function for me as an ideal opaque blue. It’s intriguing that a fairly neutral or cool opaque blue has never been synthesized.
Regardless of its few shortcomings, I am anxious to put this palette through a real challenge and take it outside for a
plein air
session. Perhaps I will post the completed painting. Do you have a favorite simple, minimal palette of colors? Please share them with me. I always find it interesting to discover what colors an artist is using.
Palettes
6/11/2007 2:41:57 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Comments [2]
6/16/2007 11:02:24 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
I like bright colors and many of my watercolor paintings are seascapes with palm trees. When I use tube watercolor paints ... generally I use blue, green, red, purple, yellow and brown straight from the tube without mixing - they do tend to mix on the paper or on the brush on the palette as I paint though.
When I painted in oils, I tended to use mostly pthalo blue, alizarin crimson, cad yellow & sap green (and titanium white for light values and pure highlights).
I could never get my blue/yellow green mixtures to be colors I liked to use in landscape painting so your above comment brought a grin to my face as I remembered the mint green I created once and used as an early frost color in a first snow painting - I didn't want to throw it out after mixing all that paint and it was a lovely color ... but it changed a fall painting to a winter painting.
Thank you for letting me know I am not alone in having problems mixing foliage greens if I start with blues & yellows as the base colors!
Barbara Burns
|
barbaraburnsAT NOSPAMbarbaraburns dot com
1/5/2008 3:38:46 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
It surprises me that Gellatly uses Prussian Blue. I understand from Mayer's tome that it is a borderline pigment regarding permanency. Also, Mayer suggests that true Indian Yellow is no longer available. I am unable to find any info on Gamblin's site regarding pigments in these named paint colors... if they are truly the pigments stated, or something else. (I'm guessing Gellatly uses Gamblin colors.)
Diana Moses Botkin
|
botkin dot idAT NOSPAMverizon dot net
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