Tuesday, October 9, 2007

2.2.3_Other tools.

2.2.3_Other tools.


Anything can be used as a tool for oil painting. As a child I knew a man that painted with sharpened sticks and twigs and referred to himself as the twig painter.  Each painting tool is a discipline to master. While working solely with the pallet knife I needed a larger surface to move paint, I chose to use a toaster for several composition paintings simply because was the tool that could get the results I was looking for. The concept that I was working on at the time dictated what tool I use, as I chose the toaster simply because I could only acquire the results I wanted from its large, flat, smooth surface.  I wanted a larger size so I used a freezer door as my tool, with the same intended purpose as the toaster and pallet knife. My personal experiments with unconventional tools did not end there and eventually lead me back to the brush. These experiences gave me separate voices of dramatic difference within my work that I someday may eventually unite into a single personality with a voice based on multiple techniques. 

I once challenged an artist to paint with a wind up toy bear that’s arms would become animated in opposing directions, swinging in a swimming motion, and a small toilet plunger. Although the physical aesthetic of the work he produced was poor, if the artist would have continued to practice the discipline in oil painting with the toy bear and toilet plunger he would have eventually found a way to create what his intuitive mind was telling him in an aesthetically pleasing manner. The toy bear and a toilet plunger were experiments in teaching an understanding of what a tool is to the artist. The lesson was intended to remove the artists dependance on a conventional painting tool as the brush, and to teach the artist that all painting tools are simply a discipline within themselves to learn. My apprentice painted five works with the toy bear and toilet plunger. It was not until the fourth work did he begin to get a handle on the tools themselves, and not until the 5th did he start to see the lesson of tool as a discipline. 







Prior to this experiment I attempted the same lesson with this artist, confining him to use one brush type per painting. The lesson, tool as discipline, is the same here as it was with the unconventional tools, but my apprentice couldn’t separate his mind from the brush as he used it even though he was only allowed to paint exclusively per brush type. His unimaginative approach to painting and painting tools that pointed me in the direction of removing his habits with the unconventional and witty toy wind up bear and toilet plunger. I had to remove the idea of tools as tools, making the action of painting absurd in order for him to see the ideas behind the lesson. Subsequently this artist should have been able to see this on his own, and as far as I know he no longer paints.
together we did have a very good time painting, and Stefan was extremely talented in illustration, and I hope that he still works creatively today as he did yesterday.




Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Artwork of the month: Max Beckmann.

I have never really liked Max Beckmann's work. I found it unskilled, childish, and uninventive. For years I would simply walk past this painting, paying it no mind. Working at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, I have found myself paying attention to works of art that I would have normally ignored. Subsequently, I have changed my perspective on many works of art; Beckmann's piece included.

Although I still do not like his poor use of composition, I find Beckmann's use of color enjoyable. The layers of color, dark over light over dark, is typical of the expressionists and still innovative today. Philosophically this work is a personal catharses and escape from World War II.

Max Beckmann
German, 1884-1950
"Blind Mans Buff"
1945, oil on canvas

"I think only of objects: of a leg or an arm, of the wonderful sense of foreshortening, breaking through the plane, of the division of space, of the combination of straight lines in relation to curved ones."
-Max Beckmann


Pay attention to the content in this painting...
...it can surprise you.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

New illustration study

Another bitTorrent study.  I am getting better at handling a circle in ink.  Eventually I will be good enough to paint a complete circle in oil perfectly.  At the moment I just take my time and slowly go over its outer edge, then move into the circle itself.

This composition seams at first unbalanced, and heavy toward the right.  But as you will notice the unbalanced weight is reestablished by the open space between the arch and angle.  This composition would be most successful if used with a monotone background, lighter complementaries as the forms and triadic complements as the lines.

BitTorrent Study #7
Ink on paper.
2007

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Artwork of the Month: My favorite Picasso's at the MIA.

I have admired the composition of this vase for a long time.  Picasso has long been an artist that I both love and hate.  Today he is on my good side.




Pablo Picasso
Spanish, 1881-1973
Vase
Earthenware, slip, 1950


"Art is a lie that makes us realize truth."
-Pablo Picasso 



Sunday, September 16, 2007

Minneapolis Institute of Arts Sept 2007

I got the chance to exhibit two of my newest works at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.  It is just a staff show and not open the the general public, but it is still cool.  I love my job.





thanks for reading...
...more to come soon.


Tuesday, September 11, 2007

New illustration study

This is a new study for my upcoming series of oil paintings titled "BitTorrent."  The BitTorrent paintings are going to be a self created mythology where I take the ideas of our past and combine them with what is in our minds today.  This study is about the disharmony of size and complexity.  I want to work with compositions that are very simple, yet very complex as the convoluted arrangement and use of the compositional forms within the total space quiets down its own exaggeration.  

I can see these in my mind as very subtle images with many juxtaposing compositional elements.  Each element at war with one another as their disharmony causes a mindfulness of peace.  I will keep working on I an very interested in how we as mankind see our world very similar to these ideas of balance and discord.  I wanted to work toward an overbalanced composition that felt as if it almost sprang back on itself.  And I think I got it.


BitTorrent Study 6
Ink on Paper
2007

Thursday, September 6, 2007

2.2.2_The pallet knife.

2.2.2_The pallet knife.
The pallet knife is naturally quick and improvisational in its abilities for laying paint on a surface.  There as many varieties as to the edge, shape, and flexibility of a palette knife; most of which mimic the paint brushes various features of each bristle type.  The palette knife has the ability to control the texture of oil paint, manipulating this painting medium into a sculpting medium.  The use of oil paint as a sculpting medium is still painting.  I use the pallet knife to sculpt three-dimensional forms out of oil paint.


     I used a set of 12 palette knives for an entire series of works.  I even found myself using a toaster, then a freezer door for their larger edge to pull paint.  

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Studio #7 - 1915 2nd Avenue South #13

To continue on with the series of posts about my studios, here is where I am working now.  My 7th studio in Minneapolis is a top floor, 800 square foot, 1 bedroom corner apartment in Stevens Square.  it is pretty nice, so I will kept it nice.  

I have ben able to really dig into my series of works titled BitTorent, no telling how soon I will have them Finished.  


Just finished this, yep its cool.

Its funny

Chris and I looking at my new work, he likes it.

I am talking about the painting... 
...I talk a lot.

I completed one of my major compositions at this studio.  BitTorrent #2 "Marinuis Van der Lubbe as Icarus"  This painting was to me a crowning achievement in what i wanted to paint next.
Laugh all you want, this painting was and is a major accomplishment for me.  I do take it that seriously, and then I tend to giggle about it later.


Thanks for reading...
...I will keep you up to date about my antics in this new studio.



Tuesday, August 7, 2007

2.2.1_On the paint brush.

2.2.1_On the paint brush.
Regardless of the tools the oil painter comes to use as his discipline, the oil painter must first learn to control the paint brush. The paint brush is the single most recognized tool used to create works of art with but the artist must never be limited to its use solely for the application of oil paint. Although it is the classic tool of the oil painter, it must not be considered the most important. All tools as a matter of personal choice are simply a discipline to learn. The artist will simply know what tool is best used to achieve each intended concept. Within compositional oil painting the intended concept of an oil painting supersedes personality and inevitably decides what the tools should be. Only the indented concept and communication of the work of art dictates what tools to use in its creation. Through the path of both self and external discovery, the oil painter will use other tools to create works of art. Afterward as the oil painter matures he will return to the use of the brush.
Paint brushes are made up of three basic parts: the head, the ferrule, and the handle. The head is the hairs or bristles of the brush. The head has three parts: the toe, the belly, and the heel. The shape and bristle quality of the head determines the nature of the stroke that it will make. The ferrule is the metal cylinder, preferably seamless, that attaches the head to the handle. The handle typically made of wood is self explanatory in its purpose and use. The professional oil painter should only use a long wooden handle as the short handled plastic brush is for the hobbyist. As the oil painter has more control over the paint with a long handled brush.
The question of the expense of a paint brush is always in debate. I tell you now, cheap tools equal cheap results, and the oil painter that can not tell the difference between a cheaply   constructed paint brush and an expensive one is not a professional and subsequently their opinion                                          on the matter is without merit.
Neither natural hair or synthetic bristle paint brushes are better than the other, as there are benefits to using both bristle types. The outer casing of natural hair, the cuticle, is covered with tiny scales that help the bristles retain moisture. Natural hair also has a hollow tube within each filament that allows the hair to absorb moisture called the medulla. These features make natural hair vastly more absorbent than synthetic hair, therefore natural hair will always hold more color than its man-made counterpart. Natural hair paint brushes work with any medium and become more attuned to a single mediums use. Synthetic bristle paint brushes far more durable, making them longer-lasting, resistant to wearing out, and to being damaged by use with solvents and harsh paint. Synthetic hair bristles are easier to clean because they lack the ultra-absorbent qualities of natural bristles. As a result, synthetic brushes are better suited than natural brushes to use with oils due to their resiliency to the paint's caustic effects.
As a preference to which bristle type is best to use, I say natural hair brushes. The professional oil painter should use the finest grade of natural hair paint brushes. Keep them clean and care for them and the will outlast a synthetic brush. Also natural hair is simply better because it is natural. There is a physical and metaphysical connection between the painter and his materials and tools. That connection is somehow stronger if the materials and tools are natural rather than synthetic.
There are a number of paint brush types varying from size, shape, and body for various purposes in working with oil paints. The most common brush types are the flat, bright, fan, filbert, egbert, liner, round, flat wash, mop, and the angular. They are named for both their appearance and use with paints.  
The flat brush with its flat rectangular body and square chisel edge is the perfect brush for applying large amounts of color both quickly and evenly. It holds plenty of paint for applying thick amounts, as it creates long straight brush strokes. the flat is excellent for softly defining compositional elements that have a straight edge to them. I find the flat most useful in applying the underpainting when clarity and precision are not too important but applying a large amount of paint is.
The bright brush has the same chisel edge as a flat but with shorter bristle length it comes to a fine chisel edge when loaded with paint. The short square head of the bright makes it ideally suited for straight lines, applying broad strokes with a controlled edge, and well-defined brush strokes. The brights capabilities of finely detailed forms makes it perfect for overpainting and finial editing. I use the bright for all geometric forms and the overpainting of large areas of negative space to redefine positive spaces.
The fan brush is shaped into a flat profile with a curved edge spread as a hand-held fan. The fan is designed for delicately blending color and softening edges, creating dusty like strokes when painting objects such as clouds, and distant foliage. I consider the fan brush a gimmick, and should not be used by the professional oil painter who can reproduce the brushstrokes that it creates with a filbert.
The filbert brush has the body of a flat brush with a slightly rounded edge point. The filbert is extremely versatile and is used to create as a flat to make broad strokes or as a round for more delicate and tapered strokes. I use the filbert for softening the edges of forms and fading small areas of change in color value. The filbert is the macro lense of oil painting with its dual ability to focus a finely detailed stroke and fade oil color, softly blurring its appearance. 
The Egbert is similar to a filbert in that it has the same rounded edge, only with much longer bristles. Its flat ferrule and long bristles can carry more color than a filbert. It is as long as the liner brush and it is most commonly used for thick long tapered lines, and blending value changes. I have no personal use for the Egbert, and I find it lacking in self control as a result of its length.
The liner brush has a slender round head with very long bristles that comes to a thin tip that is ideal for working with tiny details. The length of its body holds a lot of oil color allowing it to deliver color continuously in a single stroke when painting long lines. The thin tip creates fine lines like no other brush type. This brush is commonly called a "rigger" for its use in painting the rigging on ships. I used the liner previously with well worked oil color to achieve the immediate effects of small detail.
The round brush has a thick round head with bristles that taper to a fine point at the end. It is used for precise strokes of fine detail work. Like the liner brush, the round hold a great deal of paint and is best used with slightly thinned paints; albeit, thinned oil paints fade away, crack, and slowly become transparent with time. I do not recommend its use. Simply work the oil color on the pallet until it is soft enough to achieve the desired effect.
The flat wash brush is an extra-large flat. It is primarily used for  painting with watercolors, but is useful to the oil painter as a dry brush to remove all trace of brushstroke. I use the flat wash with oils as a dry-brush for soft surface color blending and smoothing as it is ideal for blending surface area a smooth transition between color and value changes without disturbing the underpainting.  
The mop brush has a large flappy fat body and is shaped into an oval or rounded thick edge. The mop is used for delicately glazing so as to not disturb the underpainting. It is useful as a dry-brush for blending large amounts of surface color. I personally find the mop brush a useless  gimmick.
The angular brush is similar to the build and body of the flat, with the edge angled at a tapered slant. The angular brush has a flat edge and a pointed tip, allowing for both wide and thin strokes. The tip is its most valued feature, as it can easily reach areas within a painting that are between sections you do not wish to disturb, the tight details the angular can reach are virtually impossible to work with a larger brush. I use the angular for precise details in color forms where a mistake, i.e. coloring outside the lines, would be nearly irreversible.
Taking care of paint brushes to keep them supple, resilient, and like new is essential to increase their longevity and to extend their usefulness. Simply use soap and water to get them clean. I prefer using liquid dish-soap. Do not leave a paint brush sitting bristle-side down in a solvent for days on end. This will cause the brush to lose its original shape as the bristles will splay out from time spent soaking and softening, making them weaker and more susceptible to the weight of the handle. Ideally the oil painter will want to clean paint and solvent residue off his brushes immediately after each use.  Do not use the same paint brush for different mediums or even colors. Each kind of paint and the solvents used to clean it affect the bristles differently. Using the same paint brush with different kinds of paint will rapidly destroy it.
Furthermore, the oil painter should have six classifications of each brush type and size based on color usage. Separating brush use by blues, reds, greens, yellows, whites and blacks. Even though the painter will always mix and blend colors of different hues together, each brush he uses should almost exclusively be used with one color hue. There will always be a small amount of paint left inside the ferrel of the brush, and using a freshly cleaned brush that was first used with one color for another causes unintentional mixing and color changes within a painting. Sometimes the result is disastrous when the paints color turns to a grey green mud as a result of poor cleaning. In this way the oil painter extends the lasting usefulness of his paint brushes. I have six brushes of each type and size. So if I own a bright #4, I own six of them at the least. 

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Artwork of the month: The splendor of white asparagus.

This is one of my favorite oil paintings at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.  

Pieter de Hooch
Dutch, 1629-1684
"The Asparagus Vender"
1675-1680, oil on canvas

The scene is one of an upper middle class household, the wife purchasing fresh asparagus from a door to door vender.  The wife's hand open and waiting for her husband, we presume, to give her money to buy the food.  White asparagus short growing season which made it rare an expensive.  

While we believe we are watching this scene with the wife as the main character, we see clearly that the maid sewing is the main focus.  She is the only illuminated character in the scene.  she is clearly the most important individual in the room.  The maid in the background is painted with greater detail, and greater emotion.  The sun shines through the window revealing her alone.  I have always enjoyed this painting just for that.


Asparagus inspires gentle thoughts.
-Charles Lamb