depicting s p a c e and creating harmony in that space with a dominant color

33
depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

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Page 1: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

depicting

S P A C Eand creating harmony in that space

with a DOMINANT COLOR

Page 2: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Tools to create (deep) SPACE

• Overlap• Disproportionate Scale• Transparency• Interpenetration• Line Variation, Cross Contour, Chiaroscuro• Perspective

Page 3: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

1. Overlapany time one object obstructs the full view of another form

Page 4: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Das Modewarengescheft by Edgar Degas, 1885, oil on canvas, 99 x 109”

Page 5: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Interior with a Bowl with Red Fish By Henri MatisseApproximately 1913

Page 6: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

2. Disproportionate Scalewhen one object is drastically larger or smaller in scale

compared to other dominant objects

Page 7: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Young Spartans Exercising by Edgar Degas, 1860, Oil on canvas

Page 8: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Pianist and Still Life by Henri Matisse, 1924

Page 9: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

3. Transparencywhen the opacity visibly changes throughout a work – some areas may reveal the ground color, applied

very thinly, in comparison to other areas being thickly painted

Page 10: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Mr. and Mrs. Manet by Edgar Degas, 1868-1869

Page 11: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Henri Matisse

Page 12: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

4. Interpenetrationwhen one object seemingly passes through or

disappears inside another object

Page 13: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Glass & Shells by Janet Fish, 1990

Page 14: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

The Goldfish by Henri Matisse, 1912

Page 15: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

5-7. Line Variation, Cross-Contour & Chiaroscuro

Line Variation = change in width, orientation, brush stroke Cross-Contour = line traces the contours of a form

Chiaroscuro = Light to Dark rendering of value across form

Page 16: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Dana Gordan by Alice Neel, 1972

Page 17: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Orange Cloth with Orange Poppies by Janet Fish, 2000, 48 x 60”

Page 18: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

8. Atmospheric PerspectiveObjects in foreground: most VIBRANT & DETAILED

Objects in middle ground: middle gray, mid-resolutionObjects in background: DULLEST, LIGHTEST, FUZZIEST

Page 19: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Caspar David Friedrich, Das Eismeer – Sea of IceOil on canvas, 50 x 38.1” 1823 - 24

Page 20: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Caspar David Friedrich’s Kreidefelsen auf Ruegen – Chalk Cliffs on RugenOil on canvas, 35.6 x 28” 1818

Page 21: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

9. Linear Perspectivewhen all lines seemingly converge to one

“vanishing point” on the horizon

Page 22: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Edward Hopper

Page 23: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR
Page 24: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Complex Environments:

Interior spaces including the Figure

A few more images for PAINTING II . . .

Page 25: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Establishing aFigure / Ground Relationship

• Figure = the main subject. Also considered the “positive” space

• Ground = the environment surrounding subject. Also considered the “negative space”

• Ground should not be an afterthought• Address figure & ground simultaneously• Pay attention to edges & proximity

Page 26: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Frau in dern Badewanne by Edgar Degas, 1886, Pastel, 70 x 70”

Page 27: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

New York Restaurant by Edward Hopper, 1922, Oil on canvas

Page 28: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

The Living Room by Balthus, 1960’s… Oil on canvas

Page 29: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

Tapestry or Embroiderers La Tapisserie ou Les Brodeuses by Edouard Vuillard, 1895

Page 30: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

For EVERYONE:• You will be in conversation with a partner today

sharing feedback about depicting space and constructing a dynamic composition

• Throughout class today I’ll announce: “PARTNERS” & that’s when you can have a brief dialogue about each others paintings in progress

• Painting II please partner up with a Painting I student. Introduce yourselves (we may need one group of three)

Page 31: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

For EVERYONE:• Everyone is painting from the same still

life / installation over the next couple of weeks in-class

• Painting II: Must have main view of figure, so adjust yourselves accordingly.

• Painting I: minimal to no view of figure, so adjust yourselves accordingly around still life.

Page 32: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

PAINTING II: “game plan”• Draw 2 thumbnail sketches –

locating distinct: foreground,middleground & background

composition should EMBED FIGURE in environment

• Begin by painting loose, gestural framework of space, establishing Figure/Ground Relationship aiming to build them simultaneously

• PALETTE: select a dominant color and incorporate into every color you create on palette

Page 33: Depicting S P A C E and creating harmony in that space with a DOMINANT COLOR

PAINTING I: “game plan”• Draw 2 thumbnail sketches in sketchbook –locating

distinct foreground, middleground, & background

• Begin by Painting (rather than drawing on canvas) loose, gestural framework of space DARK to Light, THIN to Thick

• PALETTE: select a dominant color, for instance: LIME GREEN. Mix LIME GREEN into every color created on palette, including the RED chair seen in the still life, the Violet Drapery etc. All colors must have a trace of LIME GREEN mixed into them.