Today I finally was brave enough to conquer the leaves. I must confess I have been painting around them the whole time wondering how I would make them look alive, hang just right and feel real. After a rough start, the kind that makes you want to cry and have a studio meltdown, I persevered and broke through to success.
I cut several branches from the Rose bush in the yard, put them in jars and moved them around the still life table. This allowed me to have them next to the vase of flowers, keep the light consistent with the original setup and piece the cut leaves in here and there throughout the painting. I would turn the jars, move the leaves around and bend them to the shapes I wanted.
It was a long day, but I knew that I needed to finish them all in one day to keep the unity of color and idea I had in mind. I knew I wouldn't sleep until they were done anyway.
Tomorrow I will finish the background layer, scumble the lights and hopefully scumble some color and light into the fabric. I think it is almost done!
10 comments:
Thanks for posting this as you did it. Interesting. Again, beautiful work.
Leaves are a challenge for sure. What is the medium you are working in? The word Integrity is what this piece evokes in my spirit - from the selection of still life objects to the mastery of technique, to the arrangement of every stem, petal, leaf and fold. Centering it completes the imagery.
This is oil on canvas. thank you for your comments.
Just so beautiful, Mark.
Forgive me Mark, but your comments made me chuckle a bit--PERSEVERANCE-A necessary trait for us artists--Just yesterday I almost experienced the same emotional "meltdown" while trying to finish a painting--I hung in there for hours till I was finally satisfied. Your fortitude paid off--beautiful work.
Mark --What size is this?
These posts have been fascinating. Thank you for sharing your struggles and insights. I clicked on your name on the left sidebar under "See All Posts By Your Favorite Artist" so I could see the progression. Awesome.
Thanks for sharing Mark. Your post are wonderful and inspiring!
This is incredible!
Lovely painting, Mark. Your process offers insights for artists and information for non-artists that helps enrich the experience.
The water line and the slight refraction shift is such a visual joy - like a surprise ganache inside of a triple layer sponge cake : )
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