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... and a detail of it so you can see the watery consistency of the paint in this layer.
For anyone considering taking a workshop, needless to say, I highly recommend signing up for one of Tony's. He teaches all over the place (including some fun destinations like France). |
Hi Michele,
I just wanted to tell you how much I appreciate you posting your step by step progress, it is facinating to see. Is this close to the way you have approached your portraits previously? You have already attained such a high level of success in your portraits, I'm curious to see how much of Tony's method you will apply to your own work. Thanks so much for your generosity in sharing this with us at the forum! Mary |
I have never painted a portrait in this way before, with this kind of color study or a "wash-in". I've always been of the school of "jump right in and wing it," though I did do a drawing like this on the canvas to start.
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This is really neat to see. . . Just wondering what you're thinning the paint with to get that 'watery consistency' ?
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Michele,
Thank you for posting - this is interesting. Just a couple of quick questions. Are you using a dryer so you can paint right on top the next day? Or, are you painting over the wash-in while it's wet? If it's dry do you put anything on it, like linseed, before you start painting again? I suppose if the wash is thinned with mineral spirits it would be dry by the next day. |
The wash is thinned with mineral spirits and is dry the next day.
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Well, the workshop is over. I started getting worn out by day 8 -- my brain was completely full. Tony must have been exhausted, too, as were the models, after 50 hours of the same pose!
I've had a request for the supplies list Tony sent us for the workshop. There were 40 colors of oil paint on the list, about half of which were the more strongly recommended ones, in case we didn't want to get all of them. The "recommended" colors were:
Tony provided medium which contained:
I'll post more photos of my work and Tony's demo later. |
To answer an earlier question in this thread, Tony sometimes uses natural light and sometimes artificial light in his own studio.
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Here's Tony's demo in progress. It shows the lines from the initial drawing (on the ear), the "wash in" layer (on the cheek and chest, etc.) and part of the "form painting", seen in the shadow areas and features of the face. This represents about 7 days of demonstrating, two hours a day, including lots of time explaining.
Normally Tony would complete the entire wash-in before beginning the form painting. He starts the form painting in the shadows, then chooses a section to paint completely. In this case he painted the chin first, from darks, to midtones and finally to lights. Once that was completely finished he moved to another area of the face. |
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This is the demo at the point where he stopped at the end of the ten-day class.
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