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03-30-2006, 10:57 AM
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#1
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Associate Member SoCal-ASOPA Founder FT Professional
Joined: Sep 2002
Location: Laguna Hills, CA
Posts: 1,395
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Painting Speed
A painting's complexity , the amount of detail and one's painting method often dictates the amount of time it takes for a paintings completion. With that in mind, I am perplexed why it takes me forever (several months!) to finish a painting. I am glad I don't work in an agency
What do you do to force yourself to pick up the pace? How long do you work in average on a painting?
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03-30-2006, 11:25 AM
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#2
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CAFE & BUSINESS MODERATOR SOG Member FT Professional
Joined: Jul 2001
Location: Seattle, WA
Posts: 3,460
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I have a sign in my office that says "Work Expands to Fill the Time Available". So true. I set up a schedule for myself with a deadline for each painting, a goal that I want to meet.
A one-person three-quarter-length painting with some kind of background typically takes me 100 hours of painting time. I keep track. That doesn't include photo shoots, planning the composition, client meetings, doing color studies etc, just actually doing the painting on the canvas. I can usually get one done a month, fitting easel time in around all the other stuff involved in "running a business" as a professional portrait artist (marketing, paperwork, etc.)
I know other artists who can get 20 to 30 portraits done in a year. One person in particular has a wife who is his full time assistant, though. He also may do more head and shoulders portraits than I do and he may do only very simple backgrounds.
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03-30-2006, 11:31 AM
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#3
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Associate Member SoCal-ASOPA Founder FT Professional
Joined: Sep 2002
Location: Laguna Hills, CA
Posts: 1,395
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Michele,
Thanks for your reply. Keeping track of "hours spend painting" is not a bad idea. This might actually help to see exactly how much time each painting takes and how much time "life" takes away from productivity.
Good tip!
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03-30-2006, 06:40 PM
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#4
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Juried Member PT Professional
Joined: May 2004
Location: Americana, Brazil
Posts: 1,042
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Hi Enzie,
One important point concerning "speed" is related to style. The way you paint makes if faster or slower.
Two great guys to mention: Morgan Weistling and Tony Ryder, the first one is a fast painter, and the second one is a contemplative painter. Both produce hight quality and beautiful works, but in very different ways.
I work part-time, but one holiday I stayed in front of my easel for about 15 hours, and once (but only once) I worked for 3 days without sleeping, but I usually like to paint for 4 or 5 hours and take a rest (painting another thing, of course) and than come back the next day, so I can see how the work is going with "fresh eyes".
Every person is different, I wish I could paint full time. I have one friend who paints 14 hours everyday since he was 19, today he is 74, so you can figure how much work he has produced so far.
The love of Art is what makes me pick up the pace everyday. As I said before, I wish I could paint full time.
C. Ya.
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03-31-2006, 09:41 AM
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#5
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Associate Member
Joined: Jan 2002
Location: Montesano, Washington
Posts: 236
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Enzie, I'm just a student, so I have no "real life" experience on finishing a painting, but something one of my teachers is fond of saying is finally beginning to sink in: "Think the end from the beginning." If I can get "end" drawing, value, color, or edges on the first or second layer of paint, do it! This has helped me speed up.
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03-31-2006, 11:00 AM
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#6
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Associate Member SoCal-ASOPA Founder FT Professional
Joined: Sep 2002
Location: Laguna Hills, CA
Posts: 1,395
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Claudemir,
I agree, sometimes I wonder how much one's personalty effects the way one paints. For example, some people are very care free, therefore if something is a bit off, they are ok to laugh it off. Then there are those that are very analytical, for them everything has to make sense and lastly the perfectionist, who can't leave things be and always strives to do better and better, often sacrificing speed for achieving the ultimate goal.
Debra, your teacher is so right.I have often found that if I failed to do a step in the initial stages, it costs me more time to fix it later. It is amazing how much discipline painting requires, isn't it?!
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04-03-2006, 10:56 AM
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#7
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Juried Member Guy who can draw a little
Joined: Dec 2002
Location: New Iberia, LA
Posts: 546
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This is an enlightening thread. I've been watching videos by Scott Burdick, Morgan Weistling and others. While they are somewhat compressed for time, they seem to film every brushstroke of the process of painting the face, and edit for time when they get to the background.
Weistling's video is ten hours long, and he seems to spend nearly six hours on just the face. The results are beautiful, but as he points out, it's not a portrait. It looks generally like the model, but I imagine he would have to spend a great deal more time to satisfy a portrait client.
I have trouble making myself slow down. I paint much too quickly, and lose accuracy as a result.
One problem for me is that I have a very hard time painting over dry paint. I feel like I can't come back to a painting, because I'll ruin it if I paint on the previous day's work (didn't oil paint used to dry slowly? Seems to dry instantly now).
For now, I scrub down just about everything I paint -- partly because I never finish anything, so I might as well re-use my canvas -- partly because my skill level is not where I want it to be.
I think I need to make a concerted effort to get out of this box and force myself to paint on just one picture over an extended period of time. Painting wet on wet is not an option for long projects, so I just have to learn to paint over dry paint. Heck. If Rembrandt could do it, how hard can it be?
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04-03-2006, 12:08 PM
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#8
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Juried Member
Joined: Jul 2001
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 1,734
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Hi Jeff, nice to see you again. Some of us here on the Forum (like me) paint several coats of paint on a surface (remembering the 'fat over lean' principle). It's not archievally unwise if you do it correctly and aesthecially I personally like the effect.
For me, speed has as much to do with how many coats of paint I apply as it does anything else.
And hi Enzie, thanks for starting this interesting topic!
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04-03-2006, 12:18 PM
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#9
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CAFE & BUSINESS MODERATOR SOG Member FT Professional
Joined: Jul 2001
Location: Seattle, WA
Posts: 3,460
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Quote:
I've been watching videos by Scott Burdick, Morgan Weistling and others.
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Are these the ones you get from that rental place, Jeff?
Painting over dry paint is easy if you oil out the dry surface first. Otherwise I find the drag of the old paint on the new stuff is not pleasant and it's very hard to match colors and values. (I oil out with a 50/50 mixture of linseed and mineral spirits, brushing it over a dry area and wiping most of it off. It restores the true value and color to the dark areas and makes a nice surface to paint into.) The old paint has to be very dry or it will smear during the oiling out, though.
I think it would be just about impossible to paint everything perfectly in one go, so using multiple layers is pretty much essential.
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04-03-2006, 12:32 PM
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#10
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Juried Member Guy who can draw a little
Joined: Dec 2002
Location: New Iberia, LA
Posts: 546
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Michele Rushworth
Are these the ones you get from that rental place, Jeff?
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I bought the Weistling Video, and rented others.
I've heard of oiling out the canvas, and I have tried it, but never had it explained as you have. I'll try it again.
Linda: I didn't mean to imply there was anything wrong with it, as I'm well aware that almost all oil painters paint over dry paint, but I'm struggling with it.
I didn't mean to get the thread sidetracked, but I seem to have a tendency to do that.
I should start a new thread.
We apologize for this interruption. now back to our regularly scheduled topic.
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