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04-11-2007, 05:46 PM
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#1
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Juried Member
Joined: Sep 2004
Location: Madrid, Spain
Posts: 483
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Your work has a quality and level to it that shows an artist who is sincere and strives to please herself -- traits which make me have a healthy envy and respect. I admire very much your economy of brushstroke , your ability to suggest while not defining too much, saying plenty with very little. The use of the brush is bold while the use of colour is subtle. Congratulations!
__________________
Carlos
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04-12-2007, 12:40 PM
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#2
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'06 Artists Mag Finalist, '07 Artists Mag Finalist, ArtKudos Merit Award Winner '08
Joined: Nov 2006
Location: U.K.
Posts: 732
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Thank-you Claudemir and Carlos. Carlos, you appreciate just what I hope to be achieving in my work.
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04-12-2007, 01:29 PM
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#3
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Juried Member FT professional, '06 finalist Portrait Society of Canada, '07 finalist Artist's Mag,'07 finalist Int'al Artist Mag.
Joined: Feb 2006
Location: Montreal,Canada
Posts: 475
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Thomasin,
when I saw this, I immediately thought to Chardin's self portraits, because of the turban, I think, the texture, and also the sincerity...
Your colors have a special quality which are very unique to you. ( would you share with us your palette? )
I also like very much your composition.
Very nice work!
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04-12-2007, 01:37 PM
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#4
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Approved Member
Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 1,730
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Thomasin,
Another beautiful painting. It has that wonderful roly-poly generosity of Flemish-Dutch painting. It is alive, real and humorous at the same time.
I love the way you control your flesh tones within such a subtle range.
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04-12-2007, 04:11 PM
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#5
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'06 Artists Mag Finalist, '07 Artists Mag Finalist, ArtKudos Merit Award Winner '08
Joined: Nov 2006
Location: U.K.
Posts: 732
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Thank-you Marina and Sharon.
Marina - I am pleased to have this painting likened to a Chardin, whose paintings I really respond to because of the rich, hearty paint and the wonderful clear-sighted crafting of his pieces to their never-failing perfection. After I did this painting, which I did because I felt that if I was painting for myself then I would do just what I wanted (despite it's looking much more traditional and old-fashioned than is usually accepted by the contemporary who's who in art crowds). You just can't deny the mastery of painters like Chardin and Velasquez and the relevance it still has for painters who love to paint, and I simply wanted to paint like that with this one.
My palette is usually limited to what I have left in my paint box, but I tend to use a lot of this Torrit Grey from Gamblin which is a mix of all the left-over paint from the year's paint-making. It comes out around environmental day and is free with any purchase of Gamblin oil paint. I use Gamblin a lot because it seems to be less toxic than the other makes, and with a young child around I want things to be as safe as possible. For this reason I also don't use turps or anything else. Just the paint. Torrit Grey is really good for my shadows because it is a kind of anti-colour, but rich because it has all the pigments in it. When I run out of Torrit Grey I usually make my own from ultramarine or a black and a cadmium orange and a brown like raw umber and perhaps a cerulean blue and then quite a bit of titanium white.
I usually use a lot of cadmiums although I do use the hues and not the pure stuff because of toxicity issues. I found that cadmium orange and white make a great pink flesh tone and works well with the torrit for making the light and the shadows in the flesh. I usually put a cadmium of some sort in the grey depending on what I see in the shadow. So this, I suppose, is my basic palette at present. I do use a lemon yellow when called for and cadmium orange and black scumbled on in the background and then some of the flesh tone in the background too, with a bit of cerulean or ultramarine blue to make it recede. And violet sometimes helps with that too. It's all a bit of an experiment to see what works the best.
Sharon - I am getting up the guts to do a really burlesque painting. Something Goya-esque. (But what would people think!? How unfeminine!)
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04-12-2007, 04:36 PM
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#6
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Approved Member
Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 1,730
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Thomasin Dewhurst
Sharon - I am getting up the guts to do a really burlesque painting. Something Goya-esque. (But what would people think!? How unfeminine!)
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Thomasin, my model just showed up with hot pink striped blond hair, Previously she was an ash-blond and I had painter her that way. I said, "what the hell" and painted in the pink striped hair.
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04-12-2007, 06:29 PM
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#7
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'06 Artists Mag Finalist, '07 Artists Mag Finalist, ArtKudos Merit Award Winner '08
Joined: Nov 2006
Location: U.K.
Posts: 732
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sharon Knettell
Thomasin, my model just showed up with hot pink striped blond hair, Previously she was an ash-blond and I had painter her that way. I said, "what the hell" and painted in the pink striped hair.
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Yes, I read that about you and your model on another of your posts. It does give me courage, and your piece that was threatening to become a Barbie doll was actually a bit of a challenge for me to do something a bit more daring. "What the hell" indeed! It's only a bit of painted fabric after all, and it doesn't have to come out of the cupboard (Picasso's "Les Desmoiselles" was hidden away for many months, wasn't it, before he had the courage to show anyone. And that's Picasso).
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04-13-2007, 02:35 AM
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#8
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SOG Member FT Professional '09 Honors, Finalist, PSOA '07 Cert of Excel PSOA '06 Cert of Excel PSOA '06 Semifinalist, Smithsonian OBPC '05 Finalist, PSOA
Joined: Mar 2004
Location: Philadelphia, PA
Posts: 1,445
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Thomasin Dewhurst
Thank-you Marina and Sharon.
Marina - I am pleased to have this painting likened to a Chardin, whose paintings I really respond to because of the rich, hearty paint and the wonderful clear-sighted crafting of his pieces to their never-failing perfection. After I did this painting, which I did because I felt that if I was painting for myself then I would do just what I wanted (despite it's looking much more traditional and old-fashioned than is usually accepted by the contemporary who's who in art crowds). You just can't deny the mastery of painters like Chardin and Velasquez and the relevance it still has for painters who love to paint, and I simply wanted to paint like that with this one.
My palette is usually limited to what I have left in my paint box, but I tend to use a lot of this Torrit Grey from Gamblin which is a mix of all the left-over paint from the year's paint-making. It comes out around environmental day and is free with any purchase of Gamblin oil paint. I use Gamblin a lot because it seems to be less toxic than the other makes, and with a young child around I want things to be as safe as possible. For this reason I also don't use turps or anything else. Just the paint. Torrit Grey is really good for my shadows because it is a kind of anti-colour, but rich because it has all the pigments in it. When I run out of Torrit Grey I usually make my own from ultramarine or a black and a cadmium orange and a brown like raw umber and perhaps a cerulean blue and then quite a bit of titanium white.
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Chardin and Velasquez are top five favorites of mine too! I love how Chardin polishes the illumination in flake white perfection.
Okay, where does one get Torrrit Grey? Who sells it? I remember meeting Bo Bartlett as he was searching for that color unsuccessfully in Philadelphia. He was just gushing about it, and could not contain his enthusiasm.
Garth
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04-13-2007, 11:38 AM
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#9
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'06 Artists Mag Finalist, '07 Artists Mag Finalist, ArtKudos Merit Award Winner '08
Joined: Nov 2006
Location: U.K.
Posts: 732
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Thank-you very much, Linda and Grethe. (I am not too fond of Odd Nerdrum, although I thought I liked his work a couple of years ago.)
Garth. Torrit Grey comes out around environmental or earth day - and I've just found out that this offer is coming to an end at the 30th of April!! And I haven't got any yet.
Dickblick offers Torrit Grey with any purchase of gamblin oil colours.
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