Saturday, 23 November 2013

Getting to know you

The thing that makes a painting difficult is uncertainty. Whereas if you plan in advance, the uncertainty is removed.  Dianne Sutherland Ball
File image from Wikipedia

It was the flash of orange at the side of the road that first caught my eye. Every day as I drove my daughters to school I noticed it, but this was a busy road, so I couldn’t stop. However I couldn’t stop thinking about it either. So when I spotted that same beckoning orange in a friend’s garden, I was thrilled. She kindly gave me some cuttings and the name of the object of my desire … Iris foetidissima.

The orange that I had seen was not the flowers, which are apparently quite dull, but rather the gorgeous seed pods, which burst open each winter to reveal brilliant scarlet orange seeds. Iris foetidissima is native to this part of the world and is said to have the constitution of an ox, willing to grow just about anywhere. It’s also known as the Stinking Iris or Roast Beef plant because the leaves are supposed to smell like roast beef when crushed.

Nicholas Culpeper wrote about it in his 17th century herbal of medicinal plants, The English Physitian, calling it `Stinking Gladwin', and described the leaves as having "a strong, ill scent". Even so, it was highly valued as a medicinal herb, especially for making poultices for drawing out splinters and the odd arrow head.

Pong or no pong, after all my practicing of washes and dry brushstrokes last week, I was eager to move onto the next stage of the painting, or the “Getting to know you” stage. The better you know your subject, the easier the painting will be, or at least, that’s the theory!

I usually work with two magnifying glasses to get up close and personal with my subject and it's portrait.
Art is born of the observation and investigation of nature. Cicero (106 BC - 43 BC)

The first thing that I did was a quick line drawing in my sketchbook, just to get the feel of the plant. I couldn’t resist adding a seed, which I discovered is actually known in botany as an aril. It’s similar to a pomegranate seed in that the seed has a fleshy covering. 

Aril – fleshy and usually brightly coloured cover of some seeds that develops from the ovule stalk and partially or entirely envelopes the seed. Arils, such the red berry-like arils of the yew (Taxus baccata), are often brightly coloured to attract animals who eat them and disperse the seeds. 

After the first little section, I decided that I wasn’t too happy with the husk of the seedpod. The colours were a little too dull and that textured surface was a challenge! So I took one of the seed pods, pulled it apart, removed the arils and did some studies of the husks.


As I want to paint this on vellum, I thought carefully about the opacity of the pigments that I am using. The smoothness and translucency of vellum can bring a vibrancy and depth to colours, so transparent pigments really come into their own. Usually I don’t worry too much about how opaque a colour is, in fact I’ve quite a few opaque colours that I really couldn’t live without. However to get the best out of my vellum, it is worth taking time to reconsider your colour choices. So out went light red, to be replaced with burnt sienna + winsor orange and winsor orange-red (also used in the arils), and perylene violet came in to replace the caput mortuum. Gold ochre replaced yellow ochre.
 You can read more about the transparency of pigments here.


      

I continued to work on my seed pod study, experimenting as I went along, and was quite pleased with the potential of the subject. However I needed to work out the colour choices for the arils as I felt that some colour mixes were a little muddy.

The vellum is the creamy coloured section at the bottom... already the colours look smoother and the arils glossier.
I couldn’t resist trying out the tiny sample of vellum that I have. It’s such a lovely surface to work on, and to my great surprise, quite forgiving. You can literally wipe off what you have painted with a damp brush… but that is a double edged sword, because sometimes you might not want to wipe off what you have painted!!

The Iris foetidissima  seed pod study so far


So the practice continues. I’m onto the leaves now. I still haven’t quite worked out what colours to use… but transparent yellow is probably going to play a starring role. I have a small sheet of parchment, which is goatskin vellum (a slightly rougher surface) to play on.  It’s not quite the same thing but will help me test out colours and brush techniques.

My kelmscott vellum is ready, all powdered up and waiting for me to begin. My new sable brushes arrived yesterday and I have some fresh seed pods waiting to have their portrait painting. I am excited!

This suspense is terrible. I hope it will last. (Oscar Wilde)

13 comments:

  1. Wonderful Shevaun. I'm fascinated by the amount of colors you have tested in your study. They are beautiful in themselves.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Aislinn, Thanks. I just find it easier to judge which are most suitable and which are transparent when they are all laid out like this. It's also handy to be able to refer to when I need to do the same plant or something similar at a later stage. I'm hoping that one day I won't have to do it like this, that it'll come naturally to me... but I'm still very much at the learning stage.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Really lovely Shevaun,I love your studies and attention to detail xx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Claire. I thought of you when I was trying to decide which colours to use. The handprint site is marvellous!

      Delete
  4. I love how you analyze and think about each stage in the creation of the painting. Lovely!!

    ReplyDelete
  5. I was captivated by your process! Being new to this whole world of art and not knowing yet my direction, I have been ruthlessly searching the art groups for paintings and drawings that I aspire to. Thank you so much for articulating your process. While lengthy it is truly a growth experience on so many levels. Your outcome is stunning. I am gaining pearls from so many artists and hope to put them all together some day ... meanwhile enjoying the process! Thank you again.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Carol, I'm so pleased that you found my blog interesting. I learned so much of what I know from other online artists and am still learning. Half the fun is in the discovery. 😃

      Delete
  6. Stunning Shevaun - really beautiful

    ReplyDelete
  7. Thank you for explaining the process so thoughtfully, it is really inspiring. I admire the patience you must have to to try all those colours until you are happy with the result. I am looking forward to seeing the finished painting.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Chris. It's encouraging to know that people find this interesting. I can't wait to see the finished painting too ;)

      Delete
  8. Dear Shevaun, I'm really interested in the articulated microscope you have. It has a nice large field. Are you able to tell me what magnification it produces and where it's possible to buy one? Brand? Thank you very much, Ruth

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Ruth, My magnifying light is actually a cheap one from Argos, and alas, the clamp snapped yesterday. I bought another cheap one from Argos which is actually a table lamp and seems quite good, but hopefully I will get one of these in the new year. The other magnifier that i have is just a clip on one from the daylight company. Hope that helps! :)
      http://cpcireland.farnell.com/luxo/8310-122-3-g/high-quality-magnifier-lamp-lfm101/dp/LA01250?in_merch=Products%20From%20This%20Range

      Delete

I love the feedback so please feel free to comment. Thank you!