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Elementary
Notions about Oil Painting
by Leon Engelen
There are a lot of painting
methods. They are all good, if you use the materials correctly. My technique
is a very simple one. Everyone with normal skills can acquire it quickly
to achieve beautiful results.
You have to obtain as many
colors as possible by using as few tubes of paint as possible. No color
can be applied unmixed. I mix the paint in very small quantities so that
new colors are formed constantly. These colors always differ from each
other so that variations are obtained within the same color. The paint
is mixed in the middle of the palette. When another shade is needed, the
new paint must be put next to the previous mixture. Then I mix slowly in
the direction of the previous mixture. Every time I make a new shade, I
work in the direction of the existing mixture. Thus I obtain a rich palette
with a lot of shades.
When a new canvas is started,
as little paint as possible should be applied. When the paint is put on
too thickly, it is almost impossible to put on a second layer before the
first layer is dry. The best brush to start with is a wide flat one of
3 to 7 cm made of white silk or pig's bristles. The paint is not diluted
with medium or turpentine. You only dilute, if you work with thin brushes
0 and 00. The paint can then be used as ink, for example to paint twigs
of trees, blades of grass and hay. The canvas can also be primed in such
a way that the oils keep the paint wet, penetrate more or less the undercoat.
This makes it possible to apply a second layer without mixing the coats
of paint.
To work canvas yourself you
have to proceed in the following manner: You need unprocessed linen (preferably
double-woven), lime, powdered chalk and water. First, the canvas is mounted
loosely on the square canvas stretcher. Take into account that linen shrinks
10% when processed. The large sizes (from 60 x 70 cm) must therefore be
mounted quite loosely. Once the canvas is mounted, there are three phases.
First phase. The oil that
is in the paint must not come into contact with the linen. That's why a
protective coat must be applied. This coat consists of size of 70 gr. lime
per liter of water. To make size you let the lime grains soak one night
in cold water. When you heat (don't boil) and stir it, the lime dissolves
easily. The size is applied to the linen with a wide brush.
Second phase. When the first
coat is quite dry, it is brushed lightly. Powdered chalk is added to the
size. ¾ liter of chalk is added to 1 liter of water. This mixture is applied
on the first coat.
Third phase. When the second
coat is quite dry, brush it lightly again. Add chalk to size that only
contains 40 gr. of lime per liter. Add at least 2 liters of chalk to 1
liter of size. Thus you obtain a pulp that is just liquid enough to be
applied easily and yet gives a few millimeters of coating. When the third
coat is quite dry, it can be brushed. First brush with coarse, then with
fine sandpaper.To process and apply the different coats the mixtures must
be heated. Be careful to keep the temperature under the boiling point.
Most paint brands offer different
qualities, expensive and less expensive ones. A lot of painters think they
have to use the most expensive paint to obtain the best results. Nothing
is further from the truth: you have to use the paint that suits your
purpose best. Expensive paint contains a lot of dye and little filler such
as chalk, beeswax or cork. This paint has a strong color power and is only
meant to be applied very thinly. For example, in order to glaze or to neutralize
strong colors. Some will work with a palette knife and spread the paint
too thickly on the canvas. The expensive paint will crack quickly for lack
of fillers, bur the cheaper qualities have enough body to keep the applied
coat of paint in perfect condition.
It is also good to know that
the properties of some paints don't allow wrong treatment. Zinc white,
for example does not lose color, but has the tendency to crack. Titanium
white, on the contrary, is elastic but turns yellow. Consequently
titanium white is suitable
for the undercoat, whereas zinc white is suitable for the upper coats.
I always use cremser white, which combines the good properties of the paints
mentioned above. If you apply a good coat of varnish, it remains colorfast.
My color palette is limited
to the fifteen colors below
-
Cerulean Blue
-
Ultramarine Blue Deep
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Burnt Umber
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Burnt Sienna
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Naples Yellow
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Cadmium Orange
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Permanent Green
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White
-
Viridian
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Yellow Ochre
-
Indian Yellow
-
Cadmium Red Deep
-
Cobalt Violet Deep
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Black
-
Madderlake Light
With these paints it is possible
to make all colors.
I use few brushes to paint.
It is advisable to have a second specimen of each size: one for the light
and one for the dark colors, in order to avoid constant cleaning. I prefer
working with flat brushes of 3 and 7 cm, a sable's hair pencil or imitation
of 10 mm, an 0 and a wiper (long hairs of 3 cm n°4).
Always place the canvas level
and perpendicular and never let the sun shine on the canvas while painting
in free nature. Painting is to be done under mediocre circumstances, never
with perfect light, because when a painting hangs somewhere inside a house
the light is never perfect. A painting should always be made with a lighting
that is less good than the lighting in the place where it is finally hung.
When painting a landscape,
the horizon should not be in the middle, but on 1/3 or 2/3 of the canvas.
However, when high trees or nearby houses are to be painted, the horizon
must be low. As the horizon is always at eye level, a tree or house would
barely come above the horizon if the horizon is high and would thus only
be two or three meters high. When the sky is dark, the landscape must be
light and vice versa. You have to do this in order to obtain the contrast
that is needed for the authenticity and strength of the entity. To obtain
the depth in a landscape, everything in the background has to be painted
vaguely, in form and color. The foreground should be painted with contrast.
A meadow in the foreground can be painted really dark at the bottom, with
a light green part above. To sum up: in the foreground a lot of contrast
is used, in the background only a little.
It is very important to know
that color changes according to the ground on which it is painted. Orange
is quite different on a white ground than on a green one. Green on a red
ground is different than on a white one. Blue on yellow-orange gives a
much warmer shade than blue on white. I always paint a dark red coat
under everything that must be green, like trees and meadows. I paint the
ground of bricks and tiles dark green and the ground of skies warm yellow-orange.
It is good to know that a lot can be achieved with a Grey color, made of
ultramarine blue, umber stained and white. When a painting comes across
as too heavy, its edge can be coated lightly with Grey, which is applied
on a dry brush of 7 cm. The points of light (Naples yellow, white or orange)
which give life to a painting are applied toward the end. The effect can
be heightened by putting a dark small stripe under a point of light.
It is important that not
everything is developed in detail. When all the bricks in a wall are developed
in detail, it will soon become boring to look at it. It is better to paint
a few bricks clearly and others only vaguely. Thus the spectator can finish
the image himself and will think that he sees all the bricks. The painter
must not be tempted to put immediately on canvas everything he sees. First
he must study the composition of the subject. I divide the work of a painting
in three phases.
phase 1
Outline and drawing. If
the drawing and outline are not correct, problems will arise later on which
will force you to repaint everything . That's why you have to see to it
that everything is in the right place and that the composition is
correct.
phase 2
Make the outline more clear
and finish it. Touch up the drawing with brush n° 10, apply some more light
and complete
the darker parts so that
the contrast is heightened. By painting more and more light and dark colors
the painting is shaped and the finishing touch can be given.
phase 3
The finishing. The finishing
is very important because it determines what the spectator will eventually
see. As opposed to the outline, improvements can be applied if the result
is unsatisfactory.
A great artist once
said he looked at his works as if they were painted by his worst enemy.
That seems exaggerated to me, because being too critical is as inadvisable
as being not critical enough. Instead of working on a painting endlessly,
I try to learn from my mistakes and to avoid them in the next painting.
How can a painting be judged
in the best way? A good criterion is the opinion of an outsider, someone
who is a layman in the art of painting. Another method is to put the painting
upside down or to look at its mirror image. When I work on a painting for
a long time, I sometimes start something new to be able to look at my work
with a fresh view.
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