Monday, October 29, 2012

Susan Murphy Workshop at the Columbia Art Center

I was invited to give a workshop at the Columbia Art Center in Columbia, MD this past weekend, and I would like to share with you some pictures and paintings from the workshop.  For the first time, I taught my "rivulet technique" in a workshop setting.  People have often asked me how I create the interesting textural effect in some of my paintings.  So the purpose of the workshop was to teach about the characteristics of certain watercolor pigments and the textural effects that can be achieved by them, and then to have to students apply these techniques to a figure or portrait painting.

This first photo is of me on the second day of the workshop, demonstrating the rivulet technique on a painting that is going to be a statue.  Many thanks to Lindsay Lucas for the photo!  Scroll down to see paintings by the students and a description of the techniques.

 
Susan Avis Murphy demonstrating her rivulet technique

This is the Columbia Art Center, where the workshop was held.

Thanks to Karen Schuster for this photo!

And thanks to Anne Mauer for this one!  The painting above is a watercolor by yours truly titled Mounted Water Sprite

 We had eleven people in the workshop.  The Columbia Art Center was a good location for this, and they provided nice hospitality and refreshments for us!

 
For the first day of the workshop, I wanted the students to have a chance to practice doing the rivulet technique, and also using stencil brushes to "lift off" the non-stainting pigments that we were using in order to create the lighter parts of the picture.   Since we only had two days, I did not want students to have to spend a lot of time drawing.  So I provided for each of them a quarter sheet of Arches 140 lb cold-pressed paper with a contour image already printed on it showing the face of a famous artist.  I called these our "Artist Hero" sheets.  Below you can see the one I painted.  Can you guess who this is?  At the end of the blog I will give you the answer.

The pre-printed sheets were created on my medium-format Epson printer using indelible inks.  First I took the raw photo (derived by Googling these artist heroes), and put it through a Photoshop filter called "photocopy".  Then I adjusted and lightened the image so it would not be too dark.  And last I put a quarter sheet of Arches into the printer and printed each one.  We had seven different famous artists to work from.
Step one: the pre-printed sheet
Step 2
Step 2: the rivulet technique has already been done (more about this below), some of the lights on his face have been lifted out, and some of the darks have been glazed in

Step 3
Step 3: More lights have been lifted and more darks glazed in.  The painting has not been finished yet, and eventually I hope to add the finished image to this posting.


Now for some of the paintings done by students in the workshop.  These came out extremely well in my opinion!  I wasn't sure how well people would be able to do this technique the first time, but obviously I had a group of artists who catch on fast!  Some of these paintings are not quite finished.  Also I was not able to capture a photo of each and every painting.  If the artists can email me their photos, I can put them on this post!  Missing are Pablo Picasso and John Singer Sargent!

 
NC Wyeth by Karen Schuster

 
An Older Georgia O'Keeffe by Joan Lok

  
Frida Kahlo by Madalyn Johns


  
Frida Kahlo by Pam Hannasch


  
Georgia O'Keeffe by Anupama Sinha


  
A Young Georgia O'Keeffe by Julia Neidorf


 
Frida Kahlo by Carol Zika

Frida Kahlo by Anne Mauer

Now I am going to discuss a little bit about the procedure we used in doing these paintings, and also show the first half of my painting process for the demonstration of a statue that I did on the second day.  Below is a copy of my reference photo, which is a small statue in a pebble garden at Dumbarton Oaks, a beautiful Georgetown garden in Washington, DC.  Unfortunately I do not have a photo of the first step, where the drawing has been completed.  But if you can imagine, on a half sheet of stretched Arches 140 lb cold-pressed paper, I had created a contour drawing of a statue.  I then went over the graphite with an indelible Sakura Micron pen (a 01 fine medium brown felt tip pen that uses pigmented ink, which is both lightfast and indelible) so that the drawing would not wash off in the next step. 


 
reference photo for Sprite of Dumbarton by Susan Avis Murphy

In Step 1 below, I have done a large wash over the entire sheet, using Winsor & Newton raw umber, and Holbein verditer blue.  I worked quickly, keeping all the paint wet, and then tilted the board and sprayed the paint with a fine water sprayed (like a plant mister), causing the paint to drop down the paper.  This results in an interesting textural effect as the water passes through the raw umber and forms "rivulets".  See the detail below.
Step 1: the rivulet wash
Step 1 detail

In Step 2 below, I have done two important things.  First, I began to lift out the paint on the light parts of the statue, mainly where sunlight is striking the edges.  To do this lifting process, I used small stencil brushes, which are blunt bristle brushes used to daub on paint through a stencil.  Of course we are not using stencils here, but the brushes are extremely useful for removing watercolor paint from a picture because they are stiff and the round blunt ones can obtain almost a hard edge.  This entire painting process depends upon the use of "liftable" paints, ie, pigments that are not staining by nature.



Second, I applied a light glaze of transparent colors around the top half of the statue in order to bring out his shape.  Here I had to be careful to apply the glaze gently and not scrub the underlying paint because I wanted the underlying rivulet texture to show through the glaze!
Step 2: lifting
In Step 3 below, I have also applied a light glaze to the statue itself to darken the shadow side a little.  The colors I used were Winsor and Newton permanent violet and cobalt violet, and Holbein vertider blue.  This is an opportunity to incorporate more color into an otherwise brown picture!  Again, I had to apply the wash with a light touch to avoid dissolving the underlying raw umber, which is a very liftable color. 

 Step 3: first glazing
 In Step 4 below, I have done more glazing of the shadow areas, and have started delineating areas of the body a little more.  I am not going to go too far with this, since I don't want to over-work the picture.  One of the nice things about having this textured background wash, is that most of the picture already has a kind of painterly detail, so that you do not have to incorporate so much realistic detail.  Also I have used a light wash of titanium white in the background.  This is an opaque color, but if you apply it as a translucent wash, the rivulet texture will still show through.   This is as far as I got on the demonstration during the workshop.  I will try to finish the painting and post the final results on this blog.  I intend to add a more darks around the body of the statue and in his pedestal to define it a little more, but otherwise it is almost finished.  The below photo of the painting was taken at my home studio using my photography lights, and is more truly representative of the colors in the picture.
 Sprite of Dumbarton (unfinished) by Susan Avis Murphy

In conclusion, in your next painting you might want to consider using non-staining paints and a lifting method to retrieve your light colors.  This will allow you to work back and forth between lights and darks, and will allow you more flexibility in the evolution of your painting.  There is a lot more I could tell you about these techniques, but enough for this posting!  I will be teaching this method in greater depth the next session of my online studio class.  Visit the Classes section of my website for more information! 

By the way, my "mystery artist" in my first demonstration above was a young Salvadore Dali! 

Susan Murphy, ARThouse, October 29, 2012

This just in!  One of the workshoppers, Lindsay Lucas, sent this finished statue painting from the workshop, showing a statue made by a New Mexico artist.  The little woman with the big hands is showing what you look like in the mirror!
 And this Mounted Water Sprite was sent by Anupama Sinha:

























Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Paintings from the People Working class

Below are some of the first results from our Painting People Working course here at ARThouse this fall.  In the first class we analyzed some of the photographs that students brought in of people working, looking for possible pitfalls and compositional problems.  Almost all of these photos had to be altered during the painting process in some way, such as:
  • cropping to focus on the person
  • eliminating extraneous detail and simplifying the composition
  • being aware of distracting linear elements that pull your eye right out of the composition
  • being aware that photographs do not record the values in shadows very well: the black shadows you will see in many photos are an artifact of the photography and the way the light meter reads the situation; the human eye would not see these shadows as totally black
The first assignment was to work in a "straight watercolor manner".  In other words, to use basic watercolor techniques, such as painting from light to dark, laying in background colors with large washes, and glazing to adjust values.  The student paintings below are not quite finished in some cases, but I captured a photograph of them so that we could share them with the class.  

 Near the Metropolitan   watercolor by Angela Lacy


 Clam Digger    watercolor by Barbara Scheihing (unfinished)

 Glass Blower     watercolor by Cecile Kirkpatrick

 Stone Cutter    watercolor by Deborah Cohan (unfinished)

 Life Guard     watercolor by Mimi Hegler

 The Swimmer     watercolor by Soohyun Kim (unfinished)

The Farrier    watercolor by Deanna Williford

 Washday    watercolor by Han-yin Shen

The Apprentice by Erika Jackson

Aren't these great?  People have gotten off to an excellent start!  This course is also available as an online course for only $50.  Visit the website here to register.  You can see a preview of my own demonstration painting for this first assignment on my website.  My own painting is going to be titled Teppanyaki Chef and this is how it looks so far:


For Class Two, we are working in what I call the "jigsaw style".  By this I mean that the watercolor is comprised of hundreds of small, irregular shapes that interlock together to create a unified whole.  Below is my almost-completed painting from the Class Two demonstration, titled Rainy Night Beijing.  The painting still needs to be tweaked a little to give it a stronger illusion of reality.  Up close it looks almost completely abstract, but when you step 10 feet back, everything almost falls into place!

Rainy Night Beijing by Susan Avis Murphy, AWS (unfinished)

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Pictures of people working for our upcoming watercolor class

Painting People Working is the title of watercolor class that I am teaching here at ARThouse this fall.  The class is all filled up with 32 students, but it is also being offered online, and there are still some slots available (watercolor classes at ARThouse).  I am collecting photos of people working and would like to present some of them here.  This will give you some idea of the kind of things I intend to paint as demonstrations.  So let's go!  These are all photos I have taken myself, in China and elsewhere:














Of course it will probably be necessary to crop and alter many of these images to make a successfull painting.  We are going to study several different approaches to this subject, from loose and semi-abstract to tight and representational.  Do you have any favorites?  I have hundreds of other photos that I have collected over the years on this theme.

Now I would like to show you some paintings done by myself and other artists of people working.

watercolor by Frank Webb
I just took an incredible workshop with Frank Webb, and he advocates adding small figures to your paintings, especially of people working!

Brooklyn Butcher Shop -- watercolor by John Salminen
John Salminen is a master of the urban scene, and almost always includes figures going about their business

Earth, Air, Fire, Water  -- oil painting by Lincoln Perry
Lincoln Perry is probably best known for the series of large murals he has done at the University of Virginia, showing students and professors at work and play

Lushan Market -- watercolor by John Salminen
Another fantastic painting by John Salminen, showing people hard at work in China

Sister Heyward -- watercolor by Mary Whyte
Mary Whyte is one of my favorite watercolorists.  She has thoroughly explored the workings and doings of people in the south, and documented a fast fading form of rural life in her book "Working South".  I own a copy and would highly recommend it.


watercolor by Burt Silverman
One of my first influences in watercolor, Burt Silverman often paints people working in factories or doing their chores, in his subtle style using lifting-off techniques


The Operator -- watercolor by Burt Silverman
I love this painting.

Ian Playing the Flute  --  watercolor by Burt Silverman

Wilson Mill -- watercolor by Frank Webb


Peace and Dumplings -- watercolor by Susan Avis Murphy
Here is one of my own, done in 2011.  This girl was stationed outside our little hotel in Beijing, selling bao-tze, a form of pork-filled dumpling

Heading Home -- watercolor by Susan Avis Murphy

The Retired Toolmaker -- watercolor by Susan Avis Murphy
This is my father-in-law, Lorenzo Colombini, who passed away recently.  He was a machinist working for Canadair in Montreal.  Here is is working in his basement.  I worked from a photo, but most of the background was unsuitable, so I made it up.

Aren't these wonderful pictures?  The subject matter, people working, has an inherent dignity to it that will give our paintings a timelessness and universal quality that is the basis of good art.  I think we will have a lot of fun with this subject and paint some excellent pictures.  Stay tuned, as I will be posting the results on this blog.

For students signed up for the class, both in-person and on-line, there will be a special private blog with premium content that you have already paid for, explaining in detail how my demonstration paintings are done.  You will receive log-in information for this private blog on around September 10, 2012.  For others who may wish to access this course material, you can sign up for the online course by following this link: Painting People Working.  It is only $50.