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C1599
"A Light in the Storm"
(Oregon Coast)
Oil on Centurian Oil Primed Linen Panel
with additional Coat of Williamsburg Lead Ground
5" x 7"
Weather-wise I could have well stayed up in the
Coast Range, as when I finally arrived in Bandon, six days after my intention
to be there, I could see the usual Summer winds were up. If you were following these postings from
their inception last Summer, you might remember that on this central &
southern Oregon Coast the winds in Summer are usually strong, from the north (and
therefore cold), and fairly incessant.
Thus they were upon my arrival late in the day after I had left my charming
forest road campsite high in the Oregon Coast Range, and toddled into
Bandon. The next day, however, they had
dissipated, but a dull overcast had set in.
This would normally not have prevented my painting on the shore, but
once down on the beach, and while looking for a spot to paint, I noticed that
the sands had shifted from what they had been last Summer … deeper and
therefore the low tide was further out past sea-stacks that I had never been
able to walk around on past visits to Bandon.
Considering the bland lighting of the overcast, and this new
configuration of the sands, I decided to concentrate taking photographs and making
pencil sketches in my pocket sketchbook.
The Oil Painting above was done from one of my drawings in that
sketchbook, and is shown below.
While rapidly
jotting down this pencil sketch, I had in mind that I would use it as the basis
for a dramatic storm with crashing waves.
This is the type of drawing I consider as informational note taking, as
are many of the drawings in this pocket sketchbook. This is one of those sketchbooks where I had
cut and folded the paper into sections and then had a professional bookbinder in
Cornwall, England bind it together; I had about twenty of various sizes bound
at the same time, eleven years ago. Not
cheap but now I have sketchbooks bound with the various papers (some handmade),
that I most enjoy working on. This is a
Fabriano Ingres paper, 160 gsm in weight; I love the way a laid* paper takes the graphite, when drawing. The day after the drawing was done I worked
up the Oil Sketch from my Pencil Sketch, as the cloud cover continued and the
wind came up again … the Sun did come out later … still breezy.
Imprimatura: Venetian Red.
Block-in:
French Ultramarine.
The Pigments used were: Rublev
Blue Ridge Yellow Ochre, Italian Burnt Sienna, with Winsor & Newton Cobalt &
French Ultramarine Blues, Venetian Red, and Cremnitz & Titanium Whites.
* A laid paper
is one where you can see the laid lines
(the close parallel lines), and the chain
lines (parallel lines wider spaced and 90 degrees to the laid lines), indented in the paper, from
the screen used during the paper making process.
A wove paper does not have
these lines and is what you find as the surface of normal writing or printing paper.
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