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C1613
“Foxgloves in the Coast Range”
(Oregon Coast
Range)
Oil Sketch on Centurian Oil Primed Linen Panel
5" x 7"
If you have not
listened to Beethoven’s Ninth, while having breakfast on the end of a ridge
after a 36 hour rain, and while watching the mist in the valleys below rising
to join the cloud not far above you, and with spears of sunlight breaking
through, now and again, to light patches of far hillside, feebly at first, then
with increasing frequency, and promising a final clearing to come soon … you
have not lived. Even though I often
listen to Classical Music Public Radio here in the States, and Radio 3, when in
Britain, I never had much of a Classical Music Album/Cassette/CD
collection. That changed over this past
Winter, when I had a brainstorm. I began
to finger through the CD shelves at Goodwill and used my Christmas money from
my sisters to begin my Classical Music Collection, at less than $2 per CD! The bonus is that at that price you can
afford to make the odd mistake, though I rarely have, and they are usually to
be found in excellent condition … Classical Music listeners seem to take care
of their CDs better than any other music listeners. I have saved them all on my PC, then
transferred them to a dedicated exterior hard-drive, as well as backed them up
on further hard-drives during my normal backups, all in WAVE formats. I have further copied the collection to my
Tablet, which automatically converts them to MP3 format, so I can easily listen
when it is not convenient to break out the PC.
Monday the 11th
of July was such a day, and when breakfast and Beethoven had finished, and the
day had cleared sufficiently to set up the Solar Array, I set up to paint. I was going to paint an Oil of my sketchbook
drawing of the day before, and I proceeded far enough to cover the panel in an
imprimatura, and draw in the composition, but I was taken with the way the
light was falling onto a patch of grass and foxgloves set against the dark of
the forest beyond, so I quickly set to work on the new panel, and the result is
that shown above. The Forest was so
enjoyable that I realized by this time that I would not be going down to paint
the coast at Bandon, as I usually do. I
needed this woodland sojourn, after spending so much time in town, over the
past year, on the commissioned works I have previously mentioned.
As usual, I am
mentioning the pigment used, and you will see that I have used two bright
yellows, as well as my old favorite Blue Ridge Yellow Ochre. The Hansa Yellow Light is, for me, a new
colour added to my palette this past Spring.
When reading about other Artist’s palettes, I often have seen this
Yellow mentioned. I have not always been
happy with the denseness of some of my mixed greens using the Cadmiums, and
decided to give Hansa Yellow a try.
Mixed with Cerulean it gives me the bright greens I was looking for, and
it also gives creditable greens when mixed with other blues as well. The Greens found in Nature are many and varied,
and Hansa Yellow adds another tool to further master this variability in my
work.
Imprimatura:
Vasari Terra Rosa.
Drawing/Block-in:
Ultramarine Blue Deep.
The Pigments used were: Rublev Blue Ridge Yellow Ochre, Italian Burnt
Sienna, Cyprus Raw Umber Deep, Cyprus Warm Burnt Umber; Winsor & Newton Cobalt,
Cerulean & Ultramarine Deep Blues, Cadmium Yellow Pale (not a lot) Permanent
Rose & Cremnitz White; M. Graham Hansa Yellow Pale.
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