
Begining
Pastel Material List
Reif Erickson, Fresh-Air (tm) painting class
BRING AND USE WHAT YOU HAVE
NuPastels are an inexpensive way to get started
The colors listed are my description, not the manufactures color
A MUST HAVE: NuPastel
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OPTIONAL:
FaberCastell
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OPTIONAL: NuPastel |
| #?
White
| 9286-141
Purple |
#?
Light Green |
| 277
Off White |
9286-134
Red-Violet
|
276 Cream
|
| 235
Light Blue |
9286-147
Blue
|
299
Light Gray |
| 275
Blue |
9286-146
Light Ultramarine
|
314
Light Mauve |
| 217
Yellow |
1
|
304
Mauve |
| 218
Light Green |
|
245
Turquoise |
| 378
Green |
One
Piece: Schminke
White Pastel
|
205
|
| 298
"Bottle Green" |
(or
other Soft
Pastel White)
|
318
|
366
Pale Pink
|
1
|
258
|
296
Orange
|
1
|
295
|
#?
Red
|
1
|
325
Blue |
346
Deep Red
|
1
|
305
Black |
1
|
1
|
254
Violet |
Many
other pastels can be added, But limiting yourself to these will
help you learnto control pressure in use of pastel, and to build
up color-notes on the paper.
Paper:
Beginners: 2 sheets of Canson Mi-Tientes. Your choice of one(1)
middle tone color and one(1) white or off white.
(DO NOT substitute "Strathmore, to begin with!)
Non-Beginners
can bring paper they like to work on, PLUS 1 sheet of LeCarte, or
Wallis sandpaper-like surface papers.
Other
Materials Needed
#1. Vine Charcoal, soft: One Piece.
#2. Light blue Pastel Pencil.
#3. Tape to tape down paper, or paper clamps.
#4. Drawing board and tray for pastels, or French Easel, Adapted
for pastels.
Or you can use two pieces of foamcore taped together at the long
edge for a tray with half used as drawing board to be hand-held.
Optional
#1. Fixative Spray, we will talk about this.
#2. Baby Wipes (for cleaning hands) the cheap ones with no lanolin.
When
working on paper-When working on sand-paper surfaces:
#1. Vinyl eraser (white)
#2. One old, Stiff bristle oil-paint brush, "Clean".
#3. Chamois, a small piece.
WHEN
PAINTING OUTSIDE
You should always bring with you if possible: A Campstool,
Mosquito repellent, some sunscreen and a hat to shade your eyes
and head
If you have any question prior to classes or going on site please
feel free to call me at my studio at: 530-887-9565
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| About
Pastels
As with any fine work of art or fine furniture, pastel paintings should
not be placed in direct sunlight. When under glass, the sun's heat
can create condensation under the glass in humid conditions.
When transporting a pastel painting, or storing a pastel, the painting
should be kept upright or face up when lying flat.
PASTEL is NOT colored chalk, which is a limestone substance, with
fugitive, or light fading dyes. PASTEL is pure pigment---the same
pigment used in making all fine art paints, including oil paint.
PASTEL is the most permanent of all media when applied to a permanent
ground and properly framed. There is no oil to cause darkening or
cracking; no other substance or medium is in contact with the pigment
to cause premature fading or blistering of the surface. PASTELS
from the 16th Century exist today, as fresh and alive as the day
they were painted.
The following is a statement from the Pastel Society of America
in New York:
PASTEL does not at all refer to pale colors as the word is commonly
used in cosmetic and fashion terminology. The name PASTEL comes
from the French word "pastische" because the pure, powdered pigment
is ground into a paste, with a small amount of gum binder, and
then rolled into sticks. The infinite variety of colors in the
PASTEL palette range from soft and subtle, to bold and brilliant.
An artwork is created by stroking the sticks of dry pigment across
an abrasive ground, embedding the color in the "tooth" of the
paper, sand board or canvas. If the ground is completely covered
with PASTEL, the work is considered a PASTEL painting; leaving
much of the ground exposed produces a Pastel sketch. Techniques
vary with individual artists. PASTEL can be blended or used with
visible strokes. The medium is favored by many artists because
it allows a spontaneous approach. There is no drying time, and
no allowances to be made for a change in color due to drying,
as is common with watercolors and oils.
Historically, PASTEL can be traced back to the 16th century. Its
invention is attributed to the German painter Johann Thiele, a
Venetian woman artist. Rosalba Carriera was the first to make
consistent use of PASTEL. Chardin did portraits with an open stroke,
while LaTour preferred the blended finish. Thereafter a galaxy
of famous artists...Watteau, Copley, Delacroix, Millet, Manet,
Renoir, Toulous-Lautrec, Vuillard, Bonnard, Glackens, Whistler,
Hassam, William Merritt Chase...just to list the more familiar
names, used PASTEL as finished work rather than preliminary sketches.
Edgar Degas was the most prolific user of Pastel, and its champion.
His portege, Mary Cassatt introduced the Impressionists and PASTEL
to her friends in Philadelphia and Washington, and thus to the
United States. In the spring of 1983, Sotheby Parke Bernet sold
at auction two Degas PASTELS for more than $3,000,000 each. Both
PASTELS were painted about 1880.
Today, PASTEL painting have the stature of oil and watercolor
as a major fine art medium. Many of our most renowned living artists
have distinguished themselves in PASTEL, and enriched the art
world with this beautiful medium. .
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| Color
Mixing
Every color spot has three characteristics, chroma, saturation, and
value. The chroma is the name of the family of color it belongs to,
the SPECIFIC red, or blue, or yellow or purple, or orange-yellow,
etc. The saturation is the measure of intensity and brilliance. A
"pure" saturated color is absent of other colors that weaken its richness.
Think of the reddest red, the bluest blue, etc. Every wavelength of
light when unmixed with other light, represents a saturated color
note. It can be more complex then this, but for now, let's keep it
simple. Lastly, the value is the measure of the "grayness" to the
color. This is how it would compare to a black/white value scale,
or a black & white photo of the color spot. NOTE: A saturated yellow
is "higher-key" in value than a saturated red.
In starting out, in approximating a color note, it its best to paint
it with MORE brilliance than you actually see it. It is easier to
ADJUST the color note in value & intensity when rich color is already
there, then it is to try and get more color back into the color
note. Think about it. If we have something that's TOO gray to begin
with, no matter how much color we add, there will always be a measure
of grayness from what was there already!
Moving on with the basics: Let's say we have a color spot that is
painted but needs an 'adjustment'. (NOTE: There are numerous factors
in why color spots are NOT "just right" from the beginning, more
on that later). In pastel, this is often the case, since the pastel
stick may not be formulated to the color desired. Adjustment needs
to be noted around all three concerns: CHROMA, SATURATION and VALUE.
1st CHROMA: Here we need to ask ourselves the some questions and
learn to see differences. Does the color spot need to be warmer,
or cooler? For instance, is the red more orange or more purple than
what we have already as our color note? How does THIS color spot
compare to related color spots? 2nd SATURATION: Does the color spot
need to be more brilliant, or less brilliant? There are inherent
limitations to pigment if MORE brilliance is needed. Consider, which
is more brilliant, a stop light of the car OR the stop sign? Both
are saturated reds. But how do we paint it? (More on this later,
but one consideration is to address the surrounding color note to
enhance the changes you want in the color note you are adjusting.)
To reduce the brilliance of the color spot, we must make it appear
more gray. There are two ways to do this, add gray, or add the opposite
temperature. That is to say, if the color spot is warm, add a cool,
any cool, and the brilliance is modified. If the color spot is cool,
the addition of a warm color will mute and gray the color note.
3rd VALUE: If we want to DARKEN a color note, we must use pigment
that is darker in value. It is suggested to select a value darker
than what you want and to use it sparingly, than to fill the paper
with a lot of pigment.
If we want to LIGHTEN a color note, remember that the use of white
will reduce the brilliance. We may consider adjusting the color
note with something that has more color than just relying on white.
Whatever we choose for adjusting our color note, will shift that
note in 3 ways---SATURATION, VALUE and TEMPERATURE. Keep life simple.
Prioritize the concerns and first establish the value. When the
value is right, DO NOT CHANGE IT! Adjustments can be made in temperature
by using similar values!
The big challenge is developing a sensitive eye to SEE the differences
in color notes and a 'light touch' in the use of pastel to modify
each color note.
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| Light
vs. Pigment
In NATURE there is a tremendous range of values with bright, vivid
colors in light & sky. In a painted picture, the 'lights' are only
as bright as the light that falls upon it, and the brightness of the
vivid colors are never as bright as the light that falls upon it.
This is the difference between light sources as found in NATURE, and
the reflected light from a painting. And so, we are faced with the
first dilemma: the limitations of pigment in a painting on rendering
'light'.
How we address this concern, and prioritize our approach will give
us a guide to follow in understanding the painting process, and
hopefully make our task as painters a bit easier.
FIRST: Notice the "compression" of values in the painted picture,
compared to the brilliance of light and increase in range of values
as found in NATURE. How we keep this "relationship" of values
within our painting, compared to the "relationship" of values
in what we see in NATURE is the first step in making better paintings.
The novice's tendency is to minimize the RANGE of values he's
using in a painting. His darks are not dark enough, and his lights
are washed out. It does not matter what you use, watercolor, oils,
or pastels, the problem is the same. We must learn to SEE color
as value, and interpret it WITHIN the limitations of the value
range of pigment.
So, establish your value range early in your painting process,
giving consideration to what will become the areas for darks and
shadows, and what will become the areas for light.
SECOND: Notice the differences in the values in the transition
of what is 'in light' and what is not 'in light.' This brings
us to our next concern of ESTABLISHING THE WARM AND COOL RELATIONSHIPS.
By compressing the value-range, things begin to get crowded, and
we need to keep it simple! Whatever is illuminated in NATURE is
full of light and warmth and it is here we find the most brilliant
colors. (The sun IS a yellow star!) Notice also that the shadows
are absent of this warm light and APPEAR cool. In addition, the
reflected light into the shadows from the sky, on a clear day,
will enhance this cool-color phenomenon. Also note, that without
light, the shadows do not have brilliant color saturation.
So, the problem of addressing the transition of values, between
the areas of light and and areas of shadow, can be addressed by
keeping warm and saturated colors in the areas of light, and more
muted and cooler colors in areas of non-light.
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