I did another watercolor outside this morning. Although I wasn’t entirely happy with the results, I did manage to take pictures after each wash. Here’s what I did:

Step 1: Working out a Battle Plan

The subject was a white statue in shadow. The challenge was to get the statue dark enough to read as a shadow and light enough to contrast with the background.

I made some mistakes in the drawing. I had wanted to get the base of the statue up a little higher on the page, but it didn’t turn out that way. In other circumstances, I might have erased everything and redrawn it, but the weather was getting hot and the bright sunlight was inching ever closer to my work surface. I opted to proceed with what I had.

Step 2: Establishing a Strong Value

Statue: Step 2

After a *very* light wash of nickel azo yellow and raw sienna in parts of the background, I started in with a strong wash of raw umber, burnt sienna, and ultramarine violet for the tree limbs and the foreground. I made what I thought was a very dark wash.

Step 3: Going for a Darker Value

Statue: Step 3

Next, I wanted the leaves to be as dark as I could make them. Judging against the value I had already established for the tree trunk and foreground, I used thalo blue, burnt sienna, and nickel azo yellow to make the dark green leaves. I added a few drops of gum arabic to my palette to keep the heavy paint fluid as I was working. I made sure to paint carefully around the silhouette of the statue.

Step 4: Painting the Statue

Statue: Step 1

With the medium-dark and dark values established, I was ready to try the statue. Getting the value of the statue right the first time was critical. Taking two tries at the value would almost certainly make the painting labored and overworked. The statue needed to be substantially lighter than the dark of the leaves, but still darker than the full light. I laid in a wash of raw sienna, quinadridone rose, and ultramarine violet. The wash was just a little too dark at the top and I tried to adjust as I went down the page. I wish I had made the wash a little more even.

Step 5: Adjustments and Final Details

After I finished the statue and a few suggestions of trees in the background, I fixed a few things that were bothering me.

Statue: Step 5

I decided that the leaves needed to come down a little lower on the left side of the painting. The big problem, though, was that some of my original darks were simply not dark enough. I made a second pass at some of the leaves and the foreground. In the final stage, I also added the suggestion of the wrought iron fence behind the statue. Although there was indeed a fence behind the statue, I’m not sure that it was a good idea to put it into the painting.

Step 6: Retouching at Home

The big picture is the last picture I took in the field. I may make some minor adjustments at home this evening. I’m not sure yet.

Lessons Learned

… or what I would do differently next time.

  • Hitting the strong value at the beginning was important. If I had not been able to judge against the darker values, I am fairly certain I would have made the statue too dark.
  • Running the statue off the bottom of the page bothers me. I should have measured more carefully in the beginning.
  • The end of the fence and the right side of the tree trunk are almost tangent to one another. I didn’t notice that until after I got home. Hmmm…. I’m not sure what to do about it.
  • I’m wondering if I could have had some dappled light on the statue. Although I didn’t see any light except for a small rim at the top of her head, a touch of pure light may have helped …. or not. I’ll try it sometime in the future and see what happens.