'The Tanglewood' by Amber Caspian

'The Tanglewood' by Amber Caspian

Thursday 28 February 2013

The Birth of a Painting...Part I

I've felt very excited about this painting... and probably because I was slightly nervous in case I mucked it up, I found that I was very aware of the process of creating it...like watching from the outside looking in, so I thought I'd share the experience with you... 

The painting I am talking about here is called 'In a Tangle' and is a version of Briar Rose or Sleeping Beauty...


Sometimes ideas just plop fully formed into my head, maybe from something I'm reading or listening to. Words often inspire me, even unrelated ones can conjure an image in my mind. I'll write my initial thoughts down and then move on to something else...work or go for a walk, but always something that allows my mind to moodle the idea around without over-thinking it.  The idea may be moodled for several days, months or even years...until the right time...when it feels like it wants to be made... 


...remove the importance of getting it right first time...

Then I'll scribble on the back of an envelope and either work it up on there or, if I'm feeling really sure of where it's going, move onto my sketching pad. I always seem to panic and think I won't be able to draw what's in my head. That's why I have to move out of my own way... and remove the importance of getting it right first time. I find I can be really playful scribbling on the back of an envelope, it doesn't matter and I can fiddle about until I get the composition right. I always draw with a biro when doing these, I can see the mistakes and learn from them. I've noticed that I will nearly always do a really bad drawing first, just to get it out of the way... 


Dog Rose - Wiki
I sometimes use reference material, such as photographs I've taken myself or found on the internet. However I only use these loosely...mainly to help me get to know the tree or plant or whatever it is but never to copy. In this case the Dog Rose was something I knew well and wanted to give the impression of rather than replicate exactly. However, it needed to be distinct from the roses I've done in the past so I looked at the bud, blossom and hips to see what made them different...











Developing the Pose - Sketch I

Then I may draw it...or elements of it such as the pose...several times in the sketching pad in pencil until I feel happy that it's right. While I'm doing this I usually have more ideas for it or...as in this case, I remember a previous painting which has elements I want to develop for this one. 




The Spinney by Sarah Turpin


For instance I drew my art studio, The Spinney, as a little witch's cottage in a fairy tale wood last year. This made me rethink my initial idea to do a mad tangle of thin briars as you can see on the envelope sketch above and instead do a more stylised, Art Nouveau tangle.  


Playing with Composition - Sketch II






So...in the sketch pad I developed the main briars as inspired by the Spinney picture... then I traced the girl from the first sketch because I liked her pose, which is why she is highlighted in black pen (see above - sketch I) so I could trace her through the paper. This enabled me to move her around into the right position amongst the briars, like a swimmer, and then entwine some of the plant around her so she was caught...




Tracing the Tangle


Once I have worked out the exact composition I'll trace the main elements and transfer them onto the watercolour paper. I try and leave a little room for more tweaks throughout the painting of the final piece. 






Part II will follow soon...
My Little Helper!

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