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New presective on old topic
From a interview with Nelson himself about colors of paint he uses.
Carol: Do you enjoy playing with new colors that become available on the market? Nelson: Oh, I love it. I'm going berserk now with all kinds of thing as long as I feel there's a great permanency. But I don't think anything will ever replace the strong body of colors you can get with good earth colors. A dye color cannot do what a body color can do and vice-versa. The pigment may be of a little less importance than the knowledge you have. That's where the key is that unlocks it all: knowing in your mind what you want. And that takes a lot of experimentation. It also takes a freedom in painting. You can't just sit there and dabble in miniscule amounts, carefully, because you are accomplishing so little in doing so. Paint broadly and powerfully and sink yourself into it and you'll learn so much more. |
One thing that seems to characterize Nelson Shanks' complex official portraits is the use of intense color in the clothing that he has his subjects wear and in the background items he includes. I imagine that's where most of his wide range of intense pigments are used.
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Peter, I have watched Nelson paint just two demos. He is not one of the many accomplished artists who can paint and talk at the same time, so what I say is based on my observation and explanation that his teaching assistants made later.
Nelson uses all the colors on his palette. I watched him touch every red available in the course of mixing the wide variety of tones he painted into the flesh of his paintings. He doesn't work by set formulas, but by looking, mixing, and adjusting: making color statements and playing with the relationships. When I painted in his class, we were urged to "swim color in," making our paintings reflect what we saw: orange into a blue drape, green into a shadow. It's radically different from painting with a limited palette. The basic idea is to start brighter than you'd ever dream, because you can never make a painting brighter than tube colors. I hope you will have an opportunity to see Nelson painting. I have seen a couple masters with limited palettes paint; David Leffel, Albert Handell, Sherrie McGraw. Theirs is a very different process than Nelson's. Watching him paint will undoubtedly be more revealing than my description! |
Does anyone know why he has those little mountains of paint around his palette? Does he put the whole palette into a box to try and keep some of the paint on it wet for the next session? Is that how he transports the palette with those paint piles, in a box?
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Michele,
I don't know why Nelson Shanks has paint mountains, but you can read why I do here... http://www.williamwhitaker.com/B_HTM...tes/studio.HTM Bill |
Thanks for that link. Now, how do you keep those "mountains" so clean and not contaminated with adjacent colors?
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Ahh Michele,
This is where photography on the web fails us all. Those piles are seriously contaminated with thoughtless and garish colors, many of them buried away. I am forever mindlessly sticking my black brush in my white paint. Bill |
Sargent
Bill, your remark about your studio sounds like something one of Sargent's sitters said once about his London studio. She said, "It's not large and cluttered with all kinds of stuff like an amateur's studio."
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Quote:
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Nelson Shanks moves mountains
Michele,
Nelson has a box that resembles an oversize attache case in which his palette travels. He relies on a brush washer and rags to clean his brushes frequently as he paints. Haven't seen the paint piles too close though. |
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