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05-14-2007, 03:26 PM
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#1
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Juried Member FT professional, '06 finalist Portrait Society of Canada, '07 finalist Artist's Mag,'07 finalist Int'al Artist Mag.
Joined: Feb 2006
Location: Montreal,Canada
Posts: 475
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Garth Herrick
Well for you to be someone who professes to have no experience with pastels, what are you waiting for?! Your chalk, sanguine, and charcoal drawings are atounding, to say the least!
Garth
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Well, it's pretty hard to resist to the temptation, I could spent my whole life experimenting new techniques! But for the moment I try to be reasonable, and to be able to control few ones...
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05-14-2007, 09:09 PM
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#2
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UNVEILINGS MODERATOR Juried Member
Joined: May 2005
Location: Narberth, PA
Posts: 2,485
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I'm becoming more interested in pastels by the second! The range of approaches seems infinite. Garth, you were working only in soft pastels, then we have the Gwynneth Barth demo, hard to soft, and I'm thinking of Judy Carducci's wonderful demos, too.
Thank you for sharing the reference photos, Garth. Maybe the likeness wasn't the most important thing, but you've definitely caught it. I didn't realize he was the same boy that was in that other painting. (It's obvious now that I know.)
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05-19-2007, 05:26 PM
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#3
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CAFE & BUSINESS MODERATOR SOG Member FT Professional
Joined: Jul 2001
Location: Seattle, WA
Posts: 3,460
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Oooooooh, lucky you, Garth. You got the BIG box of crayons! Your new pastels sound like great fun.
(By the way, I also love the composition with the viewpoint from above showing the boy peeking out from behind the wall. It has a very contemporary feel.)
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06-29-2007, 09:56 PM
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#4
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Juried Member
Joined: May 2007
Location: Morlaix, France
Posts: 9
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The oil painting is marvelous too, and thanks for showing the reference photos, I think there is nothing to say about the likeness !
It has been a while since you posted this, do you have new pastels to show here ? What has become of this one, you mentioned you were pausing to show it here, have you left it untouched ? I think it is fine as it is, except maybe for the white area to the left.
Also I wonder about letting the surface of the paper show so much : the pastel pigment itself should not be altered in time, but usually coloured papers fade in time which would change the whole balance of your original work.
Gwenneth Barth has a DVD "Creating A Portrait In Pastel"
I know what they say about working with hard pastels and moving on to softer and softer ones.... But I tend to work the other way around : it is interesting to learn how other people work to give you new insights, but it is so much fun working your way around difficulties all by yourself at first.
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06-30-2007, 01:55 AM
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#5
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SOG Member FT Professional '09 Honors, Finalist, PSOA '07 Cert of Excel PSOA '06 Cert of Excel PSOA '06 Semifinalist, Smithsonian OBPC '05 Finalist, PSOA
Joined: Mar 2004
Location: Philadelphia, PA
Posts: 1,445
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Sound advice on paper fading!
Jean-Fran
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